Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Aletha Adu, Jessica Elgot and Aubrey Allegretti

Who is in and who is out? Key figures in Rishi Sunak’s cabinet

Rishi Sunak
Sunak began his cabinet reshuffle on Tuesday. Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

In the cabinet

Jeremy Hunt, chancellor
Had he won the Tory leadership in the summer, Rishi Sunak had been keen to appoint one of his close allies as chancellor, and he is rumoured to prefer Oliver Dowden or Mel Stride, the chair of the Treasury select committee. That may yet happen at the next reshuffle but for now Sunak has kept with Hunt, deciding that stability is the priority. Having been in post for less than a fortnight, it was the consensus position among MPs that Hunt should stay in post. He is keen to deliver the 31 October fiscal event on schedule, in an attempt to bolster market confidence.

Penny Mordaunt, leader of the Commons
Mordaunt, who stood in both Tory leadership elections this year, would have hoped for a promotion but is instead kept in place. The Commons leader is confident at the dispatch box and is deemed popular with Tory activists.

Dominic Raab, deputy prime minister and justice secretary
Raab got his old jobs back. He kept a largely low profile after Boris Johnson’s administration collapsed in July. But he was a consistent and early backer of Sunak and spoke up for him in the broadcast rounds over the past week.

Oliver Dowden, chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster
Once David Cameron’s deputy chief of staff in No 10, Dowden is one of Rishi Sunak’s closest allies, who has long supported his friend’s campaign to become prime minister and may yet become chancellor. Dowden quit as Tory party co-chair in June after a double byelection defeat for the Tories, insisting “serious times require serious leadership”. Rumour suggested he was on the brink of being sacked before making his bombshell resignation, as he had increasingly become sceptical of the Johnson administration.

Suella Braverman, home secretary
Last week Braverman became the shortest-serving home secretary since 1834, having quit after she was found to have breached security rules. Her resignation rocked Liz Truss’s premiership and helped trigger Truss’s resignation the next day. Braverman makes a quick return to office in arguably the standout move of Sunak’s new team.

Simon Hart, chief whip
Hart served in Boris Johnson’s cabinet as Wales secretary before resigning in July 2022. He is a staunch remainer and his appointment suggests Sunak is taking a different approach to restoring harmony within the party.

Thérèse Coffey, environment secretary
The deputy prime minister and health secretary under Liz Truss, Coffey is moved to Defra. She was not seen as friendly towards the National Trust and RSPB during her time as a junior Defra minister and many in the environment sector viewed her as “unenthusiastic” about the role.

Out of the cabinet

Jacob Rees-Mogg
With a letter written by hand, Rees-Mogg resigned as business secretary as Rishi Sunak kicked off his cabinet reshuffle, acknowledging his proximity to the last two regimes.

Wendy Morton
Widely viewed as over-promoted due to her closeness to Truss, confidence in the former chief whip collapsed when confusion broke out over whether a motion on fracking last week would be treated as a confidence vote in Truss’s administration.

Kit Malthouse
Malthouse’s career took off after Johnson lost his battle to remain in No 10 earlier this year. The former policing minister became the most senior minister in the Cabinet Office as part of Johnson’s caretaker government, before accepting the poisoned chalice of becoming the fifth education secretary in just over a year.

Robert Buckland
The outgoing Wales secretary backed Rishi Sunak before switching to Liz Truss in the summer leadership race, making him an enemy of many of Sunak’s allies.

Jake Berry
The former party chair came under fire last month for telling struggling Britons to “go out there and get that new job”. Berry, who was chair of the Northern Research Group, later apologised for the remarks.

Simon Clarke
The former levelling up secretary was chief secretary to the Treasury under Sunak when he was chancellor.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.