New Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has appointed ally Alan聽Mak to聽shadow the science and technology brief as聽her new team continues to聽take shape.
The MP for Havant moves from the shadow Treasury role he聽has held since the July general election to聽take on聽the post, shadowing Peter Kyle, who holds the position in聽the Labour government.
He replaces Andrew Griffith, who was appointed by former prime minister Rishi Sunak to the shadow science role while the Tories elected a new leader.
Mr Mak joins Laura Trott, who on 4聽November was appointed shadow education secretary and was immediately thrown into action, speaking in a parliamentary debate after her counterpart, Bridget Phillipson, announced that she was raising university tuition fees by聽拢285.
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Mr Mak held several roles in the Treasury in the government of Boris Johnson before being moved by Mr聽Sunak to the Cabinet Office, where he was the parliamentary undersecretary of state for the investment security unit.
Mr Mak鈥檚 website lists his main policy interests as 鈥淏ritain鈥檚 leadership of the fourth industrial revolution; education and skills and social mobility鈥.
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As shadow minister, he will have responsibility for scrutinising the government鈥檚 work on funding university research, which sits within the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.
The fledgling department was created by Mr聽Sunak in February 2023 to signal the country鈥檚 seriousness about becoming a 鈥渟cience superpower鈥, but it has been criticised for its low profile under former minister Michelle Donelan.
Since taking the position in government, Mr聽Kyle has declared that the 鈥渨ar on聽universities is聽over鈥 and emphasised the role of institutions in driving growth via research and innovation.
It was speculated ahead of Rachel Reeves鈥 first budget last week that the department would be聽hit with a聽real-terms cut in聽income as the costs of associating to Horizon Europe were 鈥渢ucked in鈥 to its spending.
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Ms Reeves eventually handed the department further funding to cover the extra costs it faced, which was expected to cushion some of the impact, at least in the short term.
A law graduate from Peterhouse, Cambridge, Mr聽Mak was the first in his family to attend university. He has held the seat once occupied by influential former science minister Lord Willetts since 2015 but only just secured a fourth term at the last election, winning by 92聽votes.
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