Kemi Badenoch: Minimum wage in the UK harms businesses

Kemi Badenoch said that UK minimum wage and maternity leave rules were among the regulations “overburdening business” and causing certain companies to close. She was trying to gain momentum during the four day beauty parade of Conservative Leadership candidates. Badenoch is a former Business Secretary who warned the country that it was being faced with “excessive taxes”. . . During an hour-long session of questions on the mainstage at the party’s conference in Birmingham, the speaker said: “excessive regulation and excessive government intervention”.

On Monday, she and her fellow Tory candidate Tom Tugendhat took turns being quizzed. Their rivals James Cleverly & Robert Jenrick, the frontrunner will be taking part in a similar session on Tuesday. The four candidates will give two 20-minute speeches back to back on Wednesday, as the event closes. Badenoch, on the first day at the conference, caused confusion by saying that maternity pays were “excessive”, then insisting this was not her opinion.

She appeared to double-down on her position Monday. She told delegates that a café in my constituency had closed, and its owner said she couldn’t pay any wages anymore. I cannot afford the minimum wage. I cannot afford to pay for my employees’ [paid] maternity leave ]’.”

Badenoch continued: “We are overburdening businesses. We overburden them with regulations and taxes. “People are no longer starting new businesses because they’re afraid.” In a pamphlet published the same afternoon she lamented the growth of a “bureaucratic” class that was socially intolerant, and caused an economic slowdown.

She was once considered the frontrunner in the race for the post of Rishi Sunak, after the Conservatives lost the election in July. However, Jenrick has now overtaken her, as he has chosen to appeal to the anti-immigration party. Badenoch said on Monday that there “needs to be a limit” on net legal immigration, but cautioned it must be designed so that it “cannot easily be manipulated”.

She said the cap should prevent “bad people” from leaving the country and “good people” from entering, while suggesting that the Tories apologize for their failure to control migration during their 14 years at power. She said that she would “if necessary” leave the European Convention on Human Rights.

Candidates have been arguing over whether Britain should remain a member of the ECHR. The ECHR was founded by Britain. Only Jenrick has so far explicitly pledged to pull the UK from the ECHR, saying on Monday that it was “leave-or-die” for the party.

Jenrick, speaking earlier at a campaign breakfast rally, claimed that the ECHR made it “impossible to deport terrorists” or remove “dangerous criminals from abroad like rapists, murderers and pedophiles” off British streets.

Jenrick claimed in a video released on Monday that UK Special Forces “kill rather than capture terrorists” because their lawyers told them that the European Court would release them if they were caught. A military official called it an “outrageous charge”. The Ministry of Defence didn’t immediately respond to our request for a comment.

Jenrick, who will be answering questions on stage on Tuesday, said that the UK had to “get immigration done”, and warned the country it could not discuss other pressing topics such as education, health, or the economy until this “running ailment” was addressed.

In his question and answer session, Tugendhat, the former minister of security, who is considered the outsider to the leadership race, made a passionate conference presentation, which repeatedly referenced his combat experience in Afghanistan, Iraq, and other countries.

Tugendhat admitted his lack of ministerial experience but joked he wouldn’t dwell on his rivals’ lack of combat experiences: “They served other ways,” said he. He said that his opponents would be required to “own” their records in office.

Tugendhat, a former Remainer who is now a centrist, used messages to win over the Tory base. He promised a legal migration cap of 100,000 per year, lowered taxes, and lifted the ban on grammar schools. The former intelligence officer refused to accept, however, that the party must follow the policies of Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage, saying: “My duty is to reformate the Conservative party, and not to become Reform.”

Audiences responded more positively to his session than Badenoch’s. In the contest for Tory leadership, MPs will eliminate two more candidates. The final pair of candidates will then be put to party members via an online vote. Results are announced on November 2, 2018. Jenrick was the winner of the first round of voting by MPs. Badenoch received 28, Cleverly received 21, and Tugendhat received 21.

Richard Fuller, Tory chairman, said that there would “no changes” in the timing of the Budget. This means that the new leader won’t be in place for the Budget presented by Rachel Reeves at the end of October. Liz Truss, who served as Prime Minister for 49 days, said that she would have performed better in the General Election if she was still at the helm.

She said: When I was at No 10, Reform polled at 3 percent; by the election it had risen to 18 percent.

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