UK PM Sunak sacks interior minister Suella Braverman over protest comments

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FILE PHOTO: Home Secretary Suella Braverman with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak as he hosts a policing roundtable at 10 Downing Street, London, Britain October 12, 2023. James Manning/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

A source said Mr Sunak moved against Ms Braverman, asking her “to leave government” which she had accepted.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON - British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak sacked his interior minister Suella Braverman on Monday, after her

criticism of the police’s handling of a pro-Palestinian march

divided his party and threatened his own authority.

Under fire from opposition lawmakers and members of his own governing Conservative Party to eject Ms Braverman, Mr Sunak seemed to have brought forward a long-planned reshuffle to bring in allies and remove ministers he felt were not performing.

The ever-controversial Ms Braverman defied Mr Sunak last week in an unauthorised article accusing police of “double standards” at protests, suggesting they were tough on right-wing demonstrators, but easy on pro-Palestinian marchers.

The opposition Labour Party said that inflamed frictions between a pro-Palestinian demonstration and a far-right counter protest on Saturday, when nearly 150 people were arrested

“Rishi Sunak has asked Suella Braverman to leave government, and she has accepted,” a government source said.

She was replaced by foreign minister James Cleverly, who was seen walking up to Mr Sunak’s Downing Street office on Monday.

In what is seen as a surprise move, former Prime Minister David Cameron was being made foreign minister.

Ms Braverman’s removal will anger some Conservatives on the right of the party, who believe her criticism of the police was justified, and Mr Sunak may try to keep them on board by suggesting that it was her language not her points that were wrong.

The move comes just days before the government and the interior ministry find out whether they have succeeded in one of their key policy areas - winning a legal battle at the Supreme Court to be able to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda.

Mr Sunak is expected to carry out a wider number of changes in his Cabinet, bringing in allies and removing some ministers who his Downing Street office say have not been performing as well as he wanted in their departments. REUTERS

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