Selasa, 25 Oktober 2022

Rishi Sunak vows to fix Liz Truss's mistakes in first speech as PM - BBC

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Rishi Sunak has pledged to fix "mistakes" made under Liz Truss's leadership and warned of "difficult decisions" ahead, in his first speech as prime minister.

He said he would restore trust, rebuild confidence and lead the UK through "a profound economic crisis".

Mr Sunak promised to deliver the manifesto that won the Conservatives a landslide election victory in 2019.

His speech outside No 10 came after he was appointed PM by King Charles.

The UK's first British Asian prime minister, Mr Sunak announced his cabinet this afternoon, after telling Tory MPs to unify or face electoral oblivion.

In major reshuffle, Dominic Raab returned as deputy PM, and Grant Shapps became business secretary, while Jeremy Hunt remained as chancellor.

A large majority of MPs backed Mr Sunak for the leadership and when his only remaining rival Penny Mordaunt withdrew, there was no need for a ballot of Tory members.

Following Mr Sunak's speech, opposition parties repeated their demand for an immediate general election and argued Mr Sunak had no mandate from the public.

Mr Sunak's effective coronation as Tory leader on Monday spelled the end of Ms Truss's turbulent premiership, just 49 days after she took office.

Ms Truss became prime minister after defeating Mr Sunak in a ballot of Tory members during the summer, winning over members with her tax-cutting economic agenda.

But her government was destabilised by political and economic turmoil, exacerbated by her mini-budget, whose package of unfunded tax cuts has mostly been ditched.

In her farewell speech, Ms Truss defended her economic policies and said her time as prime minister convinced her of the need to be "bold".

In his own speech, Mr Sunak paid tribute to his predecessors Boris Johnson and Ms Truss, saying she "was not wrong to want to improve growth in this country - it is a noble aim".

"But some mistake were made," Mr Sunak said. "Not born of ill will or bad intentions, quite the opposite, in fact. But mistakes nonetheless.

"I have been elected as leader of the party and as prime minister in part to fix them. And that work begins immediately."

Mr Sunak - who was chancellor until July this year - said he would place "economic componence and stability at the heart of this government's agenda", warning that "will mean difficult decisions to come".

He gave no details about what those decisions were, but how to fund support for energy bills, and bring down government debt, are likely to be among them.

Mr Sunak is expected to cut public spending to plug an estimated £40bn hole in the public finances.

On his first day in office Mr Sunak spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky "to underline the United Kingdom's steadfast support for Ukraine", a Downing Street spokesman said.

United States President Joe Biden said "that the UK remains America's closest ally" in another call, according to Downing Street.

The prime minister and President Biden also agreed to "preserve" the Good Friday peace deal, which set up power sharing in Northern Ireland.

It comes amid an ongoing row over the Northern Ireland Protocol - part of the post-Brexit deal between the UK and EU.

Rishi Sunak makes a speech outside 10 Downing Street, London
PA Media

Mr Sunak also spoke to the first minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, and of Wales, Mark Drakeford.

Ms Sturgeon said that the call with Mr Sunak had been "constructive", and Downing Street said Mr Sunak had emphasised their "duty" to work closely together.

Mr Drakeford said the call had been a chance to "discuss the importance of working together as four nations" to address the "urgent challenges" faced by the UK.

The economic challenges ahead for Mr Sunak loomed large in his speech, which he delivered in a solemn tone, outside his new residence at Downing Street.

He appeared on his own without his wife, Akshata Murty, and two daughters beside him.

He reminded the public of his decisions when he was chancellor during the Covid-19 pandemic, including the furlough scheme to help employers pay their staff.

While "there are always limits", Mr Sunak said, "I promise you this: I will bring that same compassion to the challenges we face today."

Other than a brief, television statement on Monday evening, this was the first the public had heard from Mr Sunak since he was elected Tory leader.

The 42-year-old former hedge fund boss, who has only been an MP for seven years, enters office at a time when his party is cratering in the polls.

As the party searched for its third leader this year, Mr Sunak's former boss - Mr Johnson - insisted he was the only person who could unite the Conservatives and win the next election.

Mr Johnson, who only resigned as prime minister in September, ultimately withdrew from the Tory leadership contest, admitting it was not the "right time" for a comeback.

