Jaguar Land Rover’s design world was rocked this week as Gerry McGovern — JLR’s chief creative officer and the architect behind the company’s most polarising look — has left the firm, according to reports from India. The news lands barely a fortnight after new CEO P.B. Balaji, formerly group CFO at parent Tata Motors, took charge of the British car maker, and it leaves a big gap at the top of Britain’s biggest exporter. McGovern’s imprint on JLR is unmistakable. Over 21 years he turned Range Rover into a six-figure luxury icon, masterminded the compact hit Evoque and helped resurrect the Defender. But the last 12 months were dominated by his radical relaunch of Jaguar — a campaign that deliberately provoked debate. It began with an artful film of models in futuristic couture on an alien plain, intoning “delete ordinary,” “break moulds” and “copy nothing” — and, notably, showing no actual Jaguar car.
The Type 00 concept, a radical two-door coupe previewing the new design language, only surfaced weeks later at Miami Art Week. The ad stormed into global headlines and ignited culture-war commentary back home, drawing criticism from conservative commentators who branded the rebrand “woke.” McGovern’s departure compounds the change already underway at JLR. His deputy, Massimo Frascella, left in January 2024 and is now Audi’s head of design, leaving McGovern without a long-term lieutenant. The timing matters because Jaguar is executing one of the boldest repositionings in recent automotive history: the company is effectively “sun-setting” its current model lineup to create a hard firewall between the old cars and an all-new, purely electric generation. The first of that new generation will be a four-door GT built on the standalone Jaguar Electric Architecture (JEA) platform. It’s a 5 m-long grand tourer intended to be an objet d’art as much as a car, and Jaguar says it will deliver more than 692 km of range and blistering performance.
Pricing will be radically different too: the GT is expected to retail in a range roughly equivalent to €129,000–€152,000, significantly above Jaguar’s historical average transaction price of about €64,000. Executives have ruled out hybrids or combustion engines for the new line — it’s electric-only, a high-stakes wager given how narrow the €117,000+ electric market currently is. Design choices have been just as provocative as the marketing. The Type 00 and its siblings sport extremely long bonnets and dramatic proportions that executives say were chosen to create “exuberant” silhouettes that stand out from the EV crowd. Critics point out the incongruity: long hoods suggest internal combustion heritage and invite questions about packaging and function on an electric architecture. McGovern defended the approach as creating desire rather than mere utility, calling the vehicles “objects of longing,” not simple A-to-B transport.
Production won’t ramp for some time: full GT volume isn’t expected until 2027. JLR’s transition has already been uneven — a cyberattack last autumn disrupted activity across the business — yet work on fitting the JEA assembly line into Solihull beside Land Rover operations reportedly continued despite the setbacks. At nearly 70, McGovern’s exit also crystallises the need for a clear succession plan. He was instrumental early on in projects like the Freelander and MG F and was a key architect of JLR’s “House of Brands” strategy that elevated Range Rover, Defender and Discovery to headline roles while repositioning Land Rover as an umbrella trust mark. With the company straddling seismic technical, strategic and cultural shifts — new leadership, a new platform, a controversial brand relaunch and an all-electric future — the search for a replacement who can unite radical design with commercial reality is now urgent.
Expect more developments rapidly. This is a pivotal moment for Jaguar and for JLR’s identity: bold design bets, hard commercial choices and a leadership reshuffle have set the stage for a dramatic next chapter.