Anna Edwards
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Podcast Appearances
Good morning to you, Callum.
So how big an expectation of change should we have on all kinds of fronts?
Is this, you know, in terms of the makeup of the cabinet, the people in the room when decisions are taking place, the nature of appointments and how we add transparency to all that process?
I mean, what kind of big change agenda are we talking about next?
So Callum, do we need to think about a new chancellor?
I mean, on the one hand, she has stuck to the fiscal rules.
On the other, candid conversations, it seems, between Wes Streeting and Peter Mandelson suggest that there's a lot of conversation about whether the top team,
at number 10 and 11 has enough of a focus on the growth agenda?
Are we thinking about a new chancellor here, a new finance team?
Do you think when do you think we're going to have you heard when we're going to get further information about the appointment of Peter Mendelsohn and all of the background story that's yet to be published?
But of course, the Metropolitan Police has said certain bits can't be or won't be for a while.
Any update on the timing of all of that?
News when you want it with Bloomberg News Now.
I'm Anna Edwards.
And I'm Stephen Carroll.
The UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer appears to have won a reprieve from a potential leadership challenge with all members of his cabinet backing him to stay on.
The public endorsement of Starmer comes after a second top advisor resigned and the leader of the Labour Party in Scotland, Anna Sarwar, called for the Prime Minister to go.
However, Sarwar's push for Starmer's removal was met with a wall of support for the Prime Minister as Labour politicians came to his defence.
And perhaps most notably, key potential leadership challengers, including the likes of former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and Health Secretary Wes Streeting, opted to back Starmer.
The near-unanimous public support from Streeting and others gives Starmer more time in the top job.