Dramatic return to British government for David Cameron after Suella Braverman sacked

The former prime minister replaced James Cleverly as Foreign Secretary and will be given a peerage
Dramatic return to British government for David Cameron after Suella Braverman sacked

David Cameron (left) leaving Downing Street after being appointed as Britain's foreign secretary in a shock government shake-up. Picture: Maja Smiejkowska/PA Wire

David Cameron has made a dramatic return to government as British foreign secretary in a reshuffle triggered by Rishi Sunak’s decision to sack Suella Braverman from the Home Office.

The former prime minister replaced James Cleverly as foreign secretary and will be given a peerage.

Mr Cleverly takes on the job of home secretary after Mr Sunak ended Mrs Braverman’s controversial tenure in the job.

Sacking one of the leading figures on the Tory right could pose difficulties for the British prime minister as he seeks to get his party united behind him and ready for a general election, expected next year.

Mr Cameron, 57, served as British prime minister from 2010 to 2016, resigning after the outcome of the Brexit referendum, when Britain voted to leave the European Union.

His unexpected return to the front line of British politics comes after he spent the last seven years writing his memoirs and involving himself in business, including Greensill Capital, a finance firm which later collapsed.

Sunak's office said on Monday that King Charles III had approved giving Mr Cameron a seat in Britain's upper chamber, the House of Lords, allowing him to return to government as a minister despite no longer being an elected member of parliament.

Mr Cameron has become the 15th former prime minister to serve in a later government led by someone else.

The appointment of Mr Cameron was a massive shock in Westminster, not just because of the return of a former prime minister to government – the first since Alec Douglas-Home – but also because of his views on China.

During the Mr Cameron administration, there was a “golden era” of UK-China co-operation, something Mr Sunak described as “naive” last year following growing tensions with Beijing.

Former prime minister David Cameron arriving at 10 Downing Street, London. Picture: Sam Hall/PA Wire
Former prime minister David Cameron arriving at 10 Downing Street, London. Picture: Sam Hall/PA Wire

Mr Cameron had also been critical of Mr Sunak’s decision to scrap the northern leg of HS2, while the prime minister used his Tory conference speech to distance himself from the legacy of his predecessors.

But the former prime minister made clear he backed Mr Sunak and would work with him to help the Tories win the general election expected next year.

Mr Cameron said: “Though I may have disagreed with some individual decisions, it is clear to me that Rishi Sunak is a strong and capable prime minister, who is showing exemplary leadership at a difficult time.

“I want to help him to deliver the security and prosperity our country needs and be part of the strongest possible team that serves the United Kingdom and that can be presented to the country when the general election is held. ” 

Braverman gets the chop

Ominously for Mr Sunak, Mrs Braverman said she would have “more to say in due course” about her exit, which followed rows over comments about homeless people and the policing of pro-Palestinian marches.

Mrs Braverman said: “It has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve as home secretary.” 

Former minister Andrea Jenkyns said Mrs Braverman had been “sacked for speaking the truth”, and it was a “bad call by Rishi caving in to the left”.

Former Tory treasurer Lord Cruddas also criticised Mr Sunak’s actions, saying: “The coup is complete, remain has won and democracy has lost.” News of Mrs Braverman’s exit came as defence minister James Heappey was touring broadcast studios.

Minutes before she was sacked, he had told LBC that Mr Sunak and his team in No 10 had been “very clear she (Mrs Braverman) has his confidence and, in that sense, one would imagine that she will continue”.

But he was told on air during an ITV Good Morning Britain interview that she had been sacked, leaving him to say: “Your viewers will be enjoying my discomfort, but it is, in this case, difficult to offer commentary when I just don’t know what is going on.” 

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “Suella Braverman was never fit to be Home Secretary. Rishi Sunak knew this and he still appointed her.

“It was the prime minister’s sheer cowardice that kept her in the job even for this long. We are witnessing a broken party and a broken Government, both of which are breaking this country.” In his first comments in the new role, Mr Cleverly said it was an “honour to be appointed as Home Secretary”.

“The goal is clear,” he said.

“My job is to keep people in this country safe.” 

In the junior ranks, Will Quince and Neil O’Brien both quit as health ministers, while veteran schools minister Nick Gibb also left his post and Jesse Norman departed from the Department for Transport.

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