Home

Trade minister Jones 'ready to quit'

Trade minister 'ready to step down' ahead of next electionTrade minister 'ready to step down' ahead of next election

Tuesday, 15, Apr 2008 12:00

Trade minister Lord Jones of Birmingham is prepared to resign before the next election to avoid refusing to publicly back Gordon Brown, according to reports.

It is believed that Lord Jones, the former director-general of the CBI, told a group of businessmen and lobbyists that he would resign before the start of an election campaign due to a desire to avoid being questioned about his support for Gordon Brown.

According to the Times newspaper, Lord Jones is unhappy at changes to capital gains tax and legislation for 'non-doms' - UK residents who are nondomiciled for tax purposes - believes his role would be more suited to a businessmen, rather than a politician.

Speaking at a private meeting on January 29th in London's Great Smith Street, he was also said to be critical of the civil service - though not of his known civil servants - and of his functions in the House of Lords.

The minister's - the first British minister ever appointed without membership of a political party - apparent unwillingness to offer his support to the embattled prime minister adds to a growing list of problems for Mr Brown whose approval ratings have tumbled over fears regarding the economy and seemingly-critical comments from other ministers.

A spokeswoman for UK Trade and Investment told the newspaper Lord Jones' intention to resign at some point was "widely known".

She said: "As a dedicated supporter of British business, who has spent years raising business issues from the outside, Lord Jones has said on many occasions how delighted he was to join the government as trade and investment minister, working as part of a successful team focused on maintaining the stability and competitiveness of the British economy.

"It is no secret that he does not wish to pursue a political career in the long term and he has always said he would continue in his ministerial role for a finite period."

She added: "With a successful 30-year business career behind him and the benefit of a single focus on trade and investment, he will continue to use his ministerial position to deliver more intensive support for UK business internationally and to bang the drum for brand Britain around the world."


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

New jobs channel

The new look politics.co.uk now includes a jobs channel, where you can search for jobs and sign up for our jobs bulletin.

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

Intellect

Intellect is committed to improving the environment in which our members do business, promoting their interests and providing them with high value services.

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles.

politics.co.uk brings you a new monthly roundup of public affairs, government and local government appointments.

Current Vacancies:

Related News

Govt high on CBI's entrepreneurship blame list

"Political decisions" have damaged the UK's reputation as a haven for entrepreneurs, Confederation of British Industry (CBI) head Richard Lambert said today.

CBI head Richard Lambert

Latest Headlines

Concern over adult retraining courses

Those who have lost their jobs because of the recession and looking to reskill are facing a decline in the number of available courses because of the government's policies, it has been claimed.

Adult learning faces funding shortfall

Legislation

Banking (special provisions) bill

The government has rushed its nationalisation of high street lender Northern Rock through parliament in the banking (special provisions) bill.

Post Office closures

Post offices have been a staple of British life for decades. Click here to read the background to the government's restructuring plans.