This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28730274
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Baroness Warsi warns Tories over attracting ethnic minorities | Baroness Warsi warns Tories over attracting ethnic minorities |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Former Conservative chairman Baroness Warsi says her party will not win the next election unless it does more to attract ethnic minority voters. | |
She resigned as a government minister over the UK's policy on Gaza last week but has now broadened her criticisms. | She resigned as a government minister over the UK's policy on Gaza last week but has now broadened her criticisms. |
Lady Warsi told the Sunday Times and Independent on Sunday the Tories had left it "a little late" to woo ethnic minorities for the next election. | Lady Warsi told the Sunday Times and Independent on Sunday the Tories had left it "a little late" to woo ethnic minorities for the next election. |
Tory MP Alec Shelbrooke said her criticisms would soon be forgotten. | |
Lady Warsi became the first female Muslim cabinet minister when David Cameron became prime minister in 2010. | |
'Shifting' leadership | 'Shifting' leadership |
In her newspaper interviews she also criticised "bitchy" male colleagues and repeated her anger at the government's handling of the fighting in Gaza. | In her newspaper interviews she also criticised "bitchy" male colleagues and repeated her anger at the government's handling of the fighting in Gaza. |
She said: "I will be out there, vocally fighting for an outright Conservative majority. | She said: "I will be out there, vocally fighting for an outright Conservative majority. |
"But the electoral reality is that we will not win outright Conservative majorities until we start attracting more of the ethnic vote." | "But the electoral reality is that we will not win outright Conservative majorities until we start attracting more of the ethnic vote." |
Lady Warsi said she was one of David Cameron's earliest supporters in 2005, thinking: "This is a guy who gets today's Britain. He's a new kind of Conservative. He's comfortable with today's Britain." | |
But she added: "I think the party has shifted since then. The party leadership has shifted since then. I think over time it will be a regressive move because we have to appeal to all of Britain, not just because it's morally the right thing to do... but because it is an electoral reality. | But she added: "I think the party has shifted since then. The party leadership has shifted since then. I think over time it will be a regressive move because we have to appeal to all of Britain, not just because it's morally the right thing to do... but because it is an electoral reality. |
"We've probably left it a little too late to take this part of the electorate seriously." | "We've probably left it a little too late to take this part of the electorate seriously." |
The Conservatives won a 36% share of the vote at the last election, but gained the support of just 16% of ethnic minority voters. | |
Israeli relationship | Israeli relationship |
Rejecting criticisms that she was not up to her job, Lady Warsi said she was a "brown, working-class woman from the North. People have been telling me I'm not good enough since the day I was born". | Rejecting criticisms that she was not up to her job, Lady Warsi said she was a "brown, working-class woman from the North. People have been telling me I'm not good enough since the day I was born". |
She also said that "some of the bitchiest women I've ever met in my life are the men in politics". | She also said that "some of the bitchiest women I've ever met in my life are the men in politics". |
She called on the government to "recognise Palestine as a state" and impose an arms embargo on Israel. | |
She also criticised Chancellor George Osborne and chief whip Michael Gove for not using their "very, very close" relations with the Israeli government to help end the hostilities. | She also criticised Chancellor George Osborne and chief whip Michael Gove for not using their "very, very close" relations with the Israeli government to help end the hostilities. |
"What is the point of having that strong relationship if you can't use it to move them to a position which is in their interests and our interests?" | "What is the point of having that strong relationship if you can't use it to move them to a position which is in their interests and our interests?" |
She also rejected Mr Osborne's claim that her resignation had been "unnecessary". | She also rejected Mr Osborne's claim that her resignation had been "unnecessary". |
She said: "My actions would not have been necessary if he had done what he should have done, which is pick up the phone to people he is incredibly close to and say: 'It's unnecessary for you to meet your ends by taking out power stations, taking out homes, taking out schools and killing kids on beaches.'" | |
'Who was Lady Warsi?' | |
Mr Shelbrooke, who is the MP for Elmet and Rothwell, said Lady Warsi had "embarrassed herself" and her criticisms would "quickly fizzle out". | |
He said: "I think within a week, 'Who was Lady Warsi?' will be the question. She has ended her career in many ways." | |
He went on to describe Lady Warsi's comments as "unfortunate", and said that by "spreading out into areas of different criticism" she had undermined the real reason for her resignation. | |
"Isn't it best to step down on a point of principle, but don't you embarrass yourself if you start launching into a tirade about many other things, when you come from a position of having never held elected office," he said. | |
BBC political correspondent Chris Mason said there was a "big gap" between the Conservative Party's overall appeal and its appeal to ethnic minorities. | |
He said: "This is not the kind of thing that they [the Conservative Party] would want her to be saying in public just a short distance away from the election campaign." | |
The Conservative Party said it would not comment on Lady Warsi's newspaper interviews at the moment. | |
Lady Warsi stood for election to the Commons in her home town of Dewsbury in 2005 but lost to Labour. She was appointed to the House of Lords in 2007. |