Starmer shaking up top team as shadow cabinet reshuffle begins

Politics

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is carrying out a reshuffle of his shadow cabinet, with the first departure from his top team confirmed.

A Labour source has told Sky News: “It’s all happening – big names being moved.”

The reshuffle comes six months after Sir Keir‘s last refresh of his shadow cabinet, in the wake of a mixed night for Labour in May’s elections across the UK.

After a morning of reports and speculation about a reshuffle, Cat Smith has revealed she is departing as shadow minister for young people and democracy.

She tweeted out a copy of a letter she has sent to Sir Keir, saying: “Although I am grateful for your offer to remain in my current brief, I have only been on the backbenches for four months in my six and a half years as an MP and I will instead be returning to the backbenches.”

Ms Smith warned Sir Keir of the “damage” being done by Jeremy Corbyn remaining suspended from the Parliamentary Labour Party.

Speaking earlier at an event in Westminster, Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner said: “I don’t know the details of the reshuffle or the timing of it, I’ve been here concentrating on my role now.

More on Keir Starmer

“But six months ago I said again we need some consistency in how we’re approaching things as an opposition. I want us to see us as a government in waiting, I want us to do that job.”

Sky’s political correspondent Kate McCann reports that Ms Rayner did get a call from Sir Keir on Monday morning to say she would keep her role, but was not given any detail or consulted about the reshuffle itself.

Sir Keir’s previous reshuffle provoked controversy within the party when he sacked Ms Rayner as Labour Party chair.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

You Never Forget Your First Catriona Ward
CVS Health (CVS) earnings Q1 2024
Nancy Pelosi Calls Out Katy Tur For Being A Trump Apologist
Security Guard Steals The Show & Has The Time Of His Life During Morgan Wallen Concert In Nashville
Microsoft Outlook Flaw Exploited by Russia’s APT28 to Hack Czech, German Entities