[ad_1]
Cameron dismisses suggestions Greensill lobbying record, or being in Lords, make him wrong choice for foreign secretary
David Cameron has recorded a pooled clip with Chris Mason, the BBC’s political editor, which is now being broadcast.
He says he hopes his six years as PM will give him useful contacts and relationships that will enable him to help the PM in his new job. He says he wants to support the PM.
Asked about the Treasury committee’s report saying his lobbying for Greensill Capital showed a lack of judgment, Cameron says the most important job he has done since leaving the Commons is to be president of the Alzheimer’s Society. He says he has resigned from that and all his other jobs so he can focus on being foreign secretary.
Asked again about the Treasury committee’s report, he says that was dealt with at the time. He says he is now focused on his one new job.
Q: What do you say to the speaker, who has raised concerns that you cannot be held to account in the Commons?
Cameron says he will be held to account in the Lords. Andrew Mitchell, the development minister, will answer questions in the Commons, he says. He says he will answer questions from select committees. And the government will be accountable at the general election, he says.
Key events
-
Closing summary
-
Johnson loyalist Andrea Jenkyns submits no confidence letter in Sunak
-
Esther McVey returns to cabinet as minister without portfolio
-
Esther McVey reportedly going to Cabinet Office ‘to tackle wokery’
-
No 10 implies Braverman sacked over ‘issues around language’, not policy
-
Cameron dismisses suggestions Greensill lobbying record, or being in Lords, make him wrong choice for foreign secretary
-
Greg Hands demoted from Tory chair to trade minister, and John Glen becomes paymaster general
-
Lee Rowley appointed new housing minister
-
Environmental groups welcome departure of Thérèse Coffey
-
Wes Streeting taunts Tory MPs in Commons, saying Sunak thought none of them good enough to be foreign secretary
-
Hoyle to explore how MPs can question Cameron as foreign secretary – and how one solution was floated in 2010
-
Campaigners says it’s ‘shambolic’ UK about to get its 16th housing minister since 2010
-
Cameron’s appointment means Sunak likely to shelve talk of leaving ECHR, says Jo Johnson
-
Laura Trott appointed chief secretary to the Treasury
-
Victoria Atkins promoted to health secretary
-
Richard Holden becomes new Conservative party chair
-
Steve Barclay demoted from health secretary to environment secretary
-
Rachel Maclean says she is ‘disappointed’ about being sacked as housing minister
-
Precedents for ex-PMs returning to cabinet, and foreign secretaries sitting in the Lords
-
Cameron’s appointment as foreign secretary triggers backlash among some Tories
-
Thérèse Coffey resigns as environment secretary, saying it is ‘right time’ for her to leave governmnet
-
European ex-PMs who went on to become foreign secretary welcome Cameron to their ranks
-
Labour says reshuffle shows Sunak’s claim to be offering change is ‘laughable’
-
Rees-Mogg claims sacking Braverman will make it harder for Tories to win next election
-
Jesse Norman says he has resigned as transport minister
-
Appointment of Cameron as foreign secretary ‘act of desperation’, says Labour
-
Cameron says as foreign secretary he wants to focus on supporting allies and strengthening partnerships
-
Three things we’ve learned from Sunak’s reshuffle so far
-
Jeremy Hunt staying as chancellor, No 10 confirms
-
David Cameron appointed next foreign secretary, with seat in House of Lords
-
James Cleverly confirmed as new home secretary
-
Braverman says she will have ‘more to say in due course’, implying she does not plan to accept her sacking quietly
-
Nick Gibb says he is standing down as schools standards minister
-
David Cameron seen arriving at No 10
-
James Cleverly ‘appointed home secretary’
-
Neil O’Brien stands down as junior health minister to spend more time on constituency work
-
Suella Braverman sacked as home secretary after comments over policing of protests
-
Suella Braverman sacked from post as home secretary
-
Sunak reshuffling cabinet today Sky News reports
-
Westminster expecting Rishi Sunak to reshuffle cabinet today
Closing summary
-
David Cameron has made a stunning political comeback as Rishi Sunak’s foreign secretary in a cabinet reshuffle in which Suella Braverman was sacked as home secretary. The prime minister, who pledged to be the “change candidate” at the Conservative conference just a month ago, turned to his centrist predecessor on Monday to help close the gap with Labour as he confirmed the ministerial team expected to lead the party into the next election.
-
Sunak moved James Cleverly, a moderate who was foreign secretary, to the Home Office, and confirmed that Jeremy Hunt would stay as chancellor, in a clear shift towards the centre ground that alarmed some on the right of the party.
