List of British governments

This article lists successive British governments, also referred to as ministries, from the creation of the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707, continuing through the duration of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 1801 to 1922, and since then dealing with those of the present-day United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

Guide to the list

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"Ministry" refers collectively to all the ministers of a government, including cabinet members and junior ministers alike. Only the Civil Service is considered outside of the ministry. While the term was in common parlance in the 19th and early 20th centuries, it has become rarer, except in official and academic uses.[1] Both Australia and Canada have inherited the term and continue to use it. It is perhaps in more common use in those countries, which both have official catalogues of their respective ministries, whereas Britain has no such catalogue.[2][3]

Articles listed by ministry contain information on the term(s) of one prime minister. Articles listed by political party contain information on the ministries of multiple consecutive prime ministers of the same political party. Prior to the 20th century, the leader of the British government held the title of First Lord of the Treasury, and not that of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Therefore, the list below refers to the "Head of Government" and not the "Prime Minister". Even so, the leader of a government was often colloquially referred to as the "prime minister", beginning in the 18th century. Since 1902, prime ministers have always held the office of First Lord of the Treasury.[4]

Ministries

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Colour key
DatesGovernmentKey event(s)[a]HeadGoverning partyMonarch
1 May 1707 – 8 Aug 1710Godolphin–Marlborough ministryThe Duke of MarlboroughToryWhigAnne
16 Nov 1710 – Sep 1714Harley ministryRobert Harley[b]Tory
Accession of George I (1714)George I
Sep 1714 – 1717Townshend ministry1715 general electionThe Viscount Townshend[c]Whig
1717 – 1718First Stanhope–Sunderland ministry[data missing]The Earl Stanhope
1718 – Feb 1721Second Stanhope–Sunderland ministry[data missing]
3 Apr 1721 – 16 May 1730Walpole–Townshend ministry
Robert Walpole[d]
George II
16 May 1730 – 11 Feb 1742Walpole ministry
12 Feb 1742 – 24 Nov 1744Carteret ministry1742 vote of no confidence in the Walpole ministryThe Earl of Wilmington
Death of Wilmington (1743)Henry Pelham
24 Nov 1744 – 10 Feb 1746First Broad Bottom ministry[data missing]
14 Feb 1746 – 6 Mar 1754Second Broad Bottom ministry[e]
16 Mar 1754 – 11 Nov 1756First Newcastle ministry
The Duke of Newcastle
Nov 1756 – Apr 1757Pitt–Devonshire ministryCollapse following the Fall of Minorca (1756)The Duke of Devonshire
Apr 1757 – Jun 17571757 caretaker ministryDismissal of PittWhig (caretaker)
27 Jun 1757 – 1761Pitt–Newcastle ministryPitt reappointed (1757)The Duke of NewcastleWhig
Accession of George III (1760)George III
1761 – 26 May 1762Bute–Newcastle coalition
ToryWhig
1762 – 1763Bute ministryResignation of Newcastle (1762)The Earl of Bute
16 Apr 1763 – 13 Jul 1765Grenville ministryBute's resignation following fierce criticism of the Treaty of Paris (1763)George Grenville
13 Jul 1765 – 30 Jul 1766First Rockingham ministryKing disliked Grenville to the point of dismissal (1765)The Marquess of RockinghamWhig
30 Jul 1766 – 14 Oct 1768Chatham (Pitt) ministry
The Earl of ChathamWhigTory
