Kemi Badenoch has rejected the claims of a crack with the Secretary of Justice of the Shadow, Robert Jenrick, about when the party should form a pact with rek rek.
The conservative leader has always ruled out that agreement, arguing that Nigel Farage’s party is trying to destroy the conservatives.
In a filtered recording obtained by Sky News, Jenrick said that the “struggle” against work in the next general elections to be “united” and was “decided” to “unite this coalition.”
Libs’ work and Democrats, who urged Badenoch to fire his former leadership rival of Frontbench Tory for contradicting her, but Badenoch’s spokesman did not insist that there were no differences between the subject.
“Kemi Badenoch has perfectly made clear that there will be absolutely no electoral pact with the reform.
“If you really read the words of the Secretary of Justice of the Shadow, he is saying that he is working to defeat the reform. The coalition he is talking about is or voters in the center of the right and join them,” the spokesman told journalists.
When asked if Badenoch considered Jenrick as a “team player,” the spokesman said: “Yes, the shadow cabinet is a team that works well.”
He said that Badenoch not aware of Jenrick’s comments before Sky obtained, but that it was “demonstrable -it” that the right is not “united” and that the conservatives needed to recover millions of voters of reform uk.
And he responded to Badenoch’s claims, who beat Jenrick to the Tory Crown in a vote of the members last November, she should “stop it” to write articles and speeches that went beyond his ministerial letter in the shadow.
“It is fine for the members of the shadow cabinet and the parliamentarians talk about things that are in the advance of the conservative party,” he told reporters.
The spokesman’s comments occurred after the questions of a burning prime minister, in which Badenoch attacked Sir Keir Starmer for lacking the “balls” to say what he thought he absorbed the transgender problem.
The prime minister replied, saying that no Tory parliamentarian thought that she would be the conservative leader in the next general elections.
He added that Jenrick, who was absent from the camera, was “plotting”, and that would be “fighting for the bones of Tory’s party” with Nigel Farage, who said “would eat Tory’s party for breakfast.”
In the recording in the center of the controversy, which was held in March this year at a local Tory event, Jenick can be listened to how the reform of the United Kingdom can be difficult for her party.
“You go to a general choice, where the nightmare scenario is that Keir Starmer navigates through the middle when the results of the two parts are demolished.
“I don’t know about you, but I’m not prepared for that to happen.”
He added: “I want the fight to join. And so, in one way or another, I am determined to do that and gather this coalition and make sure we also join as a nation.”
A source close to Jenrick told Pa Media on Wednesday that she had no differentials with the leader of her party to rule out a pact with the reform.
“Rob’s comments are about voters and not parties.
“It is clear that we have to put the reform of business and make the conservatives the natural home for all those who are on the right, rebuilding the coalition of voters that we had in 2019 and that they can have again.
“But it has no illusions how difficult that is: we have to show that over time we have changed and can be trusted again.”