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Rishi Sunak rolled the dice for the election today as he jettisoned right-wingers and promoted loyalists in a ‘shock and awe’ reshuffle.

The PM kicked off a dramatic day by sacking Suella Braverman, and instead installing his close ally James Cleverly as Home Secretary.

That left the Foreign Office clear for the bombshell return of former PM David Cameron.

But there was worse news for other long-serving ministers, with Therese Coffey – who served as deputy PM under Liz Truss – leaving government. Health Secretary Steve Barclay has been shifted from Health Secretary to take that job, in what will be seen as a demotion.

Victoria Atkins has taken that key brief, as Mr Sunak tries to promote good TV performers ahead of the election. Sunak loyalists are also doing well so far, with Ric Holden taking over from Greg Hands as Conservative Party chair and Laura Trott – Lord Cameron’s former speechwriter – becoming Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

Read the full MailOnline story below

Who’s in and who’s out in Rishi’s reshuffle?

Suella Braverman – was Home Secretary

Therese Coffey – was Environment Secretary

Rachel Maclean – was Housing Minister

Jeremy Quin – was Paymaster General

Will Quince – was Minister of State for Health and Social Care

George Freeman – was Minister for Science, Research, Technology and Innovation

James Cleverly – from Foreign Secretary to Home Secretary

Steve Barclay – from Health Secretary to Environment Secretary

Richard Holden – from Roads Minister to Party Chairman

Vicky Atkins – from Financial Secretary to the Treasury to Health Secretary

Laura Trott – from Pensions Minister to Chief Secretary to the Treasury

David Cameron – Foreign Secretary

Jeremy Hunt – Chancelllor

What we have learned from Rishi Sunak’s reshuffle so far

Privately educated men hold the four great offices of state

The four great offices of state are being held by privately educated men for the first time since the Tories came to power more than a decade ago following Rishi Sunak’s Cabinet reshuffle.

Former prime minister Lord Cameron has been appointed Foreign Secretary while his predecessor James Cleverly has taken over from Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, with Jeremy Hunt remaining as Chancellor.

The changes mean that for the first time since the Conservatives won the 2010 election, there are no women occupying any of the four most senior positions in Cabinet.

Three of the office-holders – Prime Minister Mr Sunak, Mr Hunt and Lord Cameron – graduated with first class honours in philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) from the University of Oxford.

All four were educated at either public or private school, while two – Mr Sunak, who has Indian heritage, and Mr Cleverly, who has West African heritage – are from minority ethnic backgrounds.

Only eight women have ever served in one of the roles – Margaret Thatcher as prime minister, Margaret Beckett as foreign secretary, Jacqui Smith as home secretary, Theresa May as both home secretary and PM, Amber Rudd as home secretary followed by Priti Patel and Ms Braverman and Liz Truss as foreign secretary and PM.

No woman has yet held the role of chancellor.

The Truss ministry was notable for initially having no white men serving in the great offices of state for the first time in British political history, with Kwasi Kwarteng becoming the first black chancellor.

Privately educated men hold all four great offices of state

The four great offices of state are being held by privately educated men for the first time since the Tories came to power more than a decade ago following Rishi Sunak’s Cabinet reshuffle.

Former prime minister Lord Cameron has been appointed Foreign Secretary while his predecessor James Cleverly has taken over from Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, with Jeremy Hunt remaining as Chancellor.

The changes mean that for the first time since the Conservatives won the 2010 election, there are no women occupying any of the four most senior positions in Cabinet.

Three of the office-holders – Prime Minister Mr Sunak, Mr Hunt and Lord Cameron – graduated with first class honours in philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) from the University of Oxford.

All four were educated at either public or private school, while two – Mr Sunak, who has Indian heritage, and Mr Cleverly, who has West African heritage – are from minority ethnic backgrounds.

Only eight women have ever served in one of the roles – Margaret Thatcher as prime minister, Margaret Beckett as foreign secretary, Jacqui Smith as home secretary, Theresa May as both home secretary and PM, Amber Rudd as home secretary followed by Priti Patel and Ms Braverman and Liz Truss as foreign secretary and PM.

No woman has yet held the role of chancellor.

The Truss ministry was notable for initially having no white men serving in the great offices of state for the first time in British political history, with Kwasi Kwarteng becoming the first black chancellor.

Privately educated men hold the four great offices of state

The four great offices of state are being held by privately educated men for the first time since the Tories came to power more than a decade ago following Rishi Sunak’s Cabinet reshuffle.

Former prime minister Lord Cameron has been appointed Foreign Secretary while his predecessor James Cleverly has taken over from Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, with Jeremy Hunt remaining as Chancellor.

The changes mean that for the first time since the Conservatives won the 2010 election, there are no women occupying any of the four most senior positions in Cabinet.

