Sue Gray’s resignation after pay scandal weakens Starmer’s leadership
After several controversies, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s senior advisor Sue Gray submitted her resignation this Sunday. Downing Street faces the first major crisis for a Labor government that has not completed even 100 days in officeAs head of the civil service, Gray was in charge of the Partygate investigation that ended Boris Johnson’s leadership, so when Starmer signed off on it while she was still leader of the opposition, the Conservatives criticized that His test was not neutral. This controversy increased further when the Labor Party became the head of the government and it came to light that The advisor earned more than the Prime Minister himselfLeaks to the press continued. There was talk of mismanagement and tension with Simon Case, the current head of the civil servant body, who had announced days earlier that he would be leaving his post in December.
Ultimately Gray justified his decision to resign. “It was a distraction”His new role will be as head of the regions. He will be replaced by Morgan McSweeney, who led the Labor Party’s election campaign, as part of an internal restructuring by a Prime Minister who has not exactly had an easy start.
The party’s recent conference, the first held by Labor while in power after 24 years in opposition, was overshadowed by donations made by the billionaire. Lord Waheed AlliWho allegedly authorized a temporary pass to Downing Street after the July election.
The New Labor Executive’s belief that there were not enough of the right people in the right jobs contributed to the errors of the strategy. In short, this was not what was expected from the state’s former attorney general, a man who had ample time to assemble a team in the face of clear evidence of the shift in the cycle that all polls predicted for the June elections. Was done.
Some powers, which were under Gray’s control, will now be under his control. james lyonsFormer political journalist from “The Sunday Times” and “Daily Mirror”, who will now be the new communications director.
Starmer will now also have two new deputy chiefs of staff, Vidya Alkeson and Jill Cuthbertson, and a new Principal Private Secretary in Nin Pandit – a key civil service role for every Prime Minister.
Thanking Gray for his work, Starmer said he was “delighted” to have her with him in his new role, adding that the change had “increased his efforts to deliver the change promised to the British people”. Showed determination.