Sunak reshuffle: Shapps named energy secretary in department shake-up
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has appointed Grant Shapps as the new energy and net zero secretary in a shake-up of government departments.
The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy has been broken up as part of the reorganisation.
Greg Hands has replaced Nadhim Zahawi after the former Tory party chairman was sacked over his tax affairs.
And Lucy Frazer will head up a streamlined department of culture, media, and sport.
Mr Sunak’s top team of ministers will meet in the coming hours to discuss the changes.
Opposition parties say reorganising government departments will be costly and suggest Mr Sunak’s reshuffle is a sign of weakness.
Labour’s shadow climate and net zero secretary, Ed Miliband, said “rearranging of deckchairs on the sinking Titanic of failed Conservative energy policy will not rescue the country”.
But the government says the changes will help departments focus on the prime minister’s priorities.
- Rishi Sunak’s five promises analysed
- Have Sunak’s first 100 days been calm or ‘cringe’?
- Sunak’s backseat-driving former prime ministers
The government said the new Department for Energy Security and Net Zero will be “tasked with securing our long-term energy supply, bringing down bills and halving inflation”.
Mr Sunak promised last summer – when he was campaigning to be Conservative leader – to re-establish a standalone department for energy.
The change will see business and trade merged in one department, headed by Kemi Badenoch, and the creation of a new department focused on science, innovation and technology, led by Michelle Donelan.
There have been no changes to the position of Dominic Raab, the deputy prime minister. The BBC understands Mr Sunak is waiting for a report into bullying allegations against Mr Raab before deciding on his future.
New cabinet appointments in full:
- Grant Shapps, secretary of state for energy security and net zero
- Kemi Badenoch – secretary of state for business and trade
- Lucy Frazer, secretary of state for culture, media, and sport
- Michelle Donelan, secretary of state for science, innovation and technology
- Greg Hands, Conservative Party chairman
Mr Sunak has been under pressure to assert his authority over his government and party since taking office in October last year, following the resignation of two prime ministers in a period of heightened political turbulence.
But his government has been dogged by political controversies in recent weeks and the Conservatives continue to trial Labour in the opinion polls.
-
Rishi Sunak’s five promises analysed
-
4 January
-
-
Have Sunak’s first 100 days been calm or ‘cringe’?
-
28 January
-
-
Sunak defends handling of Zahawi sacking
-
30 January
-
Published at Tue, 07 Feb 2023 11:50:40 +0000