Boris Johnson is lighting a bonfire of Remainers as he assembles a hardline Tory Cabinet in his first day in 10 Downing Street.
The new Prime Minister is flexing his muscle by stuffing his top team with Leavers and people racked with controversies.
So who's backed for promotion, who's sacked by the boss, and who's cracked under the pressure in Boris Johnson's new-look team?
We've had a look at them all - and their more chequered records.
This piece will continue to be updated throughout the Cabinet reshuffle.
BACKED: New hires to Cabinet
Chief Whip: Mark Spencer
VOTED REMAIN

The MP for Sherwood since 2010 will be the PM's own Sheriff of Nottingham, trying to win over Tory MPs in Brexit votes despite a working majority of just one or two.
It's an about-turn for Mr Spencer - who voted Remain in the 2016 referendum.
The state-educated politician studied at Shuttleworth Agricultural College in Bedfordshire and joined his family's farming and farm shop business.
He joined Parliament in 2010 where he was a backbencher for six years. His big break was in the Tory whips' office, which he joined in June 2016.
He prompted fury in 2015 by suggesting a "dying" benefit claimant, sanctioned after he turned up four minutes late, should "learn the discipline of timekeeping".
Labour MP Lisa Nandy said the man "hadn’t eaten for 5 days" and "looked like he was dying" but Mr Sherwood cut in: "It is important that those who are seeking employment learn the discipline of timekeeping."
Separately, Mr Spencer - who receives at least £10,000 in rent per year from a farm - was one of 72 Tory landlords who voted against a Commons bid to force all homes to be "fit for human habitation" in 2016.
Priti Patel
VOTED LEAVE

Shamed Tory ex minister Priti Patel will be handed a plum job in Boris Johnson's top team - with some tipping her as a possible Home Secretary.
Theresa May sacked Ms Patel as International Development Secretary in 2017 after she had 'off-the-books' meetings with senior Israeli officials during a 'family holiday'.
But Mr Johnson was expected to trumpet her return to the Cabinet as part of a record number of ethnic minority politicians in the team.
The 47-year-old MP for Witham, Essex, is a hard-right Tory who backs tax cuts and supported the death penalty until 2016. She's also a Brexiteer 'ultra' who voted against Theresa May's deal all three times in Parliament.
She was slammed in December for suggesting the government could use possible Brexit food shortages as "leverage". A government report said No Deal could prompt food shortages in Ireland - infamously crippled by the 19th Century potato famine. But Ms Patel told The Times: "Why hasn't this point been pressed home during negotiations?"
The grammar school-educated Tory apparatchik was born in London to Gujarati parents who fled Uganda in the 1960s and studied at Essex and Keele Universities.
She worked for the Tories and Sir James Goldsmith's Referendum Party in the 1990s before returning as William Hague's deputy press secretary from 1997 to 2000 - eventually becoming an MP in 2010.
Alok Sharma
VOTED REMAIN

The MP for Reading West was expected to reach the Cabinet table for the first time after spending three years as a junior minister.
The married dad-of-two, 51, attended the private Reading Blue Coat school and the University of Salford before qualifying as a Deloitte chartered accountant.
He spent 16 years in banking including investment banking before joining Parliament in 2010. He was made a Foreign Office minister in 2016 followed by the Communities Department and Department for Work and Pensions.
Last year he faced shouts of 'pathetic!' as he tried to deny Universal Credit was forcing people to food banks - something his boss Amber Rudd later admitted. He also admitted the DWP "dropped the ball" when a scathing internal report on the benefit was published almost 18 months late.
He voted Remain in the 2016 EU referendum.
Others
MPs Rishi Sunak, Oliver Dowden and Robert Jenrick were all due to get promotions, as was former Sports minister Tracey Crouch who resigned over delays to the stake cap on fixed-odds gambling machines.
At the time of writing it wasn't yet known if they'll be elevated to the Cabinet.
SACKED: Dumped from the Cabinet
TBC
CRACKED: Resigned from Cabinet
Chancellor: Philip Hammond

Philip Hammond confirmed he was getting ready to quit ahead of Boris Johnson taking over as PM.
The Chancellor is vehemently opposed to crashing out of the UK without a deal.
He said he wouldn't wait to be sacked by Boris Johnson but rather planned to resign after Theresa May's last PMQs in place on Wednesday.
He told the BBC's Andrew Marr: "I'm sure I'm not going to be sacked because I'm going to resign before we get to that point."
Justice Secretary: David Gauke

Justice Secretary David Gauke served in Theresa May's Cabinet since she took office in June 2016.
He was so famed for his cool manner that he used to get "uncorked" by more senior Tories to face difficult questions.
But he said he would not be able to serve under Boris Johnson. "Given that I've been in the Cabinet since Theresa May came to power, I think the appropriate thing is for me to resign to her," he said.
He's now tipped to form a "Gaukeward Squad" on the backbenches fighting against a No Deal Brexit .
Development Secretary: Rory Stewart
The International Development Secretary announced during his brief run for the party leadership that he would not serve in a Boris Johnson government.
He said on Twitter : "Because of our differences on Brexit and prorogation, I wouldn’t be able to serve in a Boris Johnson cabinet."
And he confirmed it with a tweet congratulating Johnson on his victory, and saying he would be on the "backbench tomorrow serving Cumbria."
The tweet was accompanied by a picture of Stewart with two horses.
THE REST: Promoted or demoted from within
TBC
JUNIOR MINISTERS: Changes below Cabinet level
Resigned
- Alan Duncan (Foreign Office)
- Anne Milton (Education)
BACKROOM TEAM: Best (and worst) of the rest
Dominic Cummings

Boris Johnson has hired the infamous former boss of the Vote Leave campaign to work as a senior advisor to him in government.
MPs voiced their fury as Dominic Cummings returned to the top tier of British politics,
Mr Cummings is an abrasive former special advisor to Michael Gove who took on "the blob" of the teaching profession.
He was then one of the architects of the official Vote Leave campaign, serving as its campaign director, during the EU referendum in 2016.
His famously bullish style was portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in a TV drama on the infighting that plagued the Leave camp.
He is said to have been a mastermind behind Vote Leave's most controversial messages, including the bus that falsely claimed we send £350million a week to the EU and messages misleadingly claiming Turkey was joining the EU.
He branded Tory Brexiteers in the ERG "useful idiots", called top Tory David Davis "thick as mince", claimed some Tory Brexiteers spent the referendum "chasing girls" and other Brexiteer economists were "charlatans".
Andrew Griffiths
It's also emerged Johnson plans to make multi-millionaire Andrew Griffiths an advisor.
Griffiths hit headlines last month after it emerged he had loaned Johnson his £9.5m Westminster townhouse to use as a campaign HQ.
Labour ’s Shadow Minister for the Cabinet Office Jon Trickett MP said: "Before he is even appointed Prime Minister, one of Boris Johnson's first acts is to dish out a powerful job in Number 10 to his super-rich pal who lent him his luxurious house in Westminster for the Tory leadership campaign.
“The public would be forgiven for coming to the conclusion that Johnson’s friends can buy influence within the new administration.
"It's blindingly obvious – Boris Johnson and his government will act only in the interest of the wealthy elite."