McLoughlin keeps transport briefpublished at 13:55Breaking
Patrick McLoughlin is to continue in his role of transport secretary, David Cameron announces.
David Cameron has unveiled his first all-Conservative cabinet
Amber Rudd, John Whittingdale, Greg Clark and Robert Halfon all get roles
The PM also met Conservative backbenchers for the first time since the election
David Miliband criticises his brother's Labour leadership and rules out of the Labour leadership race
UKIP rejects Nigel Farage's resignation, meaning he will stay on as leader
Labour announced its shadow cabinet, with Chris Leslie replacing Ed Balls as shadow chancellor
Angela Harrison and Jenny Matthews
Patrick McLoughlin is to continue in his role of transport secretary, David Cameron announces.
John Cridland, director general of industry group the CBI, has congratulated Sajid Javid on his appointment as business secretary.
Quote MessageWe want to encourage more companies, especially Britain’s forgotten army of medium-sized businesses, to boost exports and investment, to drive growth and create jobs up and down the country. We look forward to working with Sajid to achieve this."
Mr Cridland continued: "As an immediate step, we want the government to set out a clear business plan for its first 100 days, including getting the deficit down, finding new ways to deliver public services and committing to the Airports Commission’s final decision this summer. We also need policies to bolster our supply chains, and make the UK the destination of choice for manufacturing high-value products.”
Hold on to your seats, it's reshuffle time again. Liz Truss - currently the environment secretary - arrives at Downing Street and, rather awkwardly, she can't get in. The door is shut. Horror! After a few knocks and a quick wave to the cameras she's been let in. Will she stay in her post or is she heading to pastures new in government?
SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon says she takes "no personal pleasure" in the defeat of so many Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs in Scotland. Appearing on Loose Women on ITV, Ms Sturgeon said losing an election was "the most miserable feeling in the world."
Ms Sturgeon - pictured here on the Andrew Marr Show on Sunday - was asked about the focus on her appearance in some coverage of the election campaign, She said she was "used to reading pretty derogatory things" about herself and it was "water off a duck's back".
But she expressed concern that the tone could make some young women think "I don't fancy putting myself in the firing line for that" and deter them from a career in politics.
Ms Sturgeon said she had paid more attention to her appearance as her political career advanced.
She also said she had never had a voice coach but had "some advice on how to project my voice from Sean Connery".
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Labour MP John Mann says he and “quite a number of” his colleagues “saw what was coming” in the weeks before their election defeat to the Conservatives.
Acting leader Harriet Harman said Labour were not expecting to lose, but Mr Mann told BBC Radio 5 live many of his colleagues “expected to see a majority Conservative government”.
Quote MessageWhat we were hearing on the doorsteps – [was not] 'we love the Conservatives,' but 'we don’t trust Labour' and repeatedly people said they didn’t see Ed Miliband as being a suitable prime minister. That was hundreds of times every day I heard that, every day this year."
John Mann, Labour MP for Bassetlaw
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"I think it's a rather odd moment for him to take the step he has," says Labour donor John Mills on Lord Sugar's announcement to quit the party.
Mr Mills told The World At One that Labour was going to have to rethink its strategy and taking a different approach to business would no doubt form a part of that, and on this issue the party would have benefited from Lord Sugar's help.
The former culture minister, Ben Bradshaw, has urged Lord Sugar not to quit the Labour Party.
Lord Sugar has announced his resignation from the party - this was him alongside Gordon Brown in 1997 - saying he had become "disillusioned" with its business policies under Ed Miliband's leadership.
In a tweet, external, Mr Bradshaw said: "This is just the time *not* to leave but to stay & help us back to sanity ensuring we win in 2020."
Nicola Sturgeon has been on ITV's Loose Women this lunchtime. Despite her party's near-total dominance on Thursday night - winning 56 of 59 seats - she told the audience: "We've still got some room for improvement."
She also met Don McLean and tweeted about it., external
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Peter Riddell, director of the Institute for Government, tells The World At One David Cameron's cabinet so far looks "sensible".
He says Mr Cameron has gone for continuity in the very big jobs, and there have been no "machinery of government" changes.
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In the school photo with his 74 new MPs, David Cameron chose to stand beside those who defeated Tory defector Mark Reckless, Labour shadow chancellor Ed Balls and Lib Dem business secretary Vince Cable.
Neil Breakwell
Newsnight Deputy Editor
If the reshuffle has one flavour it's that of George Osborne. Goodness knows what that tastes like, but the appointments today see those who have been close to him getting a promotion.
They start with a promotion for Mr Osborne himself: as well as remaining chancellor he becomes First Minister of State (seen as the vehicle for him to lead renegotiation on Europe).
Two of his former PPSs, Robert Halfon and Amber Rudd, become deputy party chairman (attending cabinet) and secretary of state for energy and climate change respectively.
Priti Patel who worked closely with Osborne in the Treasury at the end of the last parliament becomes minister for employment.
We already know that Cameron will not seek re-election. One challenger to Osborne, if he wants the top job of leader, is expected to be Theresa May. Therefore the appointment of Michael Gove to the justice department will please backers of team Osborne. May and Gove spectacularly fell out over the extremism in schools story last year. Having another Osborne ally effectively shadowing Theresa May will be seen as helpful to his chances.
For more Newsnight analysis and election coverage click here.
The Daily Politics
David Lammy won't say who he'll back for the Labour leaderhsip as he hasn't seen their pitches yet - but he wants to see them connect beyond Labour.
How does Labour deal with Scotland? Mr Lammy says the parties that did well - the SNP and the Conservatives - had a national message, one for Scotland and one for England. Labour needs to get back to a national sense of coherence that the Scottish people want, he argues. It's right Jim Murphy stayed on as Scots Labour leader but he's got "a huge job" to do, the MP adds.