Three of the office-holders – Prime Minister Mr Sunak, Mr Hunt and Lord Cameron – graduated with first class honours in philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) from the University of Oxford.

All four were educated at either public or private school, while two – Mr Sunak, who has Indian heritage, and Mr Cleverly, who has West African heritage – are from minority ethnic backgrounds.

Only eight women have ever served in one of the roles – Margaret Thatcher as prime minister, Margaret Beckett as foreign secretary, Jacqui Smith as home secretary, Theresa May as both home secretary and PM, Amber Rudd as home secretary followed by Priti Patel and Ms Braverman and Liz Truss as foreign secretary and PM.

No woman has yet held the role of chancellor.

The Truss ministry was notable for initially having no white men serving in the great offices of state for the first time in British political history, with Kwasi Kwarteng becoming the first black chancellor.

Privately educated men hold the four great offices of state

The four great offices of state are being held by privately educated men for the first time since the Tories came to power more than a decade ago following Rishi Sunak’s Cabinet reshuffle.

Former prime minister Lord Cameron has been appointed Foreign Secretary while his predecessor James Cleverly has taken over from Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, with Jeremy Hunt remaining as Chancellor.

The changes mean that for the first time since the Conservatives won the 2010 election, there are no women occupying any of the four most senior positions in Cabinet.

Three of the office-holders – Prime Minister Mr Sunak, Mr Hunt and Lord Cameron – graduated with first class honours in philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) from the University of Oxford.

All four were educated at either public or private school, while two – Mr Sunak, who has Indian heritage, and Mr Cleverly, who has West African heritage – are from minority ethnic backgrounds.

Only eight women have ever served in one of the roles – Margaret Thatcher as prime minister, Margaret Beckett as foreign secretary, Jacqui Smith as home secretary, Theresa May as both home secretary and PM, Amber Rudd as home secretary followed by Priti Patel and Ms Braverman and Liz Truss as foreign secretary and PM.

No woman has yet held the role of chancellor.

The Truss ministry was notable for initially having no white men serving in the great offices of state for the first time in British political history, with Kwasi Kwarteng becoming the first black chancellor.

George Freeman quits as Minister for Science, Research, Technology and Innovation

Britons (just) back Rishi for sacking Suella… but think appointing David Cameron is a ‘bad decision’

Suella Braverman’s supporters share AI images of sacked home secretary as Superwoman and Henry V-inspired heroine

Sunak ally Laura Trott moves to the Treasury as Tories use football transfer-style announcements for reshuffle

New Tory Chairman Richard Holden gives thumbs up as he leaves No 10

Richard Holden has left Downing Street after being appointed chairman of the Conservative Party.

The MP for North West Durham left No 10 shortly after 2.15pm.

Richard Holden leaves 10 Downing Street, London, after he was made the new Conservative chairman in Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's ministerial reshuffle following the sacking of home secretary Suella Braverman. Picture date: Monday November 13, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Reshuffle. Photo credit should read: Victoria Jones/PA Wire

Breaking: Steve Barclay DEMOTED from Health Secretary to Environment Secretary

Steve Barclay has left Downing Street after being appointed the new Environment Secretary.

The former health secretary left No 10 shortly after 2pm on Monday.

Former minister Dame Andrea Jenkyns said Mrs Braverman had been ‘sacked for speaking the truth’, and it was a ‘bad call by Rishi caving in to the left’.

Jeremy Quin has quit as paymaster general.

The former minister, who attended Cabinet, said Rishi Sunak had given him ‘the reassurance that I could continue to serve in government’ but he had decided to ‘step back’ to concentrate on his Horsham constituency.

‘Cameron’s back? WTAF’: Fury of Tory Right as Rishi Sunak hands ex-PM a peerage and makes him Foreign Secretary in ‘trolling’ reshuffle

David Cameron made a shock comeback today as Rishi Sunak sacked Suella Braverman in a reshuffle described as ‘trolling’ the Tory Right .

MPs vented fury at the ‘astonishing’ overhaul by the PM in his big reset before the election, ousting Ms Braverman after a series of bitter clashes.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, a close ally of Mr Sunak with less trenchant views on the European Convention on Human Rights, is taking over in the Home Office .

Tory MP Rachel Maclean has said she is ‘disappointed’ after being sacked as housing minister.

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, she said: ‘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.’

Therese Coffey has left her role as Environment Secretary, Downing Street said.

In a letter to the Prime Minister, Ms Coffey said that it was ‘now the right time to step back from government’.

‘I look forward to supporting you from the backbenches and working together for a Conservative majority at the next election, which I believe to be profoundly in the national interest.’

Will David Cameron keep his £115,000-a-year ex-PM allowance? And will he use the UK Foreign Secretary’s grace-and-favour London pad and Kent country mansion?