14 Oct 1768 – 28 Jan 1770Grafton ministry[data missing]The Duke of Grafton
28 Jan 1770 – 27 Mar 1782North ministry[data missing]Lord NorthToryWhig
Tory
27 Mar 1782 – 1 Jul 1782Second Rockingham ministryFall of the North ministryThe Marquess of RockinghamWhig
4 Jul 1782 – 26 Mar 1783Shelburne ministryDeath of Rockingham (1782)The Earl of ShelburneWhigTory
2 Apr 1783 – 18 Dec 1783Fox–North coalition[data missing]The Duke of Portland
19 Dec 1783 – 14 Mar 1801First Pitt ministry[data missing]William Pitt the YoungerTory (minority)
Tory
ToryWhig
17 Mar 1801 – 10 May 1804Addington ministry
Henry AddingtonTory
10 May 1804 – 23 Jan 1806Second Pitt ministry[data missing]William Pitt the Younger
11 Feb 1806 – 31 Mar 1807Ministry of All the Talents
The Lord GrenvilleWhigTory
31 Mar 1807 – 4 Oct 1809Second Portland ministry[data missing]The Duke of PortlandTory (minority)
1807 general electionTory
4 Oct 1809 – 11 May 1812Perceval ministry[data missing]Spencer Perceval
8 Jun 1812 – 9 Apr 1827Liverpool ministryThe Earl of Liverpool
George IV
Apr 1827 – Aug 1827Canning ministryCerebral haemorrhage of LiverpoolGeorge CanningTory (Canningite)Whig
Sep 1827 – Jan 1828Goderich ministryDeath of Canning (1827)The Viscount Goderich
22 Jan 1828 – 16 Nov 1830Wellington–Peel ministryResignation of Goderich (1828)The Duke of WellingtonTory
Accession of William IV (1830)William IV
1830 general electionTory (minority)
15 Nov 1830 – Jul 1834Grey ministryDefeat of the Wellington–Peel ministry (1830)The Earl GreyWhig (minority)
Whig
Jul 1834 – Nov 1834First Melbourne ministry[data missing]The Viscount Melbourne
14 Nov 1834 – 10 Dec 1834Wellington caretaker ministryMelbourne was dismissed and Peel, who was to be appointed, was out of the countryThe Duke of WellingtonTory (caretaker)
10 Dec 1834 – 8 Apr 1835First Peel ministryAppointed to lead a short-lived Conservative minorityRobert PeelConservative (minority)
Apr 1835 – Sep 1841Second Melbourne ministry1835 general electionThe Viscount MelbourneWhig
Victoria
30 Aug 1841 – 29 Jun 1846Second Peel ministry1841 general electionRobert PeelConservative
Jul 1846 – Feb 1852First Russell ministryLord John RussellWhig (minority)
28 Feb 1852 – 17 Dec 1852Who? Who? ministryFall of the Whig governmentThe Earl of DerbyConservative (minority)
1852 general electionConservative
19 Dec 1852 – 30 Jan 1855Aberdeen ministry[data missing]The Earl of AberdeenCoalition (minority)
6 Feb 1855 – 19 Feb 1858First Palmerston ministry[data missing]The Viscount PalmerstonWhig (minority)
1857 general electionWhig
20 Feb 1858 – 11 Jun 1859Second Derby–Disraeli ministry[data missing]The Earl of DerbyConservative (minority)
12 Jun 1859 – 18 Oct 1865Second Palmerston ministryThe Viscount PalmerstonLiberal
18 Oct 1865 – 26 Jun 1866Second Russell ministry[data missing]The Earl Russell
28 Jun 1866 – 27 Feb 1868Third Derby–Disraeli ministry[data missing]The Earl of DerbyConservative (minority)
27 Feb 1868 – 1 Dec 1868Resignation of Derby due to ill healthBenjamin Disraeli
3 Dec 1868 – 17 Feb 1874First Gladstone ministry1868 general electionWilliam Ewart GladstoneLiberal
20 Feb 1874 – 21 Apr 1880Second Disraeli ministry1874 general electionBenjamin Disraeli[f]Conservative
23 Apr 1880 – 9 Jun 1885Second Gladstone ministry1880 general electionWilliam Ewart GladstoneLiberal
23 Jun 1885 – 28 Jan 1886First Salisbury ministry[data missing]The Marquess of SalisburyConservative (minority)
1885 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
1 Feb 1886 – 20 Jul 1886Third Gladstone ministryFirst Salisbury defeatWilliam Ewart GladstoneLiberal (minority)
