The new Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, has said the Partygate scandal was “overblown” as she rejected the need to “churn over” everything that went wrong with previous Tory prime ministers.
Badenoch won the party leadership on Saturday and said she was going to be “honest” about what went wrong in the party under her predecessors.
However, speaking on the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg programme, the new party leader said Boris Johnson was a “great prime minister” and that he had fallen into a “trap” of breaking Covid rules that should never have been brought in.
She said she had resigned during his leadership because of “serious issues” but not because of the Partygate scandal, which was “overblown”.
Asked whether the public was wrong to be upset about Partygate, when Johnson and others in Downing Street did not stick to the Covid rules they brought in, Badenoch said: “No, they were not wrong to be upset about Partygate. The problem was that we should not have criminalised everyday activities the way that we did. People going out for walks, all of them having fixed-penalty notices, that was what ended up creating a trap for Boris Johnson.”
Badenoch said that “we need to be honest, that we got things wrong”. But she added: “What I don’t want to do this morning is start listing all of the things that we got wrong. There’s plenty of time to do that. What I’m here to do is set out how there’s going to be a change under my leadership.”
She said it was not helpful to “churn over” every incident that had happened in 14 years and there would be a “postmortem” on it in time. The new Conservative leader said the main overarching thing that had gone wrong was a “loss of public trust”.
“Promises on immigration and on tax were not kept and that is something that we need to change,” she said. “Making promises without a plan, as we have seen with Rachel Reeves and what they had in their manifesto, will create a breakdown in the public trust.”
In response to the interview, Ellie Reeves, the chair of the Labour party, said: “Listening to Kemi Badenoch dismiss Partygate as ‘overblown’ will add insult to injury for families across Britain who followed the rules, missing loved one’s deaths and family funerals, whilst her colleagues partied in Downing Street.
“Kemi Badenoch must explain where the cuts to state schools will bite after promising unfunded tax breaks for private schools – no wonder she refused to condemn Liz Truss whose mini-budget crashed the economy.
“The leader may have changed but, on her first day in the job, Kemi Badenoch has proved three times that the Tories haven’t listened and they haven’t learnt.”