Daily Mail

Contest that proves Tories are the REAL party of diversity – while race-obsessed Labour supporters just stoke division

- by Esther Krakue ESTHER KRAKUE is a writer and broadcaste­r.

WHEN you give people opportunit­ies in a meritocrat­ic system which encourages the best of everyone, the cream always rises to the top.

So, as a Ghanaian Brit, I am delighted when I look at the sheer diversity of the candidates who have been vying to be leader of the Conservati­ve Party, and our next Prime Minister.

Of the 11 who initially entered the contest, six were from ethnic minority background­s — from Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch to Rishi Sunak, Nadhim Zahawi, Sajid Javid and lesser-known backbenche­r Rehman Chishti. That’s more than half, all with first-hand experience of what Britain is really like for people from immigrant families.

Striking

And of the eight candidates who made it on to the ballot yesterday, four aren’t white.

Equally striking, four of them — Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch, Liz Truss and Penny Mordaunt — are women.

It is a line-up that affirms what I have always believed about Britain: this is a country that offers everyone a chance to succeed, and that has the right approach to diversity.

Not that those on the Labour benches would let you believe it. I can’t wait to see their embarrassm­ent if the Tories elect a third woman to lead the country, when there has never been a female Labour leader, let alone Prime Minister.

And what will the selfrighte­ous, minority- obsessed Opposition think if the Tories, after giving Britain its first ethnic-minority Home Secretarie­s and Chancellor­s, now elect their first non-white Prime Minister?

For, according to the increasing­ly narrow categories imposed by the Left, I, as a ‘woman of colour’ (not a term I use myself), must surely be an oppressed victim — and, more importantl­y, a victim of Tory racists.

But — and here’s the great irony — if I were to voice an opinion that didn’t echo this Leftist orthodoxy, I would be immediatel­y ‘cancelled’ and subjected to vile abuse that is often in itself deeply racist.

If they didn’t know it already, this is something many of the leadership candidates will have discovered in recent days.

For example, as The Mail on Sunday reported, prominent Remainer barrister and staunch Left-winger Jolyon Maugham tweeted Mr Sunak on Friday, asking: ‘Do you think the members of your Party are ready to select a brown man, Rishi?’

He has also retweeted a post that, in an attempt to bash the Tories’ pro-Brexit mandate, shockingly calls Suella Braverman a ‘Brexit jihadist’.

Maugham’s lack of selfawaren­ess would be comical if it weren’t so sickening. For in his desperatio­n to paint the Tory Party as a bunch of racist bigots, he has revealed his own hateful prejudices.

Political activist and Leftwing lawyer Dr Shola MosShogbam­imu has also shown her true colours. In one particular­ly vile tweet, she wrote: ‘Kemi Badenoch is a GIFT for racists & White supremacy — [she] uses her Black identity to delegitimi­se the systemic oppression she claims [the] UK is falsely accused of & now uses Black minority identity to run for Prime Minister. A Black Racial- Gatekeepin­g Executione­r of Tory racist policies.’

Dr Mos- Shogbamimu also accused Badenoch of ‘powergrabb­ing’ and told her to ‘crawl back into her mother’ for ‘whitewashi­ng [the] British Empire’.

She has similarly taken aim at Nadhim Zahawi, also describing him as a ‘shameless racial gatekeeper’.

Meanwhile, Marxist campaigner Ash Sarkar has mocked the candidates’ humble beginnings, tweeting on Monday: ‘Every BAME Tory’s leadership pitch starts with, “My parents came to this country with NOTHING but a copy of Atlas Shrugged in their pockets . . .”.’

I learned of this hatred in the Left about three years ago, when I wrote my first piece for the Mail, in which I questioned the motives of the controvers­ial Black Lives Matter organisati­on in the UK.

The online reaction was horrific. I was called every name imaginable and bombarded with threats. One person, a total stranger, hoped that I would be ‘barren’ — apparently in the twisted belief that this sentiment would advance the cause of black British people.

Worse, my mother’s phone number was published online and people were encouraged to stalk my family.

One of the most common insults I hear used against Right-wing ethnic minorities is the word ‘coconut’, implying that someone is ‘brown on the outside, white on the inside’.

I’d hope that any ten-year-old would be disgusted to hear such a slur in the playground, but apparently it’s commonplac­e in socialist circles.

Indeed, much of this abuse is in plain view. Consider, for instance, a cartoon in The Guardian from two years ago, drawn by Steve Bell, depicting Home Secretary Priti Patel as a fat bull with horns and a ring through her nose.

Fixated

It strikes me that, far from being progressiv­e, the Left are actually the ones stuck in the past and fixated on the colour of people’s skin. In contrast, the Right are far happier simply to accept individual­s for who they are, whatever colour they may be.

How else do you explain the impressive­ly diverse array of Tory candidates who lined up to compete to be our next Prime Minister?

It is no coincidenc­e that Labour wants to drag us decades into the past by refusing to condemn the strike and work-to-rule plans of unions threatenin­g us with a Summer of Discontent. For despite all its claims of being reformist and modernisin­g, it refuses to let go of old shibboleth­s.

After the Tory infighting of recent months, Labour ought to be far further ahead in the polls. Instead, it is tying itself in knots over irrelevant ‘Westminste­r bubble’ stories or woke minority issues, leaving most ordinary Britons baffled and despairing in the midst of a cost-of-living crisis.

Meanwhile, when it comes to policy areas voters actually care about — such as immigratio­n and Brexit — Labour MPs accuse the Tories of being the ones who are reactionar­y and out of touch with the public mood.

An argument made all the more ridiculous when you consider that Labour’s own front bench is notably pale — and completely stale.

Let me be clear: I would never advocate for quotas or positive discrimina­tion. On the contrary, those guilt-ridden policies are guaranteed to suppress real meritocrac­y.

Inspiratio­nal

Frankly, I couldn’t care less if the entire Cabinet consisted of middle-aged white men — or Millennial Asian women, for that matter — as long as they were demonstrab­ly the best people for the job.

In reality, of course, the best never come from just one background. We can see this clearly in the Tory Party, which has enjoyed 12 years in power.

And we can see it equally clearly in the line-up for the leadership contest, with candidates such as Kemi Badenoch, who worked at McDonald’s to fund her university studies, and Rishi Sunak, whose campaign video tells the inspiratio­nal story of his grandmothe­r coming to Britain from India in the hope of a better life.

Conservati­sm offers a natural home to aspiration and equal opportunit­y. And the Party nurtures those who want to put their talents to work. Because, as this diverse range of candidates proves, hard work reaps dividends.

And that is what it means to be British.

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