Explainer
Who are
No 10’s new power brokers after Morgan McSweeney’s resignation?
As the PM
appoints two acting replacements, here are the five people vying for his ear in
the new operation
Profile:
Labour election guru undone by poor judgment
Kiran
Stacey Policy editor
Sun 8 Feb
2026 18.48 GMT
Morgan
McSweeney’s departure from Downing Street is the biggest shift in power at the
heart of Keir Starmer’s operation since he came to office. As the prime
minister appoints two acting replacements for his closest aide, here are the
people vying for the prime minister’s ear in the new No 10 operation.
Vidhya
Alakeson
Acting
chief of staff
Alakeson
won plaudits before the election for leading Starmer’s outreach to the business
community. Like many of those at the top of the Labour party, she has a
background at the Resolution Foundation thinktank, where she was deputy chief
executive. Before that she worked in the Treasury as a policy adviser.
Those who
have worked with her in No 10, where she was deputy chief of staff until
Sunday, have praised her work ethic and her ability to work with groups outside
the Labour party. But as a policy expert some say she lacks the raw political
skills so ruthlessly employed by McSweeney.
Jill
Cuthbertson
Acting
chief of staff
Cuthbertson
and Alakeson have shared the role as McSweeney’s deputy, with Cuthbertson
tending to concentrate on logistics and operations.
Cuthbertson
has a long background in Labour politics, having worked in No 10 under Gordon
Brown and then as part of Ed Miliband’s events team when he was party leader.
Seen as a trusted pair of hands, she was known for her detailed logistical
plans during the election campaign, which helped Starmer avoid the kind of
mistakes that bedevilled the early days of Rishi Sunak’s campaign.
Darren
Jones
Chief
secretary to the prime minister
It was
just five months ago that Starmer relaunched his Downing Street team, with
Darren Jones at its centre in the newly created role of chief secretary to the
prime minister.
The
Labour MP and former Treasury chief secretary was brought in to help the
government deliver the prime minister’s priorities. He told allies it was his
job to bash heads together when ministers could not agree on a particular
course of action.
Starmer’s
regard for Jones was clear from the outset, when he tried to get McSweeney to
report to him rather than straight to Starmer himself. McSweeney refused, but
insiders say Jones’s arrival marked the beginning of the decline in McSweeney’s
influence.
Amy
Richards
Political
director
Richards
was a long-time adviser to Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, and worked on
her leadership campaign in 2015. She was brought into Downing Street in
September as Starmer looked to revamp the way his operation communicated with
Labour MPs after the welfare rebellion.
Loyal and
low-key, Richards has encouraged the prime minister to do far more regular
outreach to his parliamentary party, with some success. Starmer has been seen
more in the Commons, including in the MPs’ tea room, assuaging concerns among
colleagues that he had become too distant from the concerns of his own
colleagues.
Harvey
Redgrave
Head of
No 10 policy unit
A former
Fulbright scholar, Redgrave is a home affairs policy specialist who previously
spent seven years at the Tony Blair Institute.
Redgrave
was a senior adviser to Miliband when he was leader of the opposition. He was
appointed as the head of the policy unit in September as part of a shakeup that
some on the left saw as a push by Starmer to expel the few remaining true
progressives from his inner team.

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