Britain's "City minister" sidelined from role in Brexit

* Lucy Neville-Rolfe handed new Brexit role

* City Minister Simon Kirby unpopular with industry

* Role seen as vital in upcoming Brexit talks

By Andrew MacAskill, Anjuli Davies and William Schomberg

LONDON, March 1 (Reuters) - Britain has sidelined the minister responsible for financial services from addressing the impact on the sector of leaving the EU, a shakeup that a senior bank executive called a "vote of no confidence" in the industry's main government contact.

Lucy Neville-Rolfe, commercial secretary at the Treasury, has had Brexit's impact on financial services added to her official portfolio, the Treasury said on Wednesday, confirming a change that had been made without fanfare several weeks ago.

The responsibility of answering questions in parliament about Brexit's impact on financial services has previously fallen to Simon Kirby, the Treasury's economic secretary.

Kirby's post is known informally as "City minister", as the government's liaison to the finance industry based in the City of London, the capital's banking district.

"Clearly, it's a sign of a vote of no confidence in Kirby," said one senior bank executive, one of several industry figures who discussed the change in roles on condition of anonymity to avoid taking sides publicly in a political personnel matter.

"Kirby is not responsible for Brexit even though it's the biggest issue facing the City."

Neville-Rolfe and Kirby both report to Treasury Secretary Philip Hammond. Kirby is listed ahead of Neville-Rolfe in the ranking of junior ministers on the Treasury's website.

The Treasury said Kirby would still have the same role as his predecessors as City minister, overseeing the government's overall relationship with the financial sector. Having a second minister look at Brexit reflected "the importance we place on this area", it said in an email to Reuters in response to a request for comment on the change.

Of the seven people who have held the post of City minister since it was created in 2008, Kirby, 52, is the first without either a background in financial services or a PhD in economics.

Britain's position as Europe's financial centre is emerging as one of the main issues of contention in talks over the terms of its exit from the EU. Some European politicians see an opportunity to challenge British dominance of finance after decades of viewing its free-wheeling "Anglo-Saxon" model of capitalism with suspicion.

The industry figures who spoke to Reuters said bankers in London had been complaining quietly for months that Kirby, who founded a radio station and a chain of nightclubs in the seaside town of Brighton before going into local politics, seemed to lack expertise in their field.

Several said their concerns grew after a meeting Kirby held with senior finance executives in November, at which he appeared unable to answer questions about government policy. They said they were happier with Neville-Rolfe, 64, a former senior civil servant, executive at Britain's biggest supermarket chain Tesco and non-executive director of a number of large businesses.

(Editing by Peter Graff)

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