UK's May completes botched reshuffle
UK Prime Minister Theresa May completed her painful reshuffle on Monday, appointing some new faces to junior posts
After planning major changes to her senior posts on Monday, May was left looking at pretty much the same old faces around the Cabinet table on Tuesday morning.
A chaotic Monday saw two of her team refuse to quit, and another resign in protest in a highly charged day that further eroded her authority.
May turned to the lower echelons of government to make some changes.
Jo Johnson, brother of the Foreign Secretary Boris, was replaced by Sam Gyimah as universities minister.
Jo Johnson had been criticised over the appointment of the right wing commentator Toby Young to the board of the government's universities regulator.
Young came under intense fire for a series of remarks on social media insulting, women, working class students and the disabled. Johnson, and his brother Boris, both came out publicly in defence of the appointment.
Jo Johnson was moved to Transport and also appointed as Minister for London.
Mark Garnier was sacked as trade minister. He was recently cleared of improper conduct after asking his secretary to buy sex toys.
Alok Sharma moved from housing to employment and was replaced by Dominic Raab as housing minister.
Rory Stewart replaced Raab as a minister of state in the Ministry of Justice.
Margot James, Harriet Baldwin and Caroline Dinenage become ministers of state at Culture, the Foreign Office and Health respectively
Rory Stewart became a minister of state in the justice department, moving from international development, while Stephen Barclay was made a minister of state at health, moving from the Treasury.
Children and families minister Robert Goodwill, lost his job at the Department for Education. John Hayes, a transport minister, and Philip Dunne, a health minister, also left.
Dunne attracted criticism on Monday during a parliamentary debate on the NHS winter crisis after he answered a question about patients forced to sleep on the floor of accident & emergency by saying there were empty seats available.