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Shabana Mahmood tops GG2 Power List

Mahmood is followed in sec­ond place by London mayor Sir Sadiq Khan, who topped last year’s list. Vidhya Alakeson is ranked third, following her appoint­ment as joint acting chief of staff to prime minister Sir Keir Starmer in February.

Shabana Mahmood

Shabana Mahmood was pro­moted to the home office in a cabinet reshuffle in Septem­ber 2025.

Getty Images

HOME SECRETARY Shabana Mahmood has topped this year’s GG2 Power List 2026, the annual ranking of the 101 most influential south Asians in the UK across politics, business, entertainment, sport and public life.

Mahmood, who was pro­moted to the home office in a cabinet reshuffle in Septem­ber 2025, is followed in sec­ond place by London mayor Sir Sadiq Khan, who topped last year’s list.


Sadiq Khan Lonon mayor Sadiq Khan is number two in the Power List. Getty Images

Vidhya Alakeson is ranked third, following her appoint­ment as joint acting chief of staff to prime minister Sir Keir Starmer in February, af­ter the resignation of Morgan McSweeney.

Court of Appeal judge Sir Rabinder Singh was fourth, and Barclays chief executive CS Venkatakrishnan fifth in the list. Culture secretary and the first Labour cabinet minister of Indian ori­gin, Lisa Nandy, is ranked sixth.

Now in its 16th year, the list was launched at the 27th annual GG2 Leadership and Diversity Awards in central London on Wednesday (25), where deputy prime minister David Lammy was the chief guest.

More than 600 people attended the gala event, which celebrates top ethnic minority talent in the UK and is hosted by the Asian Media Group, publishers of Eastern Eye and Garavi Gujarat news weeklies, among other titles.

Former prime minister Rishi Sunak is sev­enth in the list.

Vidhya Alakeson is ranked third, following her appoint­ment as joint acting chief of staff to prime minister Sir Keir Starmer. EE

Varun Chandra, the prime minister’s spe­cial envoy to the US on trade and invest­ment, is in eighth position.

BBC chair Samir Shah (ninth) and singer-songwriter Charli XCX complete the top 10.

This year’s list includes 23 new entries and 30 women, and spans a broad range of fields, reflecting the depth of south Asian talent across British public life.

In politics, Seema Malhotra (16) serves as the de facto minister for India at the Foreign Office, also holding the equalities brief in government.

Dr Zubir Ahmed (18) and Kanishka Narayan (20), parliamentary under sec­retaries of state in health and in AI and online safety, respectively, have been in­cluded early in their careers as rising stars in the Labour party, while Nusrat Ghani (50) controls the budget debate in the Commons as deputy speaker and chairman of Ways and Means.

Court of Appeal judge Sir Rabinder Singh is fourth in the list. EE

Vim Maru (25) who heads Barclays re­tail arm; Ashwin Prasad (23), the chief executive of Tesco UK, and Parminder Kohli (53), Shell UK chair and executive vice president of the Shell Group, show the success of south Asians in the corpo­rate sector.

Pam Kaur (54), chief financial officer at HSBC, and Nik Jhangiani (62), a Rutgers Business School graduate, who holds the same role at Diageo, Lord Jitesh Gadhia (14) and Dr Swati Dhingra (24) are recog­nised for their influence in the City.

Shailesh Solanki, executive editor, AMG, said, “Shabana leads one of the great offices of state and her rise to the top of government shows how well re­garded she is by the prime minister to tackle immigration – one of the most im­portant challenges of our times.”

He added, “The rise in the number of Asians serving in government, whether as secretaries of state, junior ministers, trade envoys or civil servants, reflects the com­munity’s political clout and this is a result of a rise in political engage­ment in recent years.

Barclays chief executive CS Venkatakrishnan is fifth in the list. DANIEL LEAL

“We have moved be­yond the stereotype of Asians in profession­al services. With the Free Trade Agree­ment signed be­tween prime minis­ters Sir Keir Starmer and Naren­dra Modi at Chequers last summer, we are going to see more key players on both sides and those stories will inspire the next generation of Asians.”

Wednesday’s event also saw the pres­entation of the GG2 Leadership and Di­versity Awards, which recognise top tal­ent among Britain’s minority ethnic com­munities. Judges noted Mahmood’s rise to one of the great offices of state, prompting her rise to the top of the GG2 Power List this year.

Mahmood’s role covers immigration, law and order, policing, national security and counter-terrorism.

Earlier this month, she unveiled her tough stance on immigration, saying she was “restoring order and control” to Brit­ain’s borders and that her overhaul of the asylum system was “firm but fair”.