25 Jul 1886 – 11 Aug 1892Second Salisbury ministry1886 general electionThe Marquess of SalisburyConservative (minority)
1892 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
15 Aug 1892 – 2 Mar 1894Fourth Gladstone ministry1892 vote of no confidence in the Salisbury ministryWilliam Ewart GladstoneLiberal (minority)
5 Mar 1894 – 22 Jun 1895Rosebery ministryResignation of Gladstone over the rejection of his Home Rule Bill (1894)The Earl of Rosebery
25 Jun 1895 – 24 Oct 1900Third Salisbury ministry[data missing]The Marquess of SalisburyConservative (minority)
1895 general electionConservativeLiberal Unionist
1900 general election
24 Oct 1900 – 11 Jul 1902Fourth Salisbury ministry
Accession of Edward VII (1901)Edward VII
12 Jul 1902 – 4 Dec 1905Balfour ministry[data missing]Arthur Balfour
5 Dec 1905 – 5 Apr 1908Campbell-Bannerman ministry[data missing]Henry Campbell-BannermanLiberal (minority)
1906 general electionLiberal
5 Apr 1908 – 9 Feb 1910First Asquith ministry[data missing]H. H. Asquith
9 Feb 1910 – 19 Dec 1910Second Asquith ministryJan 1910 general electionLiberal (minority)
Accession of George V (May 1910)George V
19 Dec 1910 – 25 May 1915Third Asquith ministryDec 1910 general election
25 May 1915 – 5 Dec 1916Asquith coalition ministry[data missing]Coalition
6 Dec 1916 – 14 Dec 1918Lloyd George war ministry[data missing]David Lloyd George
14 Dec 1918 – 19 Oct 1922Second Lloyd George ministry1918 general election
23 Oct 1922 – 20 May 1923Law ministryBonar LawConservative
22 May 1923 – 22 Jan 1924First Baldwin ministry[data missing]Stanley Baldwin
1923 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
22 Jan 1924 – 4 Nov 1924First MacDonald ministryDefeat of the Baldwin ministryRamsay MacDonaldLabour (minority)
4 Nov 1924 – 4 Jun 1929Second Baldwin ministry1924 general electionStanley BaldwinConservative
1929 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
5 Jun 1929 – 24 Aug 1931Second MacDonald ministry1929 Lib–Lab pactRamsay MacDonaldLabour (minority)
24 Aug 1931 – 27 Oct 1931First National Government[data missing]National
27 Oct 1931 – 7 Jun 1935Second National Government1931 general election
7 Jun 1935 – 28 May 1937Third National Government
Stanley Baldwin
Accession of Edward VIII (1936)Edward VIII
Abdication of Edward VIII and accession of George VI (1936)George VI
28 May 1937 – 3 Sep 1939Fourth National GovernmentResignation of Baldwin (1937)Neville Chamberlain
3 Sep 1939 – 10 May 1940Chamberlain war ministryRestructuring for World War II
10 May 1940 – 23 May 1945Churchill war ministryFall of Chamberlain after the Norway Debate (1940)Winston ChurchillCoalition
23 May 1945 – 26 Jul 1945Churchill caretaker ministryCoalition broke up over whether it should remain through Japanese defeat in World War IINational (caretaker)
26 Jul 1945 – 23 Feb 1950First Attlee ministry1945 general electionClement AttleeLabour
23 Feb 1950 – 26 Oct 1951Second Attlee ministry1950 general election
26 Oct 1951 – 5 Apr 1955Third Churchill ministry1951 general electionWinston ChurchillConservative
Accession of Elizabeth II (1952)Elizabeth II
6 Apr 1955 – 9 Jan 1957Eden ministry
Anthony Eden
9 Jan 1957 – 8 Oct 1959First Macmillan ministry[data missing]Harold Macmillan
8 Oct 1959 – 18 Oct 1963Second Macmillan ministry1959 general election
19 Oct 1963 – 16 Oct 1964Douglas-Home ministry[data missing]Alec Douglas-Home[h]
16 Oct 1964 – 31 Mar 1966First Wilson ministry1964 general electionHarold WilsonLabour
31 Mar 1966 – 19 Jun 1970Second Wilson ministry1966 general election
