
LONDON — Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the UK’s Conservative Party, has launched a blistering critique of current British energy policies, drawing direct parallels between the UK’s current political trajectory and the economic mismanagement she witnessed during her childhood in Nigeria.
Speaking in an expansive interview with The Spectator, Badenoch argued that abundant natural resources mean nothing without competent governance. She warned that the United Kingdom risks sliding into “third-world” economic instability if it continues to pursue top-down state interventions.
The Paradox of Plenty
Badenoch, who lived in Nigeria until her return to the UK as a teenager, revealed that her upbringing deeply hardened her political convictions and shaped her staunch free-market views.
“My belief that we need to drill our oil and gas comes from growing up in a country… Nigeria is an oil-producing country, [but] never had electricity,” Badenoch stated. “It is very easy to have resources under the ground, but stupid public policy means that you can’t use it.”
Despite being one of Africa’s largest oil producers, Nigeria has historically struggled with a fragile national grid, leaving millions of its citizens reliant on private generators for reliable power—a reality Badenoch experienced firsthand.
Drawing Lines to Military Dictatorships
The Tory leader did not hold back in her assessment of the UK’s current approach to net-zero and energy security. She explicitly compared the strategies of Ed Miliband, the UK’s Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, to the centralized economic planning of Nigerian military juntas from the 1980s and 1990s.
“I see quite a lot of what Ed Miliband is doing as being very much like what the Nigerian military dictatorships were doing,” Badenoch remarked. “‘The government is going to take control, we know what’s best, we’re going to redistribute’. Stupid ideas which eventually just bankrupt the country.”
Preserving British Culture and Wealth
Expressing concern over the UK’s long-term direction, Badenoch emphasized that Western wealth and institutional stability are often taken for granted. She framed her political mission as a defense against national decline.
“Fundamentally, my views about how we should run our country come from growing up in a place that was very poor. You grow up in a third-world country and you look at why it is termed ‘third world,’ and I don’t want that to happen here,” she said.
Calling for a cultural and political revival, Badenoch urged British lawmakers to appreciate the nation’s historical advantages rather than implementing policies that she believes could mirror the systemic failures of developing states.
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