Mr Sunak reflected on Mr Johnson's "incredible achievements" in his speech, but downplayed his sole ownership of the party's 2019 election victory.

The prime minister said "the mandate my party earned in 2019 is not the sole property of any one individual - it is a mandate that belongs to and unites all of us".

"And the heart of that mandate is our manifesto," he said. "I will deliver on its promise."

If Mr Sunak moves too far away from his party's 2019 manifesto - which promised to "level up" the country - calls for an early general election may grow louder.

The next one is not due to take place until January 2025, at the latest, and Mr Sunak is under no obligation to hold one earlier under the UK's parliamentary system.

But Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said Mr Sunak's refusal to call a general election showed his party "does not trust the British people", who "will be rightly furious that they have been denied a say".

Labour Party chairwoman Anneliese Dodds said the country needed "a fresh start" after "12 years of Conservative failure", which Mr Sunak had been part of.

In a meeting with his shadow cabinet this morning, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer warned his party against complacency, calling Mr Sunak a "ruthless" political operator.

Sir Keir said Mr Sunak "will not deliver for working people" and told his MPs to "ignore the noise", even if the new prime minister gives the Tories "a significant poll bounce".

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2022-10-25 22:25:40Z
1621221509

Rishi Sunak appoints new cabinet - here's who's in and who's out - Sky News

Rishi Sunak has appointed his cabinet after being asked by the King to form a new government.

The new prime minister promised to form a government of "all the talents" amid calls from senior Tories to appoint the best ministers available - rather than focusing on those who are loyal to him, as his two predecessors had done.

New PM - latest from Downing Street

Here's who is in and out of Mr Sunak's new government:

Who's in?

Jeremy Hunt

Jeremy Hunt is keeping his job as chancellor, having reversed the majority of Liz Truss's mini-budget which Mr Sunak warned would be detrimental to the economy just over a week ago.

Mr Hunt is seen as a steady hand, so keeping him could be an attempt to reassure the markets.

Mr Hunt is due to lay out plans for balancing the books with a fiscal statement on Monday.

His appointment could also be seen as political, as Mr Hunt had backed Mr Sunak in the last two leadership races.

James Cleverly foreign secretary

James Cleverly has been reappointed as foreign secretary.

He is the first Liz Truss backer to stay in post under the new prime minister, in what could be seen as a show of unity after months of divisive politics within the Conservative Party.

When Ms Truss resigned, Mr Cleverly initially came out in support of Boris Johnson's return to the top job.

But after he gave up on his comeback, Mr Cleverly voiced support for Mr Sunak, saying he was the most experienced candidate for the job.

Ben Wallace

Although he backed Boris Johnson's leadership bid, Ben Wallace has also kept his job as defence secretary.

He was one of the few cabinet secretaries to keep their job during the Johnson and Truss premierships.

It was not a given Mr Wallace would accept the job as Mr Sunak has not publicly committed to spending 3% of GDP on defence by 2030.

Mr Wallace had said that was a red line for him and would quit if that pledge by Liz Truss was not honoured.

Suella Braverman

Suella Braverman is back as home secretary less than a week after she quit for breaching the ministerial code by sending classified documents from her personal email.

Her resignation came the day before Ms Truss followed her out of the door, and in an explosive letter to the former PM, she expressed "concerns about the direction of this government", including its commitment to reducing immigration.

Ms Braverman has taken a tough stance on small boats crossing the Channel, and previously said it was her "dream" to see Rwanda deportation flights take off.

She is from the right wing of the party and was not a natural Rishi Sunak supporter, announcing her backing of him late on Sunday.

Her appointment will be seen as trying to keep all wings of the party on board, while showing Mr Sunak's intention to take a hard line on immigration.

However, it could raise eyebrows given the nature of her resignation and past controversial comments.

One of Ms Braverman's most notable speeches during her short time as home secretary was when she blamed protest disruption on the "tofu-eating wokerati".

The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, has criticised the appointment, accusing Mr Sunak of putting "party before country".

"Security is too important for this irresponsible Tory chaos," she tweeted.

Penny Mordaunt

Penny Mordaunt, Mr Sunak's two-time leadership rival, will be keeping her job as Commons Leader.