David Cameron is entitled to claim the £115,000-a-year allowance given to all former prime ministers. But there is no confirmation yet on whether he will keep claiming it while in Parliament. He could also claim a salary as Foreign Secretary.

The official residence of the Foreign Secretary in London is 1 Carlton Gardens and Mr Cameron will also have the use of Chevening House, a country house in Kent.

Daily Mail Political Editor Jason Groves has pondered whether David Cameron was ever first choice for the Foreign Secretary job – suggesting that William Hague may have been the preferred candidate for the PM.

He tweeted: ‘Did Sunak initially want Hague for the job? Some Tory MPs think the PM turned to Cameron after Hague made clear he was serious about never returning to front line politics’.

He added: ‘The problem for Cameron is that Brexiteers see him as the Remainer-in-chief, while Remainers blame him for Brexit’.

Expert analysis: David Cameron’s appointment is an act of desperation – and a ‘useful distraction’ from Suella Braverman’s sacking

Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said David Cameron’s appointment ‘is a measure of the desperation that surrounds this Government.’

‘It’s difficult to believe that this is going to impress voters, whether they are convinced Brexiteers who despise David Cameron for being a remainer, or convinced remainers who despise David Cameron for holding and losing a referendum.

‘On the upside, it’s a useful distraction from Braverman’s sacking, and as a former prime minister it will mean that the UK has rather more clout in international circles than perhaps might have been the case.’

Pictured: David Cameron arrives for work at the Foreign Office

Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg: Sacking Suella Braverman will make it harder for Tories to win the next general election

Jacob Rees-Mogg said sacking the Home Secretary was ‘a mistake because Suella understood what the British voter thought and was trying to do something about it’.

‘David Cameron got the Brexit issue wrong in terms of the Conservative party and indeed the country at large who voted to leave but he did give us the choice to have the vote.

‘Without him we wouldn’t have had that referendum. He is a highly intelligent, capable individual. But will this potentially push some people to Reform’

Labour says Rishi Sunak’s decision to appoint David Cameron as Foreign Secretary appointment is ‘desperate’ and ‘laughable’

Labour’s national campaign co-ordinator Pat McFadden has laughed off the appointment of David Cameron.

‘A few weeks ago Rishi Sunak said David Cameron was part of a failed status quo, now he’s bringing him back as his life raft. This puts to bed the Prime Minister’s laughable claim to offer change from 13 years of Tory failure.’

David Lammy, Shadow Foreign Secretary said:

David Cameron was a disastrous PM. This is a last gasp act of desperation from a government devoid of talent and ideas. Amid international crisis, Sunak has chosen an unelected failure from the past who MPs cannot even hold to account.

Analysis: David Cameron’s return as Rishi Sunak’s Foreign Secretary is truly extraordinary – but will it calm Tory jitters amid fears of a civil war over Suella Braverman’s sacking?

David Cameron is the seventh former Prime Minister in history to return to Government.

Stanley Baldwin, Ramsey MacDonald, Winston Churchill, Harold Wilson, Benjamin Disraeli and William Gladstone have taken the same journey.

Cameron is also the first Foreign Secretary to be a member of the House of Lords for more than 40 years.

These are the key points about his unlikely return, including his part in the Brexit referendum, a lobbying scandal and recent disagreements with his new boss Rishi Sunak over HS2.

What was his role in the Brexit referendum?

  • David Cameron called the UK’s historic Brexit referendum – but backed remain having hoped to force the EU to change its rules for Britain while remaining a member. He promised a referendum on Britain’s membership of the EU in 2013 if the Conservative Party won the next general election in 2015. He did so to try to garner support among eurosceptics within his own party – and end the row over EU membership once and for all – but he failed.

Why did he resign as Prime Minister?

  • The last time most voters saw David Cameron was in 2016 outside Number 10, announcing his resignation the morning after millions of Britons voted to leave the European Union – putting paid to the Prime Minister’s hopes to keep the UK part of the bloc.

Is his return to Government unprecedented?

  • The return has already raised eyebrows, but it is not unprecedented – Alec Douglas-Home, after less than a year as prime minister, went on to serve as foreign secretary between 1970 and 1974. Another former leader Lord Hague also went on to serve as Mr Cameron’s first foreign secretary.

What have David Cameron and Rishi Sunak disagreed on?

  • The decision to scrap the northern leg of HS2, confirmed in the same speech, also prompted a rare public rebuke from Lord Cameron who labelled the decision the ‘wrong one’.
  • As prime minister, he presided over the so-called ‘golden era’ of relations between Britain and China, hosting a state visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping and welcoming investment from Beijing into the UK.
  • Since then, relations between the two countries have deteriorated. In his first foreign policy speech as Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak declared the golden era over and described the pursuit of closer economic ties over the previous decade as “naive”.
  • More recently, Mr Sunak also used his party conference speech to hit out at ’30 years of a political system which incentivises the easy decision, not the right one’, criticising the ‘vested interests standing in the way of change’.

