New cabinet: Who is in Liz Truss's top team?

Prime Minister Liz Truss has appointed her new cabinet, hours after taking over at 10 Downing Street.

For the first time none of the "great offices of state" is held by a white man, with Suella Braverman as home secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng as chancellor and James Cleverly as foreign secretary.

Here is a guide to the new faces and role changes.

Newcomers includes ministers who did not attend the most recent cabinet.

Click here if you cannot see the Cabinet Guide

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There was quite a big turnover in Ms Truss's reshuffle, with several high-profile members of the previous cabinet leaving. The replacements include 13 new members who have taken up cabinet roles for the first time.

Graphic showing which members of the previous cabinet left their roles

After all the comings and goings, there are now two more women serving in the cabinet than there were under Boris Johnson, taking the total to nine. That makes up 30% overall, which is the same as the first cabinets under Gordon Brown and Theresa May.

Chart showing what proportion of cabinet ministers are women under recent prime ministers

As for the education of those assembled by Ms Truss, 68% of them went to private schools, up slightly when compared with Mr Johnson's 2019 cabinet and up greatly when compared with Theresa May's in 2016.

Chart showing what proportion of cabinet ministers were privately educated under recent prime ministers

At 35%, Ms Truss's new cabinet has the lowest proportion of members who were educated at Oxford or Cambridge since Tony Blair's first cabinet in 1997.

Chart showing what proportion of cabinet ministers went to Oxford or Cambridge universities under recent prime ministers