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Ex-Prime Minister David Cameron makes shock comeback as Britain’s foreign secretary

Former British Prime Minister David Cameron
Former Prime Minister David Cameron is returning to front-line government as Britain’s new foreign secretary.
(James Manning / Associated Press)
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Former British Prime Minister David Cameron made a shock return to high office Monday, becoming foreign secretary in a major shakeup of the Conservative government that also saw the firing of divisive Home Secretary Suella Braverman.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appointed Cameron, who led the government between 2010 and 2016 and triggered the country’s exit from the European Union, as part of a Cabinet shuffle in which he also sacked Braverman and named James Cleverly, who had been foreign secretary, to replace her.

Braverman, a law-and-order hard-liner, drew anger for accusing police of being too lenient with pro-Palestinian protesters. Sunak made further changes to the government throughout the day Monday, naming Victoria Atkins as the new health secretary and moving her predecessor, Steve Barclay, to the environment portfolio.

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The bold Cabinet changes are an attempt by Sunak to reset his faltering government. The Conservatives, also known as the Tories, have been in power for 13 years, but opinion polls for months have put them 15 to 20 points behind the opposition Labor Party amid a stagnating economy, persistently high inflation, an overstretched healthcare system and a wave of public sector strikes.

The appointment of Cameron, who quit the House of Commons in 2016, came as a surprise to seasoned politics-watchers. It’s rare for a non-lawmaker to take a senior government post, and it has been decades since a former prime minister held a Cabinet job.

The government said Cameron would be appointed to Parliament’s unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords. The last foreign secretary to serve in the House of Lords, rather than in the elected House of Commons, was Peter Carrington, who was part of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s government in the 1980s.

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Cameron, 57, said Britain was “facing a daunting set of international challenges, including the war in Ukraine and the crisis in the Middle East.”

“While I have been out of front-line politics for the last seven years, I hope that my experience — as Conservative leader for 11 years and prime minister for six — will assist me in helping the prime minister to meet these vital challenges,” he said in a statement.

Cameron’s foreign policy legacy is mixed. As prime minister, he backed the NATO-led military intervention in Libya in 2011 that toppled Moammar Kadafi and deepened the chaos in the North African country. In 2013, he tried and failed to gain Parliament’s backing for airstrikes on President Bashar Assad’s forces in Syria. He also announced a short-lived “golden era” in Britain-China relations shortly before that relationship soured.

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And he will be forever remembered as the unwitting author of Brexit, a rupture that roiled Britain’s politics, economy and place in the world. Cameron called the 2016 EU membership referendum, confident that the country would vote to stay in the bloc. He resigned the day after a majority of voters opted to leave the EU.

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Bronwen Maddox, director of international affairs think tank Chatham House, said Cameron “will bring undoubted strengths into the top team and to the U.K.’s relationships abroad,” where many will welcome “a heavyweight and moderate foreign secretary.”

She added: “The concern must be, however, that these could be outweighed by the controversial legacy he brings, too.”

Sunak was a strong backer of the winning “Leave” side in the referendum. Cameron’s return and Braverman’s departure are likely to infuriate the Conservative Party’s right wing and inflame tensions in the party that Sunak has sought to soothe.

Prominent right-wing lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg said firing Braverman was “a mistake because Suella understood what the British voter thought and was trying to do something about it.”

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Sunak had been under growing pressure to fire Braverman — a hard-liner popular with the authoritarian wing of the governing Conservative Party — from one of the most senior jobs in government, responsible for handling immigration and policing.

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In a highly unusual attack on the police last week, Braverman said London’s police force, also known as Scotland Yard, was ignoring lawbreaking by “pro-Palestinian mobs.” She described demonstrators calling for a cease-fire in Gaza as “hate marchers.”

On Saturday, far-right protesters scuffled with police and tried to confront a large pro-Palestinian march by hundreds of thousands through the streets of London. Critics accused Braverman of helping to inflame tensions.

Last week Braverman wrote an article for the Times of London in which she said police “play favorites when it comes to protesters” and act more leniently toward pro-Palestinian demonstrators and Black Lives Matter supporters than toward right-wing protesters and soccer hooligans.

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The article was not approved in advance by the prime minister’s office, as would usually be the case.

Braverman said Monday that “it has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve as home secretary,” adding that she would “have more to say in due course.”

Braverman, a 43-year-old lawyer and daughter of immigrants, has become a leader of the party’s populist wing by advocating ever-tougher curbs on migration and a war on human rights protections, liberal social values and what she has called the “tofu-eating wokerati.”

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Last month, she called migration a “hurricane” that would bring “millions more immigrants to these shores, uncontrolled and unmanageable.”

As home secretary, Braverman championed the government’s stalled plan to send asylum-seekers who arrive in Britain in boats on a one-way trip to Rwanda. A Supreme Court ruling on whether the policy is legal is due Wednesday.

Critics say Braverman has been building her profile to position herself for a party leadership contest that could come if the Conservatives lose power in an election expected next year.

Last month Sunak tried to paint his government as a force of change, saying he would break the “30-year status quo” that includes the governments of Cameron and other Conservative predecessors.

“A few weeks ago, Rishi Sunak said David Cameron was part of a failed status quo. Now he’s bringing him back as his life raft,” said Labor lawmaker Pat McFadden. “This puts to bed the prime minister’s laughable claim to offer change from 13 years of Tory failure.”

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As well as bringing about Brexit, Cameron’s government imposed years of public-spending cuts after the 2008 global financial crisis that have frayed the country’s welfare system and state-funded health service. After leaving office, he was caught up in a scandal over his lobbying for Greensill Capital, a financial services firm that later collapsed.

Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said Cameron’s appointment “is a measure of the desperation that surrounds this government.”

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“It’s difficult to believe that this is going to impress voters, whether they are convinced Brexiteers who despise David Cameron for being a Remainer” — someone who wanted Britain to stay in the EU — “or convinced Remainers who despise David Cameron for holding and losing a referendum,” he said.

“On the upside, it’s a useful distraction from Braverman’s sacking, and as a former prime minister it will mean that the U.K. has rather more clout in international circles than perhaps might have been the case.”

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