19 Jun 1970 – 4 Mar 1974Heath ministry1970 general electionEdward HeathConservative
Feb 1974 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
4 Mar 1974 – 5 Apr 1976Third Wilson ministryFall of the Heath ministry (1974)Harold WilsonLabour (minority)
Fourth Wilson ministryOct 1974 general electionLabour
5 Apr 1976 – 4 May 1979Callaghan ministry1976 Labour leadership electionJames Callaghan
1977 Lib–Lab pactLabour (minority)
4 May 1979 – 10 Jun 1983First Thatcher ministry1979 general electionMargaret ThatcherConservative
10 Jun 1983 – 11 Jun 1987Second Thatcher ministry1983 general election
11 Jun 1987 – 28 Nov 1990Third Thatcher ministry1987 general election
28 Nov 1990 – 10 Apr 1992First Major ministry1990 Conservative leadership electionJohn Major
10 Apr 1992 – 13 Dec 1996Second Major ministry1992 general election
13 Dec 1996 – 2 May 19971996 Barnsley East by-electionConservative (minority)
2 May 1997 – 8 Jun 2001First Blair ministry1997 general electionTony BlairLabour
8 Jun 2001 – 6 May 2005Second Blair ministry2001 general election
6 May 2005 – 27 Jun 2007Third Blair ministry2005 general election
28 Jun 2007 – 11 May 2010Brown ministry2007 Labour leadership electionGordon Brown
2010 general electionLabour (caretaker)[g]
11 May 2010 – 8 May 2015Cameron–Clegg coalition2010 government formationDavid CameronConservativeLiberal Democrat
8 May 2015 – 13 Jul 2016Second Cameron ministry2015 general electionConservative
13 Jul 2016 – 8 Jun 2017First May ministry2016 Conservative leadership electionTheresa May
8 Jun 2017 – 11 Jun 20172017 general electionConservative (caretaker)[g]
11 Jun 2017 – 24 Jul 2019Second May ministryConservative–DUP agreementConservative (minority)
24 Jul 2019 – 16 Dec 2019First Johnson ministry2019 Conservative leadership electionBoris Johnson
16 Dec 2019 – 6 Sep 2022Second Johnson ministry2019 general electionConservative
6 Sep 2022 – 25 Oct 2022Truss ministryJuly–September 2022 Conservative Party leadership electionLiz Truss
Accession of Charles III (2022)Charles III
25 Oct 2022 – presentSunak ministryOctober 2022 Conservative Party leadership electionRishi Sunak

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Appointment, general elections, Act, etc.
  2. ^ From 1711 Robert Harley was Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer.
  3. ^ De facto leader as Northern Secretary.
  4. ^ From 1742 Robert Walpole was Earl of Orford.
  5. ^ In 1746 William Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath formed a short-lived ministry. He was ultimately unsuccessful, and is not gradually included in lists of British prime ministers.
  6. ^ From 1876 Benjamin Disraeli was Earl of Beaconsfield (and Viscount Hughenden).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Typically, as in these instances when an election produces a hung parliament, an incumbent government briefly continues in an acting capacity.
  8. ^ For the first five days of his ministry, until he had renounced his peerage, Alec Douglas-Home was known as the Earl of Home.

Citations

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  1. ^ Wilding & Laundy n.d.
  2. ^ Part 6 – Historical information on the Australian Parliament (PDF) (Report), Parliament of Australia, 31 October 2014, retrieved 6 March 2017
  3. ^ Ministers of the Crown (Report), Parliament of Canada, retrieved 4 May 2012
  4. ^ "First Lord of the Treasury", gov.uk, archived from the original on 20 May 2013, retrieved 3 September 2017

References

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Further reading

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