Try GOLD - Free

Can Kemi checkmate her rivals for the Tory crown?

Daily Express

|

July 30, 2024

As she bids to succeed Rishi Sunak, biographer Lord Ashcroft reveals how the junior chess champion's early life in Lagos shaped her

- Lord Ashcroft

Can Kemi checkmate her rivals for the Tory crown?

NIGERIA has long been regarded as a risky place to visit, but it would probably be difficult for many Britons to grasp just how volatile it could be when Kemi Badenoch, née Adegoke, was raised there during the final quarter of the 20th century - a politically explosive era resulting in three decades of military juntas.

After its 1970s oil boom began to peter out, almost nobody was immune to the widespread disruption that followed.

"Tipping' the police in order to go about one's daily business was considered normal and 'jungle justice' when, for example, someone caught stealing risked being doused in petrol and set on fire by a mob was not uncommon.

In one sense, growing up under a series of military regimes was second nature to Badenoch and her two younger siblings.

imageThey knew nothing other than the instability which most Nigerians endured. At the same time, her middle-class Christian family was relatively lucky because they were largely insulated from the disorder.

Her father Femi was a GP with his own clinic, her mother Feyi was an academic at the University of Lagos's College of Medicine.

The 44-year-old, who married banker Hamish Badenoch in 2012 and has three children, has said that her family was close.

Unlike the parents of some of her friends, hers remained married, providing a solid platform on which she was able to build.

They were fairly relaxed by Nigerian standards, apparently becoming known jovially as the Cosbys, after the 1980s American television comedy The Cosby Show, whose main character was a doctor in New York.

In the early 1990s, she enrolled at the co-educational International School Lagos (ISL). Taiwo Togun was one of the first friends she made there. She says Badenoch was not a rebel but she could be outspoken.

MORE STORIES FROM Daily Express

Daily Express

Daily Express

Movie hits new Heights of passion

THE latest big-screen version of Wuthering Heights opens with a condemned man’s arousal as he dies at the gallows, while a nun watches on - licking her lips.

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

When we met, we had nothing in common...

Now Strictly winners Karen and Carlos are best of friends

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

Mieka Smiles

Local Matters

time to read

3 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

Daily Express

TUI sued for £5m over Verde bugs

TRAVEL giant TUI is being sued for £5million over claims hundreds of holidaymakers at a 5-star Cape Verde hotel were hit by stomach bugs so severe that one of them died.

time to read

1 min

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

Daily Express

Brave wife saved soldier from attacker 'trying to cut off head'

A WIFE courageously came to the rescue of her British soldier husband as he was repeatedly stabbed by an attacker trying to “cut off his head like Lee Rigby”.

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

PM limps on a bit longer but wouldn't it be more honourable to quit now?

It is a sign that the end is nigh when a beleaguered Prime Minister has to beg his own backbenchers for support.

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

Starmer is 'worst PM for migrant crossings'

MORE migrants have crossed the Channel under Keir Starmer than any other Prime Minister.

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

Daily Express

Neighbour, 74, admits the manslaughter of Repair Shop star's uncle

A PENSIONER who stabbed the elderly uncle of Repair Shop star Jay Blades to death in a long-running row over a shared alleyway has admitted manslaughter.

time to read

1 min

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

National treasure

Tudor pendant saved in £3.5m museum win

time to read

1 mins

February 10, 2026

Daily Express

LET'S PUT SOCIAL MEDIA HARMS ON HOLD

Exclusive polling for the Express reveals that while smartphones remain a key safety tool for teenagers, a majority of Britons back government intervention to stop under-16s accessing addictive and damaging content

time to read

2 mins

February 10, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size