What other scandals has David Cameron been part of?

  • Lord Cameron was at the centre of a major scandal after it emerged he privately lobbied ministers to attempt to try to secure access to an emergency coronavirus loan scheme for the failed firm Greensill Capital, where he took up a role in 2018.

What has he been doing since he left No 10?

  • In political retirement he stayed largely out of the public eye, apart from occasional appearances. He returned to his home in the Cotswolds and famously bought a £25,000 shepherds hut in which to write his memoir. He could afford it – after resigning he was handed an £800,000 book deal.
  • Mr Cameron also made a career out of after-dinner speaking, reportedly earning up to £120,000 an hour.
  • The Eton and Oxford-educated former politician’s first major private sector job after leaving office was as an advisor to the electronic payments firm First Data Corporation, which he joined in October 2017.
  • He also had a paid advisory role with Illumina, a US genomics firm that specialises in research into genetic health conditions.
  • And in 2019 he was announced as the head of the advisory board of the billion-pound US artificial intelligence firm Afiniti, which also employed Princess Beatrice.
  • Most recently he drove to Ukraine to deliver aid.

Rishi Sunak’s dramatic cabinet reshuffle latest: What’s happened so far on Monday?

Here is the latest news from the Prime Minister’s cabinet reshuffle:

Britain's Home Secretary Suella Braverman walks outside her home, in London, Britain, November 13, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville

Suella Braverman today issued a warning shot to Rishi Sunak after the Prime Minister sacked her as Home Secretary as part of a dramatic reshuffle.

The now departed Cabinet minister vowed she would ‘have more to say’ after her removal from the top rank of Government.

Mr Sunak was also facing anger among Mrs Braverman’s supporters on the Tory Right, with some lamenting how she had been fired for ‘speaking the truth’.

David Cameron is all smiles as he makes incredible return to Downing Street as Foreign Secretary

A jovial David Cameron in Downing Street today as he was made Foreign Secretary.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Veysey/Shutterstock (14207296p) David Cameron, newly appointed Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs of the United Kingdom Overview Education History leaves 10 Downing Street Politicians in London, UK - 13 Nov 2023
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Veysey/Shutterstock (14207296k) David Cameron, newly appointed Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs of the United Kingdom Overview Education History leaves 10 Downing Street Politicians in London, UK - 13 Nov 2023
Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Veysey/Shutterstock (14207296j) David Cameron, newly appointed Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs of the United Kingdom Overview Education History leaves 10 Downing Street Politicians in London, UK - 13 Nov 2023
LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 13: Britain's former Prime Minister, David Cameron (L) leaves 10, Downing Street with Sir Philip Barton, the Permanent Under-Secretary of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, after being appointed Foreign Secretary in a Cabinet reshuffle on November 13, 2023 in London, England. Rishi Sunak came under pressure last week to sack Suella Braverman after she wrote an article criticising the Met Police over Pro-Palestinian Marches which was not signed off by Downing Street. At the weekend, several far-right protestors were arrested after confrontations at the Cenotaph during the Armistice Day service.  (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)

David Cameron made a shock comeback today as Rishi Sunak sacked Suella Braverman in a dramatic reshuffle.

The PM moved to oust Ms Braverman as he tries to restore his authority with potentially less than a year to a general election.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, a close ally of Mr Sunak with less trenchant views on the European Convention on Human Rights, is taking over in the Home Office.

In a decision that sent an earthquake through Westminster, David Cameron has been given a peerage and is filling Mr Cleverly’s old role. He is the first member of the Upper House to hold the role since Lord Carrington in the 1980s.

Just weeks ago Mr Cameron condemned Mr Sunak’s decision to downgrade the HS2 rail project. He is deeply distrusted by the Tory right after heading the Remain campaign, and also fostered closer relations with China as premier.

Read MailOnline’s story below

The PM moved to oust Ms Braverman as he tries to restore his authority with potentially less than a year to a general election.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, a close ally of Mr Sunak with less trenchant views on the European Convention on Human Rights, is taking over in the Home Office.

Read MailOnline’s story here

Suella Braverman is defiant and smiles as she leaves home after being sacked

Britain's Home Secretary Suella Braverman leaves her home, in London, Britain, November 13, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Britain's Home Secretary Suella Braverman walks outside her home, in London, Britain, November 13, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville

Welcome to MailOnline’s liveblog on Rishi Sunak’s extraordinary cabinet reshuffle

Good morning and welcome to MailOnline’s liveblog as Rishi Sunak has risked insurrection in the right of the his party as he sacked Suella Braverman as Home Secretary.

James CleverlySuella Braverman



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