List of British governments facts for kids
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
"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. 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.
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.
Ministries
Colour key |
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Dates | Government | Key event(s) | Head | Governing party | Monarch | ||
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1 May 1707 – 8 Aug 1710 | Godolphin–Marlborough ministry |
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The Duke of Marlborough | Tory | Whig | Anne | |
16 Nov 1710 – Sep 1714 | Harley ministry |
|
Robert Harley | Tory | |||
Accession of George I (1714) | George I | ||||||
Sep 1714 – 1717 | Townshend ministry | 1715 general election | The Viscount Townshend | Whig | |||
1717 – 1718 | First Stanhope–Sunderland ministry | [data missing] | The Earl Stanhope | ||||
1718 – Feb 1721 | Second Stanhope–Sunderland ministry | [data missing] | |||||
3 Apr 1721 – 16 May 1730 | Walpole–Townshend ministry |
|
Robert Walpole | ||||
|
George II | ||||||
16 May 1730 – 11 Feb 1742 | Walpole ministry |
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12 Feb 1742 – 24 Nov 1744 | Carteret ministry | 1742 vote of no confidence in the Walpole ministry | The Earl of Wilmington | ||||
Death of Wilmington (1743) | Henry Pelham | ||||||
24 Nov 1744 – 10 Feb 1746 | First Broad Bottom ministry | [data missing] | |||||
14 Feb 1746 – 6 Mar 1754 | Second Broad Bottom ministry |
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16 Mar 1754 – 11 Nov 1756 | First Newcastle ministry |
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The Duke of Newcastle | ||||
Nov 1756 – Apr 1757 | Pitt–Devonshire ministry | Collapse following the Fall of Minorca (1756) | The Duke of Devonshire | ||||
Apr 1757 – Jun 1757 | 1757 caretaker ministry | Dismissal of Pitt | Whig (caretaker) | ||||
27 Jun 1757 – 1761 | Pitt–Newcastle ministry | Pitt reappointed (1757) | The Duke of Newcastle | Whig | |||
Accession of George III (1760) | George III | ||||||
1761 – 26 May 1762 | Bute–Newcastle coalition |
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Tory | Whig | |||
1762 – 1763 | Bute ministry | Resignation of Newcastle (1762) | The Earl of Bute | ||||
16 Apr 1763 – 13 Jul 1765 | Grenville ministry | Bute's resignation following fierce criticism of the Treaty of Paris (1763) | George Grenville | ||||
13 Jul 1765 – 30 Jul 1766 | First Rockingham ministry | King disliked Grenville to the point of dismissal (1765) | The Marquess of Rockingham | Whig | |||
30 Jul 1766 – 14 Oct 1768 | Chatham (Pitt) ministry |
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The Earl of Chatham | Whig | Tory | ||
14 Oct 1768 – 28 Jan 1770 | Grafton ministry | [data missing] | The Duke of Grafton | ||||
28 Jan 1770 – 27 Mar 1782 | North ministry | [data missing] | Lord North | Tory | Whig | ||
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Tory | ||||||
27 Mar 1782 – 1 Jul 1782 | Second Rockingham ministry | Fall of the North ministry | The Marquess of Rockingham | Whig | |||
4 Jul 1782 – 26 Mar 1783 | Shelburne ministry | Death of Rockingham (1782) | The Earl of Shelburne | Whig | Tory | ||
2 Apr 1783 – 18 Dec 1783 | Fox–North coalition | [data missing] | The Duke of Portland | ||||
19 Dec 1783 – 14 Mar 1801 | First Pitt ministry | [data missing] | William Pitt the Younger | Tory (minority) | |||
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Tory | ||||||
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Tory | Whig | |||||
17 Mar 1801 – 10 May 1804 | Addington ministry |
|
Henry Addington | Tory | |||
10 May 1804 – 23 Jan 1806 | Second Pitt ministry | [data missing] | William Pitt the Younger | ||||
11 Feb 1806 – 31 Mar 1807 | Ministry of All the Talents |
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The Lord Grenville | Whig | Tory | ||
31 Mar 1807 – 4 Oct 1809 | Second Portland ministry | [data missing] | The Duke of Portland | Tory (minority) | |||
1807 general election | Tory | ||||||
4 Oct 1809 – 11 May 1812 | Perceval ministry | [data missing] | Spencer Perceval | ||||
8 Jun 1812 – 9 Apr 1827 | Liverpool ministry |
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The Earl of Liverpool | ||||
|
George IV | ||||||
Apr 1827 – Aug 1827 | Canning ministry | Cerebral haemorrhage of Liverpool | George Canning | Tory (Canningite) | Whig | ||
Sep 1827 – Jan 1828 | Goderich ministry | Death of Canning (1827) | The Viscount Goderich | ||||
22 Jan 1828 – 16 Nov 1830 | Wellington–Peel ministry | Resignation of Goderich (1828) | The Duke of Wellington | Tory | |||
Accession of William IV (1830) | William IV | ||||||
1830 general election | Tory (minority) | ||||||
15 Nov 1830 – Jul 1834 | Grey ministry | Defeat of the Wellington–Peel ministry (1830) | The Earl Grey | Whig (minority) | |||
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Whig | ||||||
