Kemi Badenoch, born of Nigerian parentage, has joined the race to become Prime Minister of UK and leader of the Conservative Party.

Her intention to contest is coming on the heels of the resignation on July 7, of Boris Johnson as UK Prime Minister.

Badenoch had told The Times that she wanted  “a limited government focused on the essentials”

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She was also among those who had resigned from Johnson’s government.

She has promised “ to lower taxes and have a tight spending discipline”

“Without change the Conservative Party, Britain and the western world will continue to drift. Aggressive and assertive rivals will outpace us economically and out-manoeuvre us internationally,” she wrote.

“It won’t be enough just to offer better management of relative decline. We need the discipline to transform government into an effective and streamlined machine for delivery, not a piggy bank for pressure groups.”

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According to Badenoch, she is contesting because she wants “to tell the truth”.

“It’s the truth that will set us free,” she added.

She also said “people are exhausted by platitudes and empty rhetoric”, adding that an “intellectual grasp of what is required to run the country” is missing.

Badenoch was born in Wimbledon, London, to parents of Nigerian origin, The Cable reports

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She studied computer systems engineering at the University of Sussex and worked as a software engineer at Logica. She also worked at the Royal Bank of Scotland Group as a systems analyst.

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In 2012, Badenoch contested but lost a seat on the London assembly. Three years later, she was selected as a London assembly member.

From February 2020to September 2021, she was appointed exchequer secretary to the treasury, and was parliamentary under-secretary of state at the department of education between July 2019 and February 2020.

In February 2020, she was appointed minister of state for equalities — a position she held until July 6, 2022.

During her time as equalities minister, Badenoch was criticized by members of the government’s LGBT+ advisory panel over delays in banning conversion therapy.

She quit as a minister alongside four colleagues through a joint-letter.

Badenoch has been publicly endorsed by some members of parliament including Neil O’Brien, MP for Harborough; Michael Gove, MP for Surrey Heath; and Gareth Bacon, MP for Orpington.

Other persons contesting the prime minister position include Rishi Sunak, former chancellor; Sajid Javid, former health secretary; Ben Wallace, current defence secretary; and Jeremy Hunt, former foreign secretary.