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Peter Kyle
Following Labour's defeat in the 2019 general election, Kyle urged Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to resign, saying that the loss was not related to Labour's position on Brexit but rather to Corbyn's incompetent leadership. Kyle subsequently endorsed Jess Phillips during the 2020 Labour Party leadership election.

In September 2020, Kyle was appointed a vice-chair of Labour Friends of Israel.

Frontbench career (2020-present)
In April 2020, he became the Shadow Minister for Victims and Youth Justice. He has campaigned on the issue of 'sex for rent' and demanded a change to the law for landlords who engage in sexual exploitation of tenants.

In February 2021, Kyle presented a bill for victims to Parliament which had the aims of:


 * Ensuring victims are read their rights at the same time as perpetrators
 * Creating a register for people who run departments in the justice system which routinely ignore victims' rights
 * Giving victims of persistent anti-social behaviour the same rights as victims of crimes
 * Making the Victims' Commissioner independent of government and able to launch their own investigations.

In the May 2021 Shadow Cabinet reshuffle, Kyle was promoted to succeed Wes Streeting as the Shadow Minister for Schools. He was appointed to the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary in the November 2021 Shadow Cabinet reshuffle, and was appointed to the newly created post of Shadow Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology following a Shadow Cabinet reshuffle in September 2023.

Ed Miliband
As Shadow Climate Change Secretary, Miliband proposed to invest £28 billion a year on green projects, dubbed the 'Green Prosperity Plan', which would create UK based jobs and support battery manufacturing, hydrogen power, offshore wind, tree planting, flood defences and home insulation. At the 2022 Labour Party conference, he proposed the creation of Great British Energy, a new publicly-owned energy generation company that would work with the private sector to invest in renewable and nuclear energy. In June 2023, the Green Prosperity Plan was revised, to a gradual roll-out where the annual investment would rise gradually to £28 billion by around 2027. The plan was further diluted in February 2024, halving the total money being spent on climate investment, with two-thirds of that being existing spending, with the reduction in the investment seen as a response to the economic situation with higher interest rates, and to prevent Conservative criticism in the forthcoming general election.