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Minister rules out early election amid government reshuffle

6th Sep 2025 12:16

(Alliance News) - A senior minister has denied the government is in crisis after Angela Rayner's resignation over her tax affairs triggered a major Cabinet reshuffle.

Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister Darren Jones said Keir Starmer now has the "strongest team" in place after his former deputy quit for breaching the ministerial code.

He ruled out the prospect of an early election amid opposition claims that the upheaval could open up splits within Labour and collapse the Prime Minister's authority.

A wider junior ministerial reshuffle is now understood to be taking place on Saturday as Starmer seeks to draw a line under the fallout from Ms Rayner's departure.

Speaking to broadcasters on Saturday, Jones dismissed suggestions that the rejig could delay the prime minister's self-described "phase two" of government by moving senior figures to unfamiliar briefs.

"It's not instability insofar as the outcomes that we're delivering are the same," Jones, who is also the newly appointed chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, told BBC Breakfast.

"Because of the former deputy prime minister's resignation, the prime minister decided it was the decisive thing to do, to bring (the reshuffle) forward and to get it done on Friday, then to be able to move forward with the strongest team that we have around the Cabinet now leading on delivering the public's priorities."

He rejected suggestions Yvette Cooper had been moved out of the Home Office because she was failing to get a grip on immigration, adding that she would be "brilliant" in her new role as foreign secretary.

Rayner quit as deputy prime minister, housing secretary and deputy Labour leader after an independent ethics investigation found she had failed to pay enough stamp duty on a seaside flat she bought this year.

In a letter published on Friday, Laurie Magnus said he believed she had acted in "good faith", but that "the responsibility of any taxpayer for reporting their tax returns and settling their liabilities rests ultimately with themselves".

The ethics watchdog said that Rayner's failure to settle her full stamp duty liability, along with the fact that this was only established following media scrutiny of her tax affairs, led him to consider the ministerial code had been breached.

Her sudden departure prompted the first major reshuffle of Starmer's premiership, in which he sacked two ministers, promoted two and moved 10 into different roles.

Former foreign secretary David Lammy has been made deputy prime minister and also takes over as justice secretary from Shabana Mahmood, who has become Home Secretary.

Starmer now faces the prospect of a party conference overshadowed by manoeuvring for the deputy leadership role vacated by Rayner, who was popular among grassroots and seen as a bridge between No 10 and the wider party.

But Jones dismissed the idea that her departure could expose divisions between different factions within Labour after Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said "splits" would open up following the scandal.

"Nigel Farage is wrong there," he said.

"The Labour Party is not going to split and there won't be an early election."

Asked whether the team was stronger after Rayner's departure, he said: "The Angela Rayner situation is different because of course she had to leave government because she broke the ministerial code.

"But, look, all of us in our first year in government have come in and gotten on with the job of running the country."

source: PA

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