Politics LIVE: First Cabinet minister enters race to replace Angela Rayner

Labour will formally begin its contest to elect a new deputy leader following the shock resignation of Angela Rayner. The party's National Executive Committee has agreed a timetable, with nominations opening on Tuesday.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has become the frst Cabinet minister to announce she's running. MPs will begin voicing support for their preferred candidate and have until 5pm on Thursday to do so. Any MP hoping to replace Ms Rayner will need a whopping 80 backers before the knockout round starts. High-profile candidates who have already put their hat into the ring include Dame Emily Thornberry, who missed out on a Cabinet position last year despite serving in Sir Keir Starmer's shadow frontbench team.
Other potential candidates include former transport secretary Louise Haigh, Lucy Powell, Stella Creasy, Sarah Owen, Anneliese Dodds, Dawn Butler, Meg Hillier, and candidates from the hard-Left such as Richard Burgon and Nadia Whittome.
Follow the day's updates below.
Bridget Phillipson is standing to be deputy leader of the Labour Party.
The education secretary is the first cabinet minister to throw her name in the hat, and is currently only the second candidate to publicly state they will run.
In a statement, Phillipson said: "I am a proud working-class woman from the north-east. I have come from a single parent family on a tough council street, all the way to the cabinet, determined to deliver better life chances for young people growing up in our country."
In the first stage, candidates have to secure nominations from 80 MPs – a fifth of the total on the Labour benches – by 5pm on Thursday.
They will then have to secure the support of 5% of constituency parties or at least three affiliates – including at least two affiliated trade unions.
The ballot for candidates who clear the nomination hurdles will open on October 8 and close at noon on October 23, with the result announced on October 25.
Labour’s annual conference starts on September 28 and is likely to be used as a key moment in the campaign, potentially causing problems for Sir Keir as candidates set out rival visions for the party.
The successful candidate will replace Ms Rayner as deputy Labour leader but not as deputy prime minister, a position which has been handed to Justice Secretary Mr Lammy.
Labour veteran Baroness Harriet Harman said the role should be filled by a woman from outside London.
The former deputy leader said that the party needs someone who is “complementary to the leader” and who will “broaden the reach of the leader and galvanise the party”, in comments to BBC Radio 4’s Today.
Nominations open on Tuesday, with a hustings on Wednesday as part of the fast-tracked election process.
Bell Ribeiro-Addy became the first person to officially throw her hat in the ring on Monday evening with an announcement on X.
“I look forward to explaining why, over the three short and undemocratic days we have to do so,” she added.
The Clapham and Brixton Hill is from the left of the party – she was recently removed from a trade envoy job as punishment for voting against the Government’s welfare reforms.
Foreign Affairs Committee chairwoman Dame Emily Thornberry has indicated she is thinking about a bid, but like both Sir Keir and Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy she represents a north London constituency which could count against her.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood and former Cabinet minister Louise Haigh have ruled themselves out of the running, while Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy is also not expected to run.
Sir Keir Starmer will hold the first meeting of his new-look Cabinet on Tuesday as the race to replace Angela Rayner as deputy Labour leader gets under way.
Sir Keir’s official spokesman said his message to the “refreshed, reshaped” Cabinet would be to put delivery and growth “front and centre” in the second phase of government.
The Prime Minister completed a major Government reshuffle triggered by Ms Rayner’s resignation after she was found to have breached the ministerial code over her underpayment of stamp duty on a seaside flat earlier this year.
But he now faces the prospect of weeks of manoeuvring for the deputy Labour leadership role she has vacated as the race to replace her is set to stretch past the Labour Party conference and into October.
express.co.uk