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Kemi Badenoch today insisted the Tories will not ally with Reform as she insisted she is the best person to lead the party.
While visiting broadcast studios at the Conservative conference in Manchester, Mrs. Badenoch minimized the significance of a poll indicating that nearly two-thirds of members would back a pact.
She said she would stand aside if there was anyone who could do the top job better – arguing she was ‘sacrifices’ to stay at the helm.
Mrs Badenoch also dismissed mockery of empty seats at the conference, insisting activists were in good spirits.
The comments came as Reform boasted of a string of new defections by councillors.

Touring broadcast studios at Conservative conference in Manchester, Kemi Badenoch played down a poll suggesting nearly two-thirds of members would support a pact

A YouGov survey found half of Conservative members thought Kemi Badenoch should not lead the party into the next general election
‘We need to turn our country around, and we’re the only party that can deliver that stronger economy and stronger borders that this conference is about,’ she told Times Radio.
‘If I thought someone else could do it, then I’d be taking a step back. I think that I’m the right person and I’m the best person.’
Mrs Badenoch said she was ‘making a sacrifice’ by not seeing her children ‘as much as I would like’ because ‘this job is really important’.
A poll released yesterday showed half of Conservative members thought Mrs Badenoch should not lead the party into the next general election.
The YouGov survey found 46 per cent thought Mrs Badenoch should stay in charge, while 50 per cent thought she should not.
It also showed 64 per cent supported an electoral pact with Reform.
Andrew Rosindell, the Conservative MP for Romford and a shadow foreign minister, yesterday urged his party to work with Reform to avoid the ‘calamity’ of another Labour government.
The Tory leader was grilled about the pressure – after ex-Cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg warned the Conservatives could not ‘split the right’ and win an election.
But she said: ‘I’m not splitting the right. There is no deal to be done with Reform.

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has been threatening to supplant the Tories on the right of politics
‘They want to increase welfare. This conference is about living within our means. That’s how we get a stronger economy. They want to nationalise.
‘What kind of alliance are we having with them?
‘The only thing that they have in common with us, really, is around immigration. We know that we need stronger borders, but we’ve got a plan that will work.
‘Their plan, which was copied from some announcements, I think, that we made previously – they hadn’t done the details behind it.’
Asked about the latest defections, Mrs Badenoch told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: ‘I’m always very sorry to lose people from the party, but as you can see from this conference, we are changing the Conservative Party talking about a stronger economy, stronger borders. Reform is a party that wants to spend more on welfare. We know there’s some Conservatives who agree with those policies, on increased welfare, on nationalisation and if that’s what they think is right for them, then we’re sorry to lose them. But we need to make it very clear that we are the party of fiscal responsibility.’
She added: ‘Just last year, we had MPs jumping to Labour because Labour was doing well in the polls. They’re not doing so well now.
‘There are some people who will leave because all they want to do is win elections. They don’t know what they’re winning the elections for.
‘We are making it very clear what we are doing this for. It is for the people of the United Kingdom. We want to give them a stronger economy. We want to give them stronger borders.
‘We’re the only party tough enough and competent enough to do both. It’s going to be a long journey back from a historic defeat and on very long, difficult journeys you will lose some people on the way. But if these people cannot stick with us because opposition is difficult, then they’re not going to be able to stick with us when government gets difficult.’