Emma Reynolds MP has been appointed as the new Secretary of State for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), following a ministerial reshuffle on 5 September 2025. The move marks a rapid rise through government ranks for Reynolds, who only entered Parliament in July 2024 as the Labour MP for Wycombe.

Prior to her new role, Reynolds served as Economic Secretary to the Treasury from January to September 2025. Before that, she held a joint position as Parliamentary Secretary at HM Treasury and the Department for Work and Pensions between July 2024 and January 2025.
Reynolds takes over from Steve Reed, who has led the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) since Labour came to power in July 2024. Reed now steps into a new position as Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, succeeding Angela Rayner, who resigned earlier this month.
As Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Reynolds assumes overall responsibility for Defra’s work, which includes oversight of the department’s budget, including Official Development Assistance (ODA), as well as international relations, senior appointments, and driving economic growth within the sector.
Her appointment comes at a pivotal time for environmental and agricultural policy, with growing focus on climate resilience, food security, and rural development across the UK.
“A new environment secretary in Emma Reynolds but we expect the same commitment under her leadership at Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to drive forward the green jobs and collective move to a more circular economy that the Prime Minister Keir Starmer looks set to build upon as he pushes forward with his growth and employment agenda with his strengthened cabinet, the CIRQLR ceo David Palmer Jones OBE commented, “Certainty about the environmental regulatory landscape remains the watchword for businesses to feel the investable conditions are in place to build the recycling infrastructure and create the jobs needed as a whole range of sectors gear up to meet the challenges and opportunities that the Government’s industrial strategy presents.
With Mary Creagh CBE MP providing Reynolds a continuity of leadership support at the under secretary level, businesses feel positive that the drive towards greater circularity remains on track, so clearly set out within weeks of this administration coming to power in July last year.”
Image credit: Gov.uk
Sources: www.gov.uk www.linkedin.com
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