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Regular-article-logo Monday, 25 November 2024

Indians retain UK team posts

The three Indian-origin ministers, who had won back their seats convincingly in the Tory landslide, have been retained in their posts

PTI London Published 17.12.19, 07:39 PM
The newly elected MPs and ministers returned to the House of Commons on Tuesday

The newly elected MPs and ministers returned to the House of Commons on Tuesday AP

Three Indian-origin ministers, including UK home secretary Priti Patel, have retained their posts in Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s cabinet, which met on Tuesday ahead of the first Parliament session since the Conservative Party won a strong 80-seat majority in the general election last week.

The newly-elected MPs and ministers returned to the House of Commons on Tuesday.

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Johnson has undertaken only a very limited cabinet reshuffle for now to fill some vacant posts, while maintaining the status quo across his top team — which he has dubbed the “People’s Cabinet”. The three Indian-origin ministers, who had won back their seats convincingly in the Tory landslide, have been retained in their posts.

Patel was back by Johnson’s side in the Commons as UK home secretary, with fellow MP Alok Sharma remaining in charge of the department for international development. Rishi Sunak, the son-in-law of Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy, retains his place at the cabinet table as chief secretary to the treasury, working closely with the UK’s Pakistani-origin chancellor, Sajid Javid.

“You ain’t seen nothing yet, folks. This is a People’s Cabinet, and we are going to work to deliver the priorities of the British people,” said Johnson, in a televised address during his first cabinet meeting on Tuesday ahead of the Commons session.

“We must recognise that people lent us their votes at this election.

“It was a seismic election, but we need to repay their trust and work 24 hours a day, work flat out to deliver on it,” he said.

Johnson then used his campaign-style echo by asking his cabinet ministers to shout out how many hospitals the government has pledged it would build and how many police officers it would hire — reflecting the key promises of the Conservative Party on the campaign trail.

In Parliament, the newly re-elected Prime Minister began his address by paying tribute to the two victims of the London Bridge terrorist attack last month before getting back to the central theme of his government — Britain’s exit from the EU scheduled for 31 January 2020. “We are going to get Brexit done,” he declared. “I think this Parliament is a vast improvement on its predecessor.”

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