She had hoped to become prime minister, but was forced to bow out of the race at the last minute on Monday after failing to get the backing of enough MPs, leaving Mr Sunak as the only person in the race.

Sources close to her said that she had been hoping to be appointed as foreign secretary - so her appointment may come as a blow.

The main role of a Commons Leader is to organise government business.

Sky News Chief political correspondent Jon Craig says she didn't look too happy with the "graveyard slot in the Commons" when leaving Number 10.

Dominic Raab

Dominic Raab has been appointed deputy PM and justice secretary,

The loyal supporter of Mr Sunak has been handed his old jobs back, having held them under Boris Johnson.

When the former prime minister was in hospital with Covid it was Mr Raab who ran the country.

However, he was demoted from foreign secretary to justice secretary last September following criticism of his handling of the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

During the leadership race to replace Mr Johnson, Mr Raab had called Ms Truss's tax plans "electoral suicide", so it was no surprise when he returned to the backbenches during her premiership.

Now that he has returned to his former post, one of the most pressing challenges he faces is reducing backlogs in the courts.

Grant Shapps

Grant Shapps, who was drafted in to replace Ms Braverman as home secretary six days ago, has been appointed as business and energy secretary.

The Sunak ally has experience in cabinet, having served as transport secretary under Boris Johnson.

Michael Gove

Meanwhile, Michael Gove has been given his old job of levelling-up secretary three months after being sacked by Boris Johnson.

Mr Gove was one of the first cabinet ministers to wield the knife as support around Mr Johnson crumbled back in July.

His comeback could be a tactical move by Mr Sunak, as Mr Gove has not been shy about criticising the government from the backbenches.

Steve Barclay

Steve Barclay has been appointed health secretary taking over from Therese Coffey.

He had been Brexit secretary under Theresa May and served as health secretary over the summer in Mr Johnson's interim cabinet.

Therese Coffey

Ms Coffey, a friend and ally of Liz Truss who was deputy prime minister and health secretary until today, has been appointed environment secretary.

Gillian Keegan becomes secretary of state for education and is the fifth person to hold this role in just over a year, following the sacking of Gavin Williamson last September.

He was replaced by Nadhim Zahawi, and then Michelle Donelan, who quit after just 36 hours in the role during the mass exodus from Mr Johnson's' government.

She was replaced by James Cleverly, now foreign secretary, and Kit Malthouse, who left his government role earlier today.

This is Ms Keegan's first cabinet position.

Under Mr Johnson, she was the parliamentary under-secretary for apprenticeships and skills. She was then care and mental health minister in the health department and Ms Truss made her parliamentary under-secretary for Africa.

Kemi Badenoch

Kemi Badenoch, a former leadership candidate, has been reappointed as international trade secretary.

She is also minister for women and equalities.

Ms Badenoch, the MP for Saffron Walden, was first given the cabinet post by Liz Truss.

Simon Hart

Simon Hart has been appointed chief whip.

He is a popular MP in the party and a former Welsh secretary, who is a good communicator so a natural for the job.

The chief whip is in charge of party discipline, telling Tory MPs how they should vote on certain issues.

Mel Stride

Mel Stride has been promoted into the cabinet as work and pensions secretary. It is perhaps unsurprising after running Rishi Sunak's campaign in the Tory leadership contest over the summer.

Mr Stride was instrumental in calling for an Office of Budget Responsibility forecast to go alongside Ms Truss's spending plans after the turmoil caused by her mini-budget, and has called for benefits to rise in line with inflation.

Nadhim Zahawi

Nadhim Zahawi has been appointed Conservative Party chairman.

He was briefly chancellor under Boris Johnson after Mr Sunak resigned and famously called on Mr Johnson to quit days after accepting the top cabinet job.

He also served as a vaccines minister and education secretary under Mr Johnson, and he was the made Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster under Ms Truss.

His appointment as chairman may come as a surprise, as he had backed Mr Johnson to return as prime minister during the last leadership race just weeks after calling for him to go.

After Mr Johnson withdrew from the race, he voiced support for Mr Sunak.

His new role will see him attend cabinet meetings but he will not have a department.