-
Sunak attempted to appease the rightwing of his party by appointing Esther McVey as a Cabinet Office minister. The GB News presenter, who was one of the first to be ousted from the 2019 Conservative leadership race, is reported to have been tasked with leading the government’s anti-woke agenda, acting as a “common sense tsar”. McVey’s appointment, officially as a minister without portfolio, is one of the final moves of the prime minister’s wider reshuffle, which kicked off with Suella Braverman being sacked from his cabinet.
-
Thérèse Coffey resigned from her post as environment secretary. Downing Street released the exchange of letters between her and Rishi Sunak. Coffey, who was deputy PM under Liz Truss, says she is returning to the backbenches because it is the “right time” for her to leave government. In his letter replying to Thérèse Coffey, Rishi Sunak thanked her for her “years of dedicated ministerial service” and her friendship to him personally. She was replaced by Steve Barclay.
-
Richard Holden was made the Conservative party chair, and a minister without portfolio. He had been a junior transport minister, and replaces Greg Hands. Holden was only elected in 2019 and he represents North West Durham, which has been Labour since the 1950s. That suggests his appointment is a concession to the “red wall” faction in the party, who may feel sidelined by the reshuffle.
-
Greg Hands, the former Tory chair, was made a minister of state in the Department for Business and Trade. And John Glen, who was chief secretary to the Treasury, was made paymaster general in the Cabinet Office. Meanwhile, Lee Rowley is the new housing minister, No 10 announced. He was local government minister.
-
New health secretary Victoria Atkins signalled she would seek to resolve industrial disputes with health unions. “Our NHS matters to us all, and I look forward to working with NHS and social care colleagues to bolster services during what promises to be a very challenging winter, cut waiting lists and improve patient care,” she said.
-
Rachel Maclean, the housing minister, said she was disappointed to be sacked. She wrote: “I’ve been asked to step down from my role as Housing Minister. Disappointed and was looking forward to introducing the Renters Reform Bill to Committee tomorrow and later the Leasehold and Freehold Bill. It has been a privilege to hold the position and I wish my successor well.”
-
Meanwhile, Laura Trott was promoted from pensions minister to chief secretary to the Treasury.
-
Francis Maude, who served as Cabinet Office minister under David Cameron, has recommended streamlining the governance of the civil service in a report published on Monday after a year-long review. Lord Maude said the centre of government should be reorganised with a full-time “head of the civil service” role and policy adviser split from the role of cabinet secretary in order to implement widespread change. Describing the current government structures as “opaque”, “unclear” and “archaic”, Maude also recommended giving ministers a greater role in the appointment of some civil servants.
-
Tory MP Andrea Jenkyns – a Boris Johnson loyalist – said she has submitted a letter of no confidence in Rishi Sunak following Monday’s reshuffle. In a post on X, formerly Twitter, she said: “Enough is enough, I have submitted my vote of no confidence letter to the Chairman of the 1922. It is time for Rishi Sunak to go and replace him with a ‘real’ Conservative party leader.”
-
Downing Street implied Suella Braverman was sacked because of the tone of what she was saying, rather than because of a disagreement over policy. The press secretary said: “[The PM and Braverman] had a professional working relationship. Clearly there were some issues around language. The prime minister said he would use some of the words that she’s used before. Ultimately the prime minister reserves the right to change the team sheet at a point where he sees fit. He felt it was the right time to make some changes to his top team.”
-
Rachel Reeves is proposing to shake up Britain’s pension system as part of a three-pronged plan aimed at boosting the economy’s sluggish growth rate if Labour wins the next election. The shadow chancellor wants more of the money saved for retirement schemes to find its way into support for expanding UK businesses, and says her reforms could increase the size of the average pension pot by up to £37,000.
-
Tony Blair has let it be known that he is available if needed to help in an effort to end the growing crisis in Israel and Palestine. His office, however, denied a report in the Israeli press that he had already been offered a specific job. Blair has built extensive contacts in the Middle East, and he worked as special envoy for the Quartet – the UN, the US, the EU and Russia – after leaving No 10 in 2007, trying to build the Middle East economy.
-
The Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson was among those at a meeting of the rightwing New Conservatives group in Westminster on Monday night following Rishi Sunak’s reshuffle. Others in attendance included MPs Sir Simon Clarke, Sir John Hayes and Danny Kruger, PA Media reported. One member of the New Conservatives told the PA news agency the group was “far from pleased”.
-
Tory whip Steve Double has quit his government role to return to the backbenches. In a letter to Rishi Sunak, the MP said he informed the chief whip of his decision in September. Double said: “This is very much a personal decision based on what is right for me, as well as my family and constituents.”
