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Lisa Nandy promises constructive Opposition as UK shadow minister

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Lisa Nandy promises constructive Opposition as UK shadow minister
LifeInternational2 min read
By Aditi Khanna

London, Apr 6 () Indian-origin MP Lisa Nandy on Monday promised a constructive Opposition to the British government as she got to work as the UK's shadow foreign secretary in the newly-elected Labour Party leader Keir Starmer's top team.

The 40-year-old MP for Wigan in Greater Manchester was one of the first appointments to be announced by Starmer, who took over from Jeremy Corbyn as the Leader of the Opposition over the weekend, and makes Nandy effectively his second in command in the House of Commons.

She thanked the new party leader for the "opportunity to serve" and in response to her counterpart in government, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab's congratulatory message, said her first focus will be on the "pressing matter" of Britons stranded abroad due to the coronavirus pandemic worldwide lockdown.

"You can be assured of constructive Opposition and I look forward to speaking at the earliest opportunity about the coronavirus crisis and the pressing matter of Britons stranded abroad," said Nandy, the daughter of India-born academic Dipak Nandy.

"It's a real honour to be tasked with leading Labour's foreign policy response in these difficult times," she posted on Twitter soon after her shadow cabinet appointment on Sunday night.

Nandy came in third in a three-way Labour Party leadership postal ballot, which was won by Starmer who polled 275,780 votes followed by Rebecca Long-Bailey in distant second with 135,218 votes.

While Long-Bailey is seen as aligned to the old guard led by Jeremy Corbyn and unlikely to find a spot among Starmer's close aides, Nandy has been a vocal critic of the former leadership over its Brexit policies and is expected to emerge as a key Opposition voice under the new guard.

Her appointment in the top team is seen as among the many signs of Starmer's plan to revamp the Opposition Labour Party, which had suffered a bruising defeat during the December 2019 General Election.

Besides Nandy, his top team includes Welsh MP Nick Thomas-Symonds as shadow home secretary and Oxford East MP Anneliese Dodds as shadow chancellor. Among the other appointments, Angela Rayner, the newly-elected deputy leader, was also made the Labour Party chair.

"I will have in my shadow cabinet those that want to serve towards the future aim of winning that next General Election. It'll be a talented, balanced shadow cabinet," said Starmer, stressing that the party's will be keeping an eye on the 2024 General Election.

"We just lost four elections in a row and therefore of course we need to change. If we don't change we will lose the next general election," he said, in one of his first interviews as Labour leader.

His win has been welcomed by Indian diaspora groups, who hope for a new chapter in the party's connect with the 1.5-million-strong Indian-origin voter base in the UK which felt increasingly alienated under Corbyn's perceived anti-India focus on contentious issues such as human rights in Kashmir.

"I am confident that under your leadership the Labour Party will further strengthen its historic bonds with India and will build enduring bridges to connect with the Indian diaspora in the UK," said Ruchi Ghanashyam, the Indian High Commissioner to the UK, in her congratulatory message for Starmer. AK MRJ MRJ

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