Michelle Donelan

Michelle Donelan, a loyal Sunak supporter, has kept her job as secretary for digital, culture, media and sport.

The Chippenham MP was given the job by Ms Truss after taking over from Nadine Dorries, who Mr Johnson appointed.

She has previously signalled she could reverse Ms Dorries's plan to privatise Channel 4, saying the case was being "re-examined".

Ms Donelan, who became an MP alongside Mr Sunak in 2015, was education secretary for two days under MrJohnson.

He appointed her after a wave of cabinet resignations in July but she quit as, she said, Mr Johnson had "put us in an impossible position".

Before that she was a government whip, parliamentary under-secretary for children then universities minister before becoming minister for higher and further education, where she attended cabinet.

Chris Heaton Harris

Chris Heaton-Harris has been reappointed as Northern Ireland secretary.

He was first appointed to this role by Ms Truss at the start of September.

He has one of the more difficult portfolios, given the collapsed executive in Northern Ireland - where another election could soon be triggered - and disputes with the EU over post-Brexit trading arrangements.

Alister Jack

Alister Jack is keeping his job as Scotland secretary, a post he has held since July 2019.

David TC Davies

David TC Davies, the Wales minister since 2019, has been promoted to Wales secretary, taking over from Robert Buckland who resigned this morning

Mr Davies, the MP for Monmouth since 2005, chaired the Welsh Affairs Committee from 2010 to 2019.

Oliver Dowden

Mr Sunak's closest political friend Oliver Dowden becomes Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.

He will be Mr Sunak's ears and eyes in the Cabinet Office, which supports the PM and the cabinet, and ensures the effective running of government.

Earlier this year he resigned as party chairman after a disastrous double by-election loss under Mr Johnson.

Former whip Mark Harper's support has been rewarded with the role of transport secretary.

He replaces Anne-Marie Trevelyan who backed Mr Johnson in the race a few days ago.

Another of Mr Sunak's allies, John Glen, becomes chief secretary to the Treasury.

Work and pensions minister Victoria Prentis takes up the role of attorney general, and former home office minister Jeremy Quin becomes paymaster general.

Tom Tugendhat has been re-appointed as security minister and Johnny Mercer will return to the role of veterans' affairs minister.

Sir Gavin Williamson returns to government as a minister without portfolio. He was kicked out of government in 2019 when serving as defence secretary over a National Security Council leak and was sacked as education secretary in 2021 for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic's impact on schools.

Another to return to cabinet is the former housing secretary Robert Jenrick who becomes minister for immigration.

Who's out:

Before Mr Sunak announced key posts, a number of Ms Truss's cabinet announced they were leaving government.

Jacob Rees-Mogg

Jacob Rees-Mogg kicked off the resignations on Tuesday, leaving his post as business secretary.

A close ally of both Mr Johnson and Ms Truss, he had earlier said he was not expecting to serve in Mr Sunak's cabinet.

Mr Rees-Mogg called Mr Sunak a "socialist" during the summer's Conservative Party leadership race because he refused to commit to the same level of tax cuts as Ms Truss, although today he backed down on those comments.

In his resignation letter, he wished Mr Sunak "every success" but added: "It is time to go. In the interests of the nation, the Conservative Party must unite under your leadership and I shall do all I can to support you."

Brandon Lewis

Brandon Lewis, resigned as justice secretary, saying Mr Sunak has his "support from the backbenches".

"Our party is at a crossroads," he said in his resignation letter to the prime minister, adding that it is time to "reunite and rebuild".

Robert Buckland

Robert Buckland is out as Welsh secretary, and wrote on Twitter that he was leaving "at my request".

Mr Buckland initially supported Mr Sunak in the summer, but swapped to Ms Truss.

Jake Berry

Jake Berry said it was an "honour" to serve as Conservative Party chairman but "all good things must come to an end".

Kit Malthouse

Kit Malthouse, the fourth education secretary this year, tweeted: "As I leave the DfE, I do so with profound gratitude to officials, my private office team and brilliant advisers, who all worked so hard.

"I hope my successor can harness their commitment to the most important mission in Whitehall: the future and welfare of our children."

