Theresa May swung the axe on four ministers tonight as she
consolidated her fragile grip on power.
The Prime Minister made the changes as No. 10 remains in
chaos – with the Queen’s Speech delayed and a deal with the hard-right DUP
still not hammered out.
Apprenticeships minister Robert Halfon, Armed Forces
minister Mike Penning and Justice minister Oliver Heald were all out, Downing
Street announced.
Mr. Halfon, a former top aide to ex-Chancellor George
Osborne who yesterday branded Mrs. May a “dead woman walking”, said he was not
given a reason for his sacking.
He said he had “loved” the job, adding: “The Prime Minister
has to make these decisions, I wasn’t really given a reason”.
Also gone was Brexit minister David Jones, who said it was
“impossible to say” if his boss would still be Prime Minister in six months
after her election drubbing.
Meanwhile, Mrs. May brought back two MPs she dumped from her
team last summer.
Brexit -backer Dominic Raab will return as a Justice
minister while Remainer Claire Perry will work on business.
Deputy whips Anne Milton and Mel Stride were also promoted
to ministerial jobs in education and the Treasury.
And three ministers were moved to new departments – Nick
Hurd from business to the Home Office, Robert Goodwill from the Home Office to
the Department for Education and Baroness Anelay from the Foreign Office to the
Brexit Department.
Mrs. May had already completed her Cabinet reshuffle on
Sunday but was continuing to jostle MPs into junior roles tonight.
She promoted Brexit backstabber Michael Gove to Environment
Secretary in the shake-up – but paralysed by her lack of a majority, was unable
to make bigger changes.
Six reasons Michael Gove is an absolutely terrible choice
for Environment Secretary in Theresa May’s cabinet reshuffle
Unsackable Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt kept his job as lame
duck Mrs May unveiled her reshuffle, dubbed “the most boring ever”.
A procession of ministers sashayed into Downing Street as
the Tory leader rejigged her team ahead of a deal with the DUP to stay in
power.
But with calls for her to quit in the Conservative Party,
Mrs May had no choice but to send most ministers out with the jobs they already
had.
Only Liz Truss, who faced fury for failing to swiftly defend
judges as Justice Secretary, had been demoted with most jobs announced.
She was named Chief Secretary to the Treasury, not a full
Cabinet job.
Tonight Mrs May managed to head off the prospect of a
leadership challenge as she apologised to a crunch meeting of backbench MPs.
She said “I got us into this mess, I’m going to get us out”
as she vowed to help MPs who had lost their seats when she failed to win a
majority. (NAN)
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