Prime Minister Boris Johnson has named Steve Barclay as his new health secretary, following Sajid Javid’s resignation yesterday evening.

Mr Barclay has most recently served as Number 10’s chief of staff – a new role that was created in light of the ‘partygate’ scandal – and as minister for the Cabinet Office and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster since last year.

He was also Brexit secretary from 2018-2020 and chief secretary to the Treasury from 2020-2021.

Mr Javid said in his resignation letter that Mr Johnson had ‘lost his confidence’ and that he could not carry on serving him ‘in good faith’.

Commenting on his appointment, Mr Barclay said: ‘It is an honour to take up the position of health and social care secretary. Our NHS and social care staff have showed us time and again – throughout the pandemic and beyond – what it means to work with compassion and dedication to transform lives.

‘This government is investing more than ever before in our NHS and care services to beat the Covid backlogs, recruit 50,000 more nurses, reform social care and ensure patients across the country can access the care they need.’

Mr Barclay has served as health minister before – from January to November 2018. But he is most notable for being a Johnson loyalist and a fervent supporter of the leave campaign.

While Mr Barclay didn’t make huge waves as a health minister, it seems as though he has some form for campaigns around primary care.

Immediately after Mr Javid’s resignation was made public, chancellor Rishi Sunak also handed in his resignation.

Mr Javid took the role of health secretary in June 2021, following the resignation of Matt Hancock, who was caught kissing a colleague in a lift, against lockdown regulations.

His main involvement in general practice was his call for GPs to see more patients face to face, and in October last year he released the winter access fund, which promised £250m worth of funding in return for a number of measures described as ‘draconian’ by GP leaders.

He was also rumoured to be looking at hospitals taking over GP services, following on from the model in Wolverhampton, where the trusts runs ten separate practices.

Education secretary Nadhim Zahawi, who served as vaccines minister during Covid, has been appointed Chancellor, replacing Mr Sunak. However Mr Johnson has also faced a string of other more junior resignations since yesterday evening.

This followed the latest scandal in Number 10, which faced allegations of dishonesty regarding what Mr Johnson knew about prior misconduct allegations against MP Chris Pincher prior to appointing him deputy chief whip.

A version of this story first appeared on our sister website, Pulse.