Jul 1834 – Nov 1834 | First Melbourne ministry | [data missing] | The Viscount Melbourne | ||||
14 Nov 1834 – 10 Dec 1834 | Wellington caretaker ministry | Melbourne was dismissed and Peel, who was to be appointed, was out of the country | The Duke of Wellington | Tory (caretaker) | |||
10 Dec 1834 – 8 Apr 1835 | First Peel ministry | Appointed to lead a short-lived Conservative minority | Robert Peel | Conservative (minority) | |||
Apr 1835 – Sep 1841 | Second Melbourne ministry | 1835 general election | The Viscount Melbourne | Whig | |||
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Victoria | ||||||
30 Aug 1841 – 29 Jun 1846 | Second Peel ministry | 1841 general election | Robert Peel | Conservative | |||
Jul 1846 – Feb 1852 | First Russell ministry | Lord John Russell | Whig (minority) | ||||
28 Feb 1852 – 17 Dec 1852 | Who? Who? ministry | Fall of the Whig government | The Earl of Derby | Conservative (minority) | |||
1852 general election | Conservative | ||||||
19 Dec 1852 – 30 Jan 1855 | Aberdeen ministry | [data missing] | The Earl of Aberdeen | Coalition (minority) | |||
6 Feb 1855 – 19 Feb 1858 | First Palmerston ministry | [data missing] | The Viscount Palmerston | Whig (minority) | |||
1857 general election | Whig | ||||||
20 Feb 1858 – 11 Jun 1859 | Second Derby–Disraeli ministry | [data missing] | The Earl of Derby | Conservative (minority) | |||
12 Jun 1859 – 18 Oct 1865 | Second Palmerston ministry | The Viscount Palmerston | Liberal | ||||
18 Oct 1865 – 26 Jun 1866 | Second Russell ministry | [data missing] | The Earl Russell | ||||
28 Jun 1866 – 27 Feb 1868 | Third Derby–Disraeli ministry | [data missing] | The Earl of Derby | Conservative (minority) | |||
27 Feb 1868 – 1 Dec 1868 | Resignation of Derby due to ill health | Benjamin Disraeli | |||||
3 Dec 1868 – 17 Feb 1874 | First Gladstone ministry | 1868 general election | William Ewart Gladstone | Liberal | |||
20 Feb 1874 – 21 Apr 1880 | Second Disraeli ministry | 1874 general election | Benjamin Disraeli | Conservative | |||
23 Apr 1880 – 9 Jun 1885 | Second Gladstone ministry | 1880 general election | William Ewart Gladstone | Liberal | |||
23 Jun 1885 – 28 Jan 1886 | First Salisbury ministry | [data missing] | The Marquess of Salisbury | Conservative (minority) | |||
1885 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | ||||||
1 Feb 1886 – 20 Jul 1886 | Third Gladstone ministry | First Salisbury defeat | William Ewart Gladstone | Liberal (minority) | |||
25 Jul 1886 – 11 Aug 1892 | Second Salisbury ministry | 1886 general election | The Marquess of Salisbury | Conservative (minority) | |||
1892 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | ||||||
15 Aug 1892 – 2 Mar 1894 | Fourth Gladstone ministry | 1892 vote of no confidence in the Salisbury ministry | William Ewart Gladstone | Liberal (minority) | |||
5 Mar 1894 – 22 Jun 1895 | Rosebery ministry | Resignation of Gladstone over the rejection of his Home Rule Bill (1894) | The Earl of Rosebery | ||||
25 Jun 1895 – 24 Oct 1900 | Third Salisbury ministry | [data missing] | The Marquess of Salisbury | Conservative (minority) | |||
1895 general election | Conservative | Liberal Unionist | |||||
1900 general election | |||||||
24 Oct 1900 – 11 Jul 1902 | Fourth Salisbury ministry | ||||||
Accession of Edward VII (1901) | Edward VII | ||||||
12 Jul 1902 – 4 Dec 1905 | Balfour ministry | [data missing] | Arthur Balfour | ||||
5 Dec 1905 – 5 Apr 1908 | Campbell-Bannerman ministry | [data missing] | Henry Campbell-Bannerman | Liberal (minority) | |||
1906 general election | Liberal | ||||||
5 Apr 1908 – 9 Feb 1910 | First Asquith ministry | [data missing] | H. H. Asquith | ||||
9 Feb 1910 – 19 Dec 1910 | Second Asquith ministry | Jan 1910 general election | Liberal (minority) | ||||
Accession of George V (May 1910) | George V | ||||||
19 Dec 1910 – 25 May 1915 | Third Asquith ministry | Dec 1910 general election | |||||
25 May 1915 – 5 Dec 1916 | Asquith coalition ministry | [data missing] | Coalition | ||||
6 Dec 1916 – 14 Dec 1918 | Lloyd George war ministry | [data missing] | David Lloyd George | ||||
14 Dec 1918 – 19 Oct 1922 | Second Lloyd George ministry | 1918 general election | |||||
23 Oct 1922 – 20 May 1923 | Law ministry |
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Bonar Law | Conservative | |||
22 May 1923 – 22 Jan 1924 | First Baldwin ministry | [data missing] | Stanley Baldwin | ||||
1923 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | ||||||
22 Jan 1924 – 4 Nov 1924 | First MacDonald ministry | Defeat of the Baldwin ministry | Ramsay MacDonald | Labour (minority) | |||
4 Nov 1924 – 4 Jun 1929 | Second Baldwin ministry | 1924 general election | Stanley Baldwin | Conservative | |||
1929 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | ||||||
5 Jun 1929 – 24 Aug 1931 | Second MacDonald ministry | 1929 Lib–Lab pact | Ramsay MacDonald | Labour (minority) | |||
24 Aug 1931 – 27 Oct 1931 | First National Government | [data missing] | National | ||||
27 Oct 1931 – 7 Jun 1935 | Second