Kiran Stacey
Four days ago David Cameron was having lunch with friends, including his old cabinet colleague Andrew Mitchell. If the former prime minister knew then that he would be appointed Mitchell’s boss in less than a week – the coup de grace in Monday’s dramatic government reshuffle – he did not let on.
“He didn’t mention anything about a return to government,” said one person who knows what was discussed at the lunch. “But it was clear his appetite for politics was still there.
Downing Street on Monday revealed Cameron would be taking over at the Foreign Office, in the most unexpected political return since Gordon Brown appointed Peter Mandelson as business secretary in 2008. A spokesperson said the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, had approached Cameron with the idea, though would not confirm reports that the offer was made as late as this weekend.
Cameron becomes the third former prime minister to become foreign secretary since 1900, following Arthur Balfour and Alec Douglas-Home, and the third cabinet minister in recent decades to serve from the House of Lords.
Tory whip Steve Double has quit his government role to return to the backbenches.
In a letter to Rishi Sunak, the MP said he informed the chief whip of his decision in September.
Double said: “This is very much a personal decision based on what is right for me, as well as my family and constituents.”
The Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson was among those at a meeting of the rightwing New Conservatives group in Westminster on Monday night following Rishi Sunak’s reshuffle.
Others in attendance included MPs Sir Simon Clarke, Sir John Hayes and Danny Kruger, PA Media reported.
One member of the New Conservatives told the PA news agency the group was “far from pleased”.
Between 10-12 MPs were believed to be in the parliamentary committee room.
Aletha Adu
Rishi Sunak has attempted to appease the right wing of his party by appointing Esther McVey as a Cabinet Office minister.
The GB News presenter, who was one of the first to be ousted from the 2019 Conservative leadership race, is reported to have been tasked with leading the government’s anti-woke agenda, acting as a “common sense tsar”.
McVey’s appointment, officially as a minister without portfolio, is one of the final moves of the prime minister’s wider reshuffle, which kicked off with Suella Braverman being sacked from his cabinet.
Braverman had long frustrated No 10 with her off-the-cuff comments, but she was removed on Monday for her article published in last Thursday’s Times, in which she claimed there was a “perception that senior police officers play favourites when it comes to protesters” and were tougher on rightwing extremists than pro-Palestinian “mobs”.
Patrick Wintour
Elsewhere in former prime minister news, Tony Blair has let it be known that he is available if needed to help in an effort to end the growing crisis in Israel and Palestine.
His office, however, denied a report in the Israeli press that he had already been offered a specific job.
Blair has built extensive contacts in the Middle East, and he worked as special envoy for the Quartet – the UN, the US, the EU and Russia – after leaving the British premiership in 2007, trying to build the Middle East economy.
A role for Blair would not be rejected by the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Both the EU and UN have Middle East envoys.
New health secretary Victoria Atkins signalled she would seek to resolve industrial disputes with health unions.
“Our NHS matters to us all, and I look forward to working with NHS and social care colleagues to bolster services during what promises to be a very challenging winter, cut waiting lists and improve patient care,” she said.
“I am also determined to drive forward discussions with striking unions in order to end the ongoing industrial action which has caused so much disruption to patients.”
Larry Elliott
Rachel Reeves is proposing to shake up Britain’s pension system as part of a three-pronged plan aimed at boosting the economy’s sluggish growth rate if Labour wins the next election.
The shadow chancellor wants more of the money saved for retirement schemes to find its way into support for expanding UK businesses, and says her reforms could increase the size of the average pension pot by up to £37,000.
Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, will announce plans to lift the economy’s growth rate in next week’s autumn statement but Reeves said the 25 tax increases announced by the government in recent years were evidence of its failure since 2010.
“It is because the Tories have failed to grow the economy that they are picking the pockets of ordinary working people,” she said.
Rishi Sunak said the cabinet reshuffle had built a “united team”.
In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, the prime minister said:
Today we have built a united team ready to deliver the changes this country needs for the long term.
Professionalism, integrity and experience – this is a team that will be bold in making the right decisions for our great country, not the easy ones.
Aletha Adu
Francis Maude, who served as Cabinet Office minister under David Cameron, has recommended streamlining the governance of the civil service in a report published on Monday after a year-long review.
Lord Maude said the centre of government should be reorganised with a full-time “head of the civil service” role and policy adviser split from the role of cabinet secretary in order to implement widespread change.
Describing the current government structures as “opaque”, “unclear” and “archaic”, Maude also recommended giving ministers a greater role in the appointment of some civil servants.
The government rejected his recommendations with then Cabinet Office minister Jeremy Quin noting implementing them now would “serve to detract from the focus on the prime minister’s five critical priorities”.
Quin explicitly ruled out “a significant restructure of the machinery of central government” or changes to the role of cabinet secretary.
