Junior roles On 18 July, further junior frontbench roles were appointed.
Changes :''Changes from Sunak's
final Cabinet to Shadow Cabinet.'' •
David Cameron, Baron Cameron of Chipping Norton (
Foreign Secretary) resigned and was succeeded by
Andrew Mitchell. • Mitchell was
Deputy Foreign Secretary for
question time in the Commons and attended Cabinet as
Minister of State for Development and Africa.
Harriett Baldwin was later announced as Shadow Development Minister, but did not attend Shadow Cabinet. •
Grant Shapps (
Defence Secretary) lost his seat and was succeeded by
James Cartlidge. •
Alex Chalk (
Secretary of State for Justice and
Lord Chancellor) lost his seat and was succeeded by
Ed Argar. •
Michelle Donelan (
Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology) lost her seat and was succeeded by
Andrew Griffith. •
Michael Gove (
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and
Minister for Intergovernmental Relations) retired from the commons and was succeeded in the former role by
Kemi Badenoch; the latter role did not have a successor named. • Badenoch (
Business Secretary and
Minister for Women and Equalities) was succeeded by
Kevin Hollinrake in the former role and
Mims Davies in the latter role. •
Penny Mordaunt (
Leader of the House of Commons and
Lord President of the Council) lost her seat and was succeeded by
Chris Philp. •
Gillian Keegan (
Education Secretary) lost her seat and was succeeded by
Damian Hinds. •
Mark Harper (
Transport Secretary) lost his seat and was succeeded by
Helen Whately. •
Lucy Frazer (
Culture Secretary) lost her seat and was succeeded by
Julia Lopez. •
Richard Holden (
Minister without Portfolio and
party chair) resigned and was succeeded by
Richard Fuller in an interim capacity outside Shadow Cabinet. •
Chris Heaton-Harris (
Northern Ireland Secretary) stood down and was succeeded by
Alex Burghart. •
Alister Jack (
Scotland Secretary) stood down and was succeeded by
John Lamont. •
David T. C. Davies (
Wales Secretary) lost his seat and was succeeded by
The Lord Davies of Gower. No Conservative MPs were elected in Wales. •
Simon Hart (
Chief Whip of the House of Commons and
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury), who attended Cabinet, lost his seat and was succeeded by
Stuart Andrew. •
Victoria Prentis (
Attorney General), who attended Cabinet, lost her seat and was succeeded by
Jeremy Wright. •
Johnny Mercer (
Minister of State for Veterans' Affairs), who attended Cabinet, lost his seat and was succeeded by
Andrew Bowie. •
Michael Tomlinson (
Minister of State for Countering Illegal Migration), who attended Cabinet, lost his seat and was not succeeded by anybody. ==References==