Chloe Smith

Chole Smith is also out as secretary of state for work and pensions. She was a big ally of Ms Truss, and had been reviewing whether to increase benefits in line with inflation.

Ranil Jayawardena

Ranil Jayawardena is also out as environment secretary.

He wrote to Mr Sunak: "I know that you wish for a new team to join you in HM government, so I write to stand aside."

He added that he is "sure that HM government will continue to deliver, and you will have my support in doing so".

Simon Clarke

The levelling-up Secretary Simon Clarke also left his role. He said it was a "great privilege" to serve in the department, as well as in his previous role as chief secretary to the Treasury.

Mr Clarke was one of Liz Truss's most vocal supporters during the summer.

He tweeted: "My loyalty to @trussliz and @BorisJohnson was sincere to the last and I appreciate deeply the opportunity they gave me. But I meant every word that I said yesterday: @Conservatives must unite under our new PM and should all work to ensure @RishiSunak succeeds. He has my support."

Wendy Morton

The chief whip Wendy Morton has also left the government, writing on Twitter that she is "heading to the backbenches".

Her exit is perhaps unsurprising, as Ms Morton presided over a chaotic parliamentary party under Ms Truss's premiership.

Her short time in the role culminated in farcical scenes during a Commons vote on fracking the night before Ms Truss announced her resignation, with claims of MPs being "bullied" into voting with the government.

Vicky Ford

Foreign minister Vicky Ford has also left the government. She said "space was needed to bring in new talent".

She added: "I think that Rishi will make a very good government from all different parts of the party.

"Some of us need to move on in order to make sure he's got room to bring in some really good talent from all across the party."

Alok Sharma

Alok Sharma has left as minister of state at the cabinet office. He will remain COP26 president and will negotiate on behalf of the UK at COP27.

The Green MP Caroline Lucas condemned his departure from the cabinet table, saying it was an "utterly shameful" move "just weeks before one of the most important global climate summits in a generation at #COP27 in Egypt".

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2022-10-25 20:15:00Z
1626356485

Rishi Sunak vows to fix Liz Truss's mistakes in first speech as PM - BBC

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Rishi Sunak has pledged to fix "mistakes" made under Liz Truss's leadership and warned of "difficult decisions" ahead, in his first speech as prime minister.

He said he would restore trust, rebuild confidence and lead the UK through "a profound economic crisis".

Mr Sunak promised to deliver the manifesto that won the Conservatives a landslide election victory in 2019.

His speech outside No 10 came after he was appointed PM by King Charles.

The UK's first British Asian prime minister, Mr Sunak announced his cabinet this afternoon, after telling Tory MPs to unify or face electoral oblivion.

In major reshuffle, Dominic Raab returned as deputy PM, and Grant Shapps became business secretary, while Jeremy Hunt remained as chancellor.

A large majority of MPs backed Mr Sunak for the leadership and when his only remaining rival Penny Mordaunt withdrew, there was no need for a ballot of Tory members.

Following Mr Sunak's speech, opposition parties repeated their demand for an immediate general election and argued Mr Sunak had no mandate from the public.

Mr Sunak's effective coronation as Tory leader on Monday spelled the end of Ms Truss's turbulent premiership, just 49 days after she took office.

Ms Truss became prime minister after defeating Mr Sunak in a ballot of Tory members during the summer, winning over members with her tax-cutting economic agenda.

But her government was destabilised by political and economic turmoil, exacerbated by her mini-budget, whose package of unfunded tax cuts has mostly been ditched.

In her farewell speech, Ms Truss defended her economic policies and said her time as prime minister convinced her of the need to be "bold".

In his own speech, Mr Sunak paid tribute to his predecessors Boris Johnson and Ms Truss, saying she "was not wrong to want to improve growth in this country - it is a noble aim".

"But some mistake were made," Mr Sunak said. "Not born of ill will or bad intentions, quite the opposite, in fact. But mistakes nonetheless.

"I have been elected as leader of the party and as prime minister in part to fix them. And that work begins immediately."

Mr Sunak - who was chancellor until July this year - said he would place "economic componence and stability at the heart of this government's agenda", warning that "will mean difficult decisions to come".

He gave no details about what those decisions were, but how to fund support for energy bills, and bring down government debt, are likely to be among them.

