David Miliband to step down as MP

  • Published
Media caption,

Newsnight's Allegra Stratton looks back at David Miliband's political career.

David Miliband is planning to leave Parliament to move to the US to work for a charity, a close friend has confirmed to the BBC.

He is going to become head of the International Rescue Committee in New York, the BBC understands.

Mr Miliband, 47, a former foreign secretary, was beaten to the Labour leadership in 2010 by his brother Ed.

The South Shields MP has taken a back seat since, opting not to join his brother's shadow cabinet.

There had been widespread rumours that he was set for a return to the opposition front bench, with Ed Miliband insisting recently that "the door is open".

However, the Daily Mirror reported earlier that Mr Miliband was planning to announce his decision on Wednesday morning.

'Serious blow'

The BBC understands Mr Miliband, nicknamed "Brains" by former Number 10 spin chief Alastair Campbell, will take up the job of chief executive of the International Rescue Committee.

It is a charity which, according to its website, works in more than 40 countries and responds to "the world's worst humanitarian crises and helps people to survive and rebuild their lives." He is thought to be replacing Dr George Rupp.

David Miliband previously said it had been right for him "to step back" from front-line politics to avoid "the daily soap opera" that may have resulted from him working alongside his brother.

But he said this did not mean he could not make a contribution from the backbenches or that he had taken a vow of silence.

His decision will spark a by-election in South Shields, where he has been MP since 2001.

BBC political editor Nick Robinson said his close friends and political allies had not been consulted, merely told, as he "must have known they would try to dissuade him".

He said: "The truth is for many, many months now he has searched for a life outside politics, appears to have failed to find such a satisfying life, and colleagues tried to urge him to return to frontline politics and started to discuss the kind of roles he could take under his brother.

"He has clearly concluded he does not want to return to the fray, he doesn't want to serve under his brother in opposition or in government which is a serious blow to his brother, and disappointment to members of the party."

'No way back'

Media caption,

Lord Mandelson: If I can come back, David Miliband can come back - and I think he will

Kevin Maguire, the Daily Mirror's associate editor, said David Miliband had been agonising for months over the decision, which he told his brother about "weeks ago".

"He knew he had to decide before the next election whether he was going to play a full role in the Labour Party, going to the front bench or whether he was going to leave, and it was a very difficult position for him," he said.

Mr Maguire said it appeared he had acted "out of a touch of love" for his brother.

"I think there is no way back for him now, he knows that," he added.

But David Miliband's former cabinet colleagues, Lord Mandelson and Jack Straw, said they did not think it was the end of his political career.

"I think he has a future in politics... I think I know a little bit about comebacks in politics and, to coin a phrase, if I can come back [then] David Miliband can come back - and I think he will," said Lord Mandelson.

Mr Straw said he would be "welcomed back into the Labour movement".

Labour MPs expressed sadness at the loss of a significant figure in the party.

"David will be brilliant over the water as he always is. He's an inspiration; know he'll be back in fight one day but for tonight am just sad," John Woodcock, MP for Barrow and Furness, wrote on Twitter.

Leicester East MP and chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee, Keith Vaz, said on Twitter: "Stunned by the news about David Miliband. A huge loss to British politics. The best and the brightest leaving the country."

Also on Twitter, shadow energy secretary Caroline Flint said she was happy for her former cabinet colleague and his family and made a joke about his nickname, saying "Thunderbirds are go".

Meanwhile, Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps described the decision as "surprising", adding: "He has contributed a great deal to British politics and we wish him well."

David Miliband quit the shadow cabinet after losing the close vote for the party leadership, in which he was clear favourite and lost out because Ed secured trade union votes.

He has remained on the backbenches but fuelled talk of a front-line comeback earlier this year with a vocal Commons attack on the government's benefit changes.

The MP, who is vice-chairman and non-executive director of Sunderland Football Club, is married to American violinist Louise Shackelton and the couple have two children.

He secured a majority of 11,109 at the 2010 general election with 52% of the vote.