Gransnet forums

News & politics

“Half truths & many lies: Fact checking Kemi Badenoch”

(128 Posts)
growstuff Sat 15-Feb-25 23:56:45

As I've written before, she is my MP and I've known since she was selected that her claimed background was a sham. I would like to add to the above that after she had finished her A levels in the UK, she did a private "apprenticeship", which was actually an expensive networking exercise for young people aiming for elite careers. She's now deleted all mention of her "gap year" from social media accounts. Her family was/is a prominent family in Lagos.

MayBee70 Sat 15-Feb-25 23:44:55

They always intended for her to come here anyway, didn’t they, which is why her mother flew here to give birth to her so she could claim British citizenship?

LizzieDrip Sat 15-Feb-25 23:03:42

From punchng.com/half-truths-many-lies-fact-checking-kemi-badenoch/?amp

Here’s an extract:

Claim 1
According to Ms Badenoch…
“I grew up in a poor country, and I watched my relatively wealthy family become poorer and poorer despite working harder and harder as their money disappeared with inflation. I came back to the UK at age 16 with my father’s last £100 in the hope of a better life …”

Findings
“Multiple sources revealed that Kemi spent her early years in Lagos, Nigeria, where she attended the International School Lagos, a private institution, and graduated in 1996 before returning permanently to the United Kingdom at 16.

In a tweet dated January 22, 2025, a Lagos-based tax consultant, Kayode Okunola, accused Badenoch of distorting her family’s history to fit a narrative of hardship.

“Dear @KemiBadenoch, stop lying about your background. You were never from a poor family! Your grandmother, ‘Iya Ondo,’ was a prominent lace and damask merchant on Kosoko Street in Balogun Market. Your mum was a professor at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital. Your dad owned his clinic, your uncle was a dentist, and your aunt was among the Nigerian students recruited from the USA to the Central Bank of Nigeria,” Okunola wrote.
“If you were poor, what happened to the rest of us who prayed to come from families like yours? Your claims mock the memories of those who genuinely struggled without the opportunities your privileged upbringing afforded you. Please stop!” he added.

In an interview with Sunday PUNCH, Okunola further shed light on the privileged status of Kemi’s family.
He said, “I knew her family well. My family and the Adegokes attended the same church—St. John’s Anglican Church, Aroloya, Lagos Island. Her grandmother, ‘Iya Ondo,’ was a renowned figure in Balogun Market, selling premium fabrics, which weren’t for poor people. Her father owned Iwosan Hospital in Surulere, and her mother was a prominent figure in the Physiology Department at the University of Lagos.
“In those days, only a select few could afford private schools like the International School Lagos, where Kemi studied. It was a school for the children of professors and the elite. Most of us attended government schools. Kemi’s claims of poverty are simply untrue. Her narrative misrepresents her background and mocks the struggles of genuinely underprivileged Nigerians.”

Well, well!