Kuwait Times

UK PM’s cabinet reshuffle thrown into disarray

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May’s long-awaited government reshuffle was thrown into disarray yesterday after a minister resigned rather than accept a new post. Education Secretary Justine Greening becomes the fourth minister to leave the cabinet since November, after resisting a request to move to the welfare and pensions ministry. Most of May’s senior ministers kept their jobs in Monday’s reshuffle, including Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, Brexit minister David Davis and finance minister Philip Hammond. The prime minister was prompted to carry out what her office called a “refresh” of the government after sacking her deputy Damian Green last month in a row over pornograph­y found on his computer in 2008.

His departure followed those of the defense and aid ministers in unrelated scandals the month before, capping a tough year for May after she lost her parliament­ary majority in a snap election in June. An interim deal on Brexit in December however gave May new impetus, and a long-anticipate­d reshuffle was arranged. But it began in a farcical fashion when her Conservati­ve party announced a new chairman on Twitter, only to delete the tweet and later name another lawmaker for the post. “No wonder Theresa May’s struggling to negotiate Brexit-she can’t even organize a reshuffle,” tweeted opposition Labor MP Stephen Kinnock.

Alistair Carmichael, an MP with the pro-European Liberal Democrats, said: “Theresa May wanted to reassert her authority but has come out of this looking weaker than ever.” Greening’s resignatio­n later Monday is likely to be viewed as a challenge to May’s authority, while media reports suggest the health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, also refused a request to move-and so stays on. For her part Greening said in a tweet that educationa­l issues like social mobility matter “more than my ministeria­l career”, and vowed to continue to work for young people as a member of parliament.

Brexit balance

May’s room for maneuver is limited by the fragility of her minority government and the need to maintain the delicate Cabinet balance of euroscepti­c and proEuropea­n ministers as major Brexit decisions loom. After starting the two-year withdrawal process in March last year, Britain struck a deal in December on the financial settlement with Brussels, as well as on expatriate rights and the Irish border. Negotiatio­ns on a transition deal begin this month, while the toughest talks, on Britain’s future relationsh­ip with the European Union including trade, are set to start in March. Johnson, a leading Brexit supporter, kept his job at the foreign office, despite challengin­g May’s strategy last year, as did fellow euroscepti­c Liam Fox, the internatio­nal trade minister.

Finance minister Hammond and interior minister Amber Rudd, who campaigned to stay in the EU, continue as before. Greening was offered the welfare ministry “but declined to take it. The prime minister is disappoint­ed but respects her decision to leave the government”, the Downing Street source said. The former Conservati­ve party chairman, Patrick McLoughlin, had been tipped for the sack after the disastrous snap election in which May lost her majority in the House of Commons.

He also drew fire after a protester interrupte­d May’s speech to the party conference in October-an address that was also marred by a coughing fit and a collapsing set. It was one of several low points in a turbulent year for the prime minister, who took office in July 2016 after the referendum on leaving the EU. —AFP

 ??  ?? LONDON: British Education Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities Justine Greening arriving to attend a pre-budget cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street. —AFP
LONDON: British Education Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities Justine Greening arriving to attend a pre-budget cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street. —AFP

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