She also laid out how “close” the contests are between the Tories and Reform in Bexley and Bromley.
Kemi Badenoch tells The London Standard that she is ‘very optimistic’ about the Tories winning back Westminster Wandsworth and Barnet on May 7
Getty
In a wide-ranging exclusive interview with The Standard, the Conservative leader:
* Said it was becoming “fashionable” to be antisemitic at dinner parties in London and other parts of Britain.
* Blamed Iran for arson attacks on London.
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Kemi Badenoch called for more driverless Tube trains to limit strikes hitting London
Getty
Asked if the Tories will win back Westminster, Wandsworth and Barnet, which they lost to Labour in 2022, Mrs Badenoch said: “Everybody can see they have all got worse since Labour took over.
“So I’m very optimistic.”
“So there’s a long journey back but we are making inroads and I would love to see Barnet, Westminster and Wandsworth come back.”
The Tory leader then turned her fire onto Mr Farage: “He’s already triumphant, proclaiming that he’s already won Havering.
“That’s quite an arrogant attitude to take.
“We trust voters. We know that many people don’t make up their mind until the day.
“We know a multi-party era means all sorts of things can happen. So we’re fighting for every vote.”
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch out campaigning in Bexley
PA
On a visit to Bexley, she pointed to the “chaos that Reform has created” just over the border in Kent.
“They’ve lost so many of their councillors, they promised savings with their Doge (Department of Government Efficiency), they didn’t find any savings, because guess what? Conservatives had already done that,” she said.
“Instead, they whacked up council tax after promising to cut it and gave themselves more money for allowances.”
Seeking to win over voters from across the political spectrum in the largely two-way contests in Bexley and Bromley, she added: “People who want Conservatives must come out and vote Conservative, and those people who don’t want Reform must come out and vote Conservative as well.”
“What Tony is talking about is the change from two-party to multi-party,” Mrs Badenoch said, in an apparent sign of how tough it may be for the Tories at the polls in just a few days’ time.
“When it was binary, you had a different threshold. But when there’s so many parties fighting for these seats, the threshold changes.”
Two Jewish men were stabbed in an incident in Golders Green, north London
PA Wire
“It is becoming more and more acceptable to be antisemitic at dinner parties across the country,” she said.
“People think it’s becoming fashionable again. We need to make it shameful to be antisemitic.
“Lots of people are treating this as a fad. The new faddish thing to discuss is how you’re anti-Zionist, which is often a cover for antisemitism.”
She stressed that Jewish people in Britain are “under siege” with antisemitism spiralling.
She partly blamed the Tehran regime, with MI5 and counter-terrorism police having thwarted 20 terror plots linked to Iran in just a year.
“What we’re seeing is actually stoking of antisemitism by countries like Iran,” she said.
She also called for a moratorium on pro-Gaza marches which she said “are more anti-Jewish than they are pro-Palestine people”.
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Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has called for a moratorium on pro-Palestinian marches
Getty
On transport, Mrs Badenoch was clear how she would seek to stop London being blighted by strikes by the militant RMT union: “Driverless trains don’t strike.”
“A lot of the young people who work for me are saying that they’re finding it harder and harder to rent.”
On tackling crime in London, she backed more stop-and-search, more live facial recognition in crime hot spots, “immediate justice” with on-the-spot fines for graffiti and anti-social behaviour to “take back our streets,” and 10,000 more police officers nationwide, including many in London.
She stressed that Conservative councils seek to keep council tax “as low as possible” but warned that “cuts will be harder” to ensure money is “spent wisely”.
To address the cost-of-living, the Tories are pledging to cut energy bills by £200 by scrapping Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband’s green taxes.
She added: “The only way that we can make sure that we get the opportunity and diminish the threat is by making this a good country for AI companies to invest.
“We can help create the guardrails around that, but that, again, is energy.
“We’re not going to get data centres here if we don’t have cheaper energy.
“Other countries like the US and China are going to get streets ahead unless we sort out our energy problem.”
Sir Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch at Prime Minister’s Questions
ParliamentTV
Mrs Badenoch, like Sir Keir Starmer, had a shaky start at the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions clashes but both of them have improved at the despatch box.
“I enjoy it because I’m able to be the voice of the whole country, telling Keir Starmer how terrible a job he’s doing,” she said before heading off again on the campaign trail.