Mr Sunak is expected to cut public spending to plug an estimated £40bn hole in the public finances.

On his first day in office Mr Sunak spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky "to underline the United Kingdom's steadfast support for Ukraine", a Downing Street spokesman said.

United States President Joe Biden said "that the UK remains America's closest ally" in another call, according to Downing Street.

The prime minister and President Biden also agreed to "preserve" the Good Friday peace deal, which set up power sharing in Northern Ireland.

It comes amid an ongoing row over the Northern Ireland Protocol - part of the post-Brexit deal between the UK and EU.

Rishi Sunak makes a speech outside 10 Downing Street, London
PA Media

The economic challenges ahead for Mr Sunak loomed large in his speech, which he delivered in a solemn tone, outside his new residence at Downing Street.

He appeared on his own without his wife, Akshata Murty, and two daughters beside him.

He reminded the public of his decisions when he was chancellor during the Covid-19 pandemic, including the furlough scheme to help employers pay their staff.

While "there are always limits", Mr Sunak said, "I promise you this: I will bring that same compassion to the challenges we face today."

Other than a brief, television statement on Monday evening, this was the first the public had heard from Mr Sunak since he was elected Tory leader.

The 42-year-old former hedge fund boss, who has only been an MP for seven years, enters office at a time when his party is cratering in the polls.

As the party searched for its third leader this year, Mr Sunak's former boss - Mr Johnson - insisted he was the only person who could unite the Conservatives and win the next election.

Mr Johnson, who only resigned as prime minister in September, ultimately withdrew from the Tory leadership contest, admitting it was not the "right time" for a comeback.

Mr Sunak reflected on Mr Johnson's "incredible achievements" in his speech, but downplayed his sole ownership of the party's 2019 election victory.

The prime minister said "the mandate my party earned in 2019 is not the sole property of any one individual - it is a mandate that belongs to and unites all of us".

"And the heart of that mandate is our manifesto," he said. "I will deliver on its promise."

If Mr Sunak moves too far away from his party's 2019 manifesto - which promised to "level up" the country - calls for an early general election may grow louder.

The next one is not due to take place until January 2025, at the latest, and Mr Sunak is under no obligation to hold one earlier under the UK's parliamentary system.

But Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said Mr Sunak's refusal to call a general election showed his party "does not trust the British people", who "will be rightly furious that they have been denied a say".

Labour Party chairwoman Anneliese Dodds said the country needed "a fresh start" after "12 years of Conservative failure", which Mr Sunak had been part of.

In a meeting with his shadow cabinet this morning, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer warned his party against complacency, calling Mr Sunak a "ruthless" political operator.

Sir Keir said Mr Sunak "will not deliver for working people" and told his MPs to "ignore the noise", even if the new prime minister gives the Tories "a significant poll bounce".

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2022-10-25 21:35:45Z
1621221509

Jeremy Hunt remains chancellor amid big cabinet reshuffle - BBC

Jeremy HuntReuters

Rishi Sunak has kept Jeremy Hunt as chancellor, amid a major cabinet overhaul after entering Downing Street.

The new PM has removed key allies of former leader Liz Truss and rewarded some loyal supporters with top jobs.

Michael Gove and Dominic Raab, key figures in Boris Johnson's government, have also returned to cabinet roles.

And Suella Braverman is back as home secretary, days after quitting over sending an official document via personal email.

Despite being tipped for a promotion, Mr Sunak's leadership rival Penny Mordaunt stays in the mid-ranking role of Commons leader.

Mr Sunak is under pressure to reach out to different parts of the Conservative Party, after becoming its third leader in seven weeks.

A number of close allies of Ms Truss, including Simon Clarke, Chloe Smith, and Wendy Morton, have left their cabinet positions.

Therese Coffey, a close friend of the former prime minister, has also been demoted from deputy PM to environment secretary.

However, a number of her cabinet have kept their roles - including James Cleverly as foreign secretary and Kemi Badenoch as trade secretary.

Dominic Raab is back as deputy PM and justice secretary, roles he held under former leader Boris Johnson.

Michael Gove, a veteran of several recent Conservative governments, also returns to the cabinet table as levelling-up secretary.

