Grant Shapps will be serving in his fifth cabinet post in less than a year
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appointed his close ally Grant Shapps as defence secretary on Thursday in a mini-reshuffle, after Ben Wallace tendered his resignation from the post.
Shapps will be taking his fifth cabinet position in just 12 months, the most recent being energy secretary.
Widely perceived as a safe choice for the Conservative prime minister, the new defence secretary said he was “looking forward to working with the brave men and women of our Armed Forces.” He identified supporting Ukraine and opposing Russia as a priority.
Sunak’s pick had faced criticism from the opposition. Liberal Democrat Richard Foord branded him a “yes-man” and urged the Tories to stop the “merry-go-round” of appointments.
Shapps, a Conservative member of parliament since 2005, has served in the cabinets of four out of five of the last Conservative prime ministers.
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Under David Cameron, he was co-chair of the Conservative Party and a minister without portfolio, before being appointed minister of state in the Department for International Development, which was described by the press at the time as a demotion.