Mike Clancy, the general secretary of the Prospect trade union, accused Maude of proposing the “politicisation” of the civil service.
He said:
While we may welcome some of Francis Maude’s proposals the idea that ministers should be able to politicise civil service appointments is simply wrong. It would remove one of the most essential founding principles which sets us apart from less effective systems of government.
David Cameron has given his first interview as the new foreign secretary – you can watch it here
Johnson loyalist Andrea Jenkyns submits no confidence letter in Sunak
Tory MP Andrea Jenkyns – a Boris Johnson loyalist – said she has submitted a letter of no confidence in Rishi Sunak following Monday’s reshuffle.
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, she said:
Enough is enough, I have submitted my vote of no confidence letter to the Chairman of the 1922. It is time for Rishi Sunak to go and replace him with a ‘real’ Conservative party leader.
In her letter to the 1922 Committee chair, Sir Graham Brady, Jenkyns said:
If it wasn’t bad enough that we have a party leader that the party members rejected, the polls demonstrate that the public reject him, and I am in full agreement. It is time for Rishi Sunak to go.
She said that forcing Boris Johnson out was “unforgivable enough”, but suggested the PM had then decided “to purge the centre-right from his cabinet and then sack Suella who was the only person in the cabinet with the balls to speak the truth of the appalling state of our streets and a two-tier policing system that leaves Jewish community in fear for their lives and safety”.
She said she submitted her no confidence letter in Sunak “to stand up and fight for true Conservatism”.
Transport minister Huw Merriman suggested Rishi Sunak’s cabinet is no longer made up of anyone who got their job thanks to the “political machinations of leadership contests” after Suella Braverman’s sacking.
Asked what the prime minister was seeking to broadcast with his reshuffle, Merriman told BBC Radio 4’s PM programme:
Unity, teamwork – these are all people that owe their position to the prime minister rather than perhaps some of the political machinations of leadership contests.
And it gives the prime minister the opportunity to stamp his mark on the cabinet and to promote some fresh talent.
Esther McVey returns to cabinet as minister without portfolio
Former cabinet minister Esther McVey has returned to the government.
The Conservative account on social media site X said she was a “cabinet minister” without specifying her job.
Downing Street said McVey would attend cabinet as a minister without portfolio.
Esther McVey reportedly going to Cabinet Office ‘to tackle wokery’
Andrew Sparrow
At the afternoon lobby briefing some journalists were asking what was in the reshuffle for red wall voters. (See 5.37pm.) We have finally got an answer. Esther McVey, a rightwinger and former work and pensions secretary, has been made a Cabinet Office minister. And, according to a story by Harry Cole and Noa Hoffman for the Sun, she will be “common sense tsar” tasked with tackling “the scourge of wokery”.
God knows what that means, but the Sun seems to approve.
McVey is also a GB News presenter, and she may be the first employee from the channel to join the government.
Last week on GB News McVey was defending Suella Braverman.
That is all from me for today. My colleague Tom Ambrose is taking over
No 10 implies Braverman sacked over ‘issues around language’, not policy
At an afternoon lobby briefing the PM’s spokesperson (who deals with government matters) and his press secretary (who deals with party politics) have been taking questions on the reshuffle. Here are the main points.
-
Downing Street implied Suella Braverman was sacked because of the tone of what she was saying, rather than because of a disagreement over policy. The press secretary said:
[The PM and Braverman] had a professional working relationship. Clearly there were some issues around language. The prime minister said he would use some of the words that she’s used before. Ultimately the prime minister reserves the right to change the team sheet at a point where he sees fit. He felt it was the right time to make some changes to his top team.
The PM believes collective responsibility is important. And it is important that the government speaks with one voice.
I think you’ll see a lot of women kind of rising up the ranks today. What I will also say is Conservatives don’t tick box diversity. We’ve had three female leaders.
Obviously at a time of sort of significant global instability, it’s a huge advantage to have someone that brings a huge amount of experience to that role and is already an established figure on the on the world stage.
-
No 10 did not accept that having David Cameron in the Lords would require new arrangements to enable MPs to hold him to account. The Commons speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, thinks new arrangments will be needed. (See 3.49pm.) The PM’s spokesperson said there was precedent for having secretaries of state in the Lords. The last was Nicky Morgan, who was briefly culture secretary in the Lords after the 2019 election. Andrew Mitchell, the development minister, will lead for the Foreign Office in the House of Commons.
-
Cameron will not take his allowance as a former PM (worth up to £115,000 a year) while he is foreign secretary, the spokesperson said.
-
Cameron’s appointment as a peer was vetted by the House of Lords Appointments Commission, the spokesperson said. He would not say how long Holac was given to consider the appointment.
[ad_2]