Penny Mordaunt
Reuters

Several of Mr Sunak's longtime allies have been given promotions, including Oliver Dowden, who has become Cabinet Office Minister, and Steve Barclay, the new health secretary.

Mel Stride, who ran Mr Sunak's unsuccessful summer leadership campaign, has been given a cabinet job as work and pensions secretary.

Ben Wallace remains defence secretary, a role he has held since Mr Johnson entered Downing Street in July 2019.

But Jacob Rees-Mogg, a big supporter of Mr Johnson, has been replaced as business secretary by Grant Shapps.

The decision to keep Mr Hunt at the Treasury has been seen as a move to reassure financial markets, which have seen in turmoil in recent weeks in the wake of last month's mini-budget.

Mr Hunt, who reversed most of the tax cuts upon his appointment by Ms Truss, is expected to give more detail of the UK's tax and spending plans in a key statement next Monday.

Dropped cabinet

The return of Ms Braverman, a figure on the right of the party, has raised eyebrows given her dramatic resignation only six days ago.

She was forced to step down on what became the final chaotic day of Liz Truss' premiership, after admitting breaching government data rules.

In her resignation letter, she said she had emailed an official document from her private email account, but also attacked Ms Truss's approach to immigration.

There have been reports that Ms Braverman had been at odds with Ms Truss over plans to relax immigration rules in a bid to boost economic growth.

Labour criticised her reappointment, with shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper accusing Mr Sunak of "putting party before country".

In other moves:

  • Nadhim Zahawi replaces Jake Berry as Conservative Party chairman
  • Gillian Keegan replaces Kit Malthouse as education secretary
  • Alister Jack remains as Scotland Secretary, a post he has now held under three prime ministers
  • David TC Davies becomes the new Welsh Secretary
  • Chris Heaton-Harris remains as Northern Ireland Secretary
  • Mark Harper replaces Anne Marie-Trevelyan as Secretary of State for Transport
  • Victoria Prentis replaces Michael Ellis as Attorney General
  • John Glen becomes Chief Secretary to the Treasury, replacing Ed Argar
  • Johnny Mercer returns to cabinet as Veterans Ministers, a role originally created for him, replacing James Heappey
  • Former leadership contender Tom Tugendhat returns to cabinet as Security Minister
  • Robert Jenrick returns to cabinet as Immigration Minister
  • Andrew Mitchell also returns to cabinet, as Development Minister

Earlier, Mr Rees-Mogg told the BBC the Conservatives would be "toast" unless they pulled together.

Only a couple of hours after leaving his post, he returned to the Commons to speak as a backbencher during a debate on government legislation to replace EU laws carried over after Brexit.

Mr Sunak has warned "difficult decisions" lie ahead for his new administration, as it grapples with a "profound economic crisis".

He said he had been elected as Tory leader to "fix" the "mistakes" made by Ms Truss, who has left after just 49 days in office.

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2022-10-25 20:05:23Z
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Two men dead and one critically injured in east London shooting - Sky News

Two men have died and a third has been left critically injured in a shooting in east London.

Police were called at around 12.15am on Tuesday to a street in Ilford after reports of a fight and shots fired.

Officers found three men with gunshot injuries. One of the victims, who was in his 20s, was pronounced dead at the scene and another died a short time later.

The injured man, who is in his 30s, was taken to hospital, where he remains in critical condition.

No arrests have been made and the investigation is ongoing, the Metropolitan Police said.

The road is blocked off by a police corden
Image: The road is blocked off by a police corden

The force said they believe they know the identity of the man in his 20s and that work is ongoing to identify the other man killed in the shooting, which took place on Henley Road.

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Armed police were among those who responded, police said.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3R3by1tZW4tZGVhZC1hbmQtb25lLWNyaXRpY2FsbHktaW5qdXJlZC1pbi1lYXN0LWxvbmRvbi1zaG9vdGluZy0xMjcyOTcyN9IBZ2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2FtcC90d28tbWVuLWRlYWQtYW5kLW9uZS1jcml0aWNhbGx5LWluanVyZWQtaW4tZWFzdC1sb25kb24tc2hvb3RpbmctMTI3Mjk3Mjc?oc=5

2022-10-25 09:39:39Z
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