Eastern Eye (UK)

Sunak becoming leader shows how party has changed, says former Tory chairman

- By LORD ANDREW FELDMAN

I WAS absolutely delighted to see Rishi Sunak become our first British Asian prime minister and leader of the Conservati­ve party this week.

Not only is Rishi an extraordin­arily talented and thoroughly decent man, but he is the embodiment of a seismic and hugely positive shift in attitudes in both the party and wider society.

At the Diwali celebratio­n and launch event of Conservati­ve Friends of India in 2014, David Cameron declared that the Conservati­ve were the “the first party to have a woman prime minister …. the first party to have a Jewish

prime minister … and when I look at the talent behind me, I think we are going to be the first party to have a British Indian prime minister.”

He repeated this sentiment at the GG2 Leadership and Diversity awards in the same year, saying that “one day I want to hear that title prime minister followed by a British Asian name.”

I doubt David, or indeed any of us in the party, imagined it would come about quite so soon.

When I became CEO, and later chairman, of the party, I was struck by the fact that we attracted so little support from the British Asian community. This was in spite of the fact that so many Asians shared the party’s values of hard work, aspiration, the centrality of family, and a sense of wider communal obligation.

When I asked my friend, Dolar Popat, why that was the case, he explained that the problem was not one of ideology but of engagement. The party needed to make much more of an effort to connect with all elements of the Asian community and to ‘smile more’.

So, with that in mind, and with the support of David Cameron,

we set about a programme of extensive engagement with the Asian community. We supported the establishm­ent-linked groups including Conservati­ve Friends of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. We actively encouraged applicatio­ns from British Asians to the candidates list and supported them through the process. We added regular visits to temples, mosques and gurdwaras to our itinerarie­s, and spent nearly as much time on Zee TV as on the BBC.

I remember being thrilled when in 2015, our efforts were rewarded with far higher levels of support in the Asian community than had been seen in previous elections. I also remember taking particular pride in the fact that a rising young star, Rishi Sunak, was selected to replace William Hague in Richmond Yorkshire, at that time the safest Conservati­ve seat in the country. This demonstrat­ed to me just how

much the party had changed. In fact, as Rishi recently reminded me, I was so delighted I invited him in for a cup of tea and a chat.

I wish Rishi and his new cabinet the very best of luck in seeking to steady the ship of state and to restore the reputation of the Conservati­ve party for responsibl­e, fair-minded and compassion­ate government. How appropriat­e that his appointmen­t coincides with Diwali, one of the greatest festivals in the Hindu faith, and I hope he is able to find some time to celebrate the festival as he embarks on his momentous premiershi­p.

Lord Feldman was chairman of the Conservati­ve party from 2010 to 2016. He is principal of Andrew Feldman Associates.

 ?? ?? INCLUSION EFFORTS: Lord Andrew Feldman
INCLUSION EFFORTS: Lord Andrew Feldman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom