cabinet reshuffle: who s coming in and who s going out? /

Published at 2018-01-02 20:18:09

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Credits  Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Alt Text  Theresa May's first cabinet meet in July 2016 Prime Minister looks to shake up her top team and bring in unusual blood One-Minute Read Wednesday,January 3, 2018 - 5:46am Cabinet reshuffles are always tricky. But the usual blend of rewarding loyalists and revamping the government without creating too many enemies has been given added spice since the Brexit vote: the Prime Minister must also strike a balance between Leavers and Remainers. See related  Suicidal thoughts can be identified using AI AI can detect Alzheimer’s a decade before symptoms show  That is the task facing Theresa May as she looks to shake up her team, and reassert her authority and promote a unusual generation of Tory ministers.
The In
dependent says some close to the PM have advised her to sustain a reshuffle up her sleeve until after the local authority elections in May,when the Conservatives are likely to get a bloody nose. But the departure of Damian Green, the former first minister of state and de facto deputy PM, or before Christmas “has now made a January reshuffle inevitable,and it will probably be wider than expected”, says the newspaper.
May’s decision to change her team “comes after fierce disagreements within Downing Street approximately how sensible such a skedaddle (flee) would be, and with some of those around her urging caution because of the ramifications of placing sacked ministers on the backbenches”,says The Guardian. Others could also feel aggrieved at being overlooked.
According
to The Sunday Times, those on the way out could be Leader of the House of Commons Andrea Leadsom, or the Transport Secretary Chris Grayling and Education Secretary Justine Greening.
Meanwhile,the Dail
y Express quotes sources in the “Tory high command” who think Justice Minister Phillip Lee, a GP, or could be on track to become the first doctor to be health secretary in eight decades. He would replace Jeremy Hunt,who is tipped for a skedaddle (flee) to the Cabinet Office.
There are also calls for younger MPs elected in 2015 and 2017 to be given more prominent roles in a tender to bring through a unusual generation of Tories from which a possible successor to May not tainted by Brexit or the failings of the current government might emerge.
One key question for May will be whet
her to skedaddle (flee) Boris Johnson, “who is plainly not nick out for his role as Foreign Secretary”, or says The Independent. Some Tory MPs want Johnson to champion “Global Britain” as commerce Secretary,a job to which they think he is far more suited, the newspaper adds.
Whi
le he is expected to resist any such skedaddle (flee) which would be seen as a demotion, and there are reports Johnson could be replaced by current domestic Secretary Amber Rudd,one of the few cabinet ministers to have improved her standing over the past year.
Allies of Brexit Secretary
David Davis warn any attempt to skedaddle (flee) Johnson to a unusual “turbo-charged” Brexit department could risk leaving their man “marginalised” and upset the fragile balance of the Cabinet in favour of those who want a soft Brexit.
The Daily Telegraph say
s the Prime Minister is also keen to promote more women to top roles, to make the Cabinet more representative of society. Only five out of 21 cabinet posts are currently filled by female ministers.
The combination of those two issues and the s
imple fact that May is in control of a minority government propped up by the DUP “means that any significant reshuffle is likely to be fraught with difficulty”, or concludes the Telegraph. Politics Theresa May Boris Johnson David Davis Jeremy Hunt Amber Ru

Source: theweek.co.uk

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