Mahmood said asylum seekers who break the law or work illegally will be thrown out of government-funded ac­commodation and lose their support payments, despite criticism from chari­ties and unease Labour itself that it is shedding left-wing voters.

Now in its 16th year, the list was launched at the 27th annual GG2 Leadership and Diversity Awards in central London.EE

New arrivals would be expected to speak English to A-level standard as a foreign language, Mahmood added.

Michael Gove, former Tory justice sec­retary and now editor of The Spectator, called her “the most impressive govern­ment figure” in government and predict­ed that she would one day lead the La­bour party.

Mahmood grew up in Small Heath, one of the city’s poorer areas, and at­tended King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Girls before reading law at Lincoln College, Oxford. She was first elected MP for Birmingham Ladywood in 2010 and was the first Muslim woman to serve as Lord chancellor, taking her oath of office on the Qu’ran, the first person in 1,400 years to do so.

When she addressed the Labour party conference last year, she said: “It is an honour to address you for the first time as a Labour home secretary. If I am honest, it is an honour I never expected. And it is one that would have been un­thinkable to my parents when they first ar­rived here in the 1970s.”

Sir Sadiq, who was knighted at Buck­ingham Palace last summer, has found himself the target of repeated attacks by US president Donald Trump.

The London mayor said, “Why does Trump not like me? I am the mayor of a city that is diverse, progressive and in­credibly successful. We are the antithesis of all he believes in. We have shown his thesis is wrong.”

On his decade in power, Sir Sadiq re­flected on London’s economic weight: “If we were a state, we would have the sev­enth largest economy in Europe. We con­tribute more than a quarter of the coun­try’s GDP and more than £43 billion net to the Treasury.”

He remains upbeat about the city’s prospects. “On tourism, FDI, culture, in­ternational students, sport, lifestyle, Lon­don is the number one city in the world. I think 2026 will be a very good year for our country and an excellent year for our city.”

One of prime minister Sir Keir Starmer’s key aides, Alakeson was born to a British Sri Lankan family and educated at Oxford and the London School of Economics.

She previously served as director of external re­lations for Starmer’s team and was credited with re­building Labour’s relationships with business leaders ahead of the 2024 gen­eral election.

The Court of Appeal’s Sir Rabinder was the first per­son of colour to serve at the highest tier of the senior courts and the first Sikh appointed to the high court. His judgments on issues ranging from surveillance powers to private school VAT have consistently addressed the ten­sion between state authority and individ­ual rights.

Born in Mysore in 1966 and trained at MIT, Barclays CEO Venkatakrishnan took over the 335-year-old bank in November 2021. Barclays reported pre-tax profits of £9.1 billion for 2025, up from £8.1bn a year earlier.

Former prime minister Sunak, since leaving Downing Street, has joined the Blavatnik School of Government at Ox­ford and the Hoover Institution, and works as a part-time adviser to Goldman Sachs, Microsoft and Anthropic. He at­tended the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi in February, where he argued that India was uniquely positioned to lead the next phase of AI development.

Chandra was appointed by Starmer to the current role of trade envoy to the US, in January this year.

Born in South Shields to parents from Bihar, Chandra was alongside Starmer at Chequers when Indian prime minister Narendra Modi came for the signing of the UK-India Free Trade Agreement. He also travelled with Starmer to China and was present when the prime minister met Trump in Scotland. The GG2 Power List features influential Asians in law, including Dame Bobby Cheema- Grubb (17), Pushpinder Saini (22), Anuja Dhir (34), Sir Akhlaq Choudhury (38) and Kaly Kaul (91).

In the arts, Indhu Rubasingham (19), artistic director of the National Theatre, actor Riz Ahmed (12); Dame Meera Syal (31), actress Ambika Mod (42), sitar mae­stro Anoushka Shankar (78) and sculptor Sir Anish Kapoor (80) reflect the breadth of south Asian creative talent in Britain.

Priya Dogra (45), chief executive of Channel 4, the first person of colour to lead a major broadcaster, alongside the BBC’s Amol Rajan (36) and Channel 4’s Krishnan Guru-Murthy (51) are featured from the media.

Emran Miah (32), permanent secretary in the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology, the first British Asian to head a government department in nearly 20 years; Vijay Rangarajan (67), chief ex­ecutive of the Electoral Commission, are also in the list.

n Coverage of the GG2 Leadership and Diversity Awards will be published in Eastern Eye’s edition of April 3.

Copies of the GG2 Power List are avail­able for sale; contact Saurin Shah on email saurin.shah@amg.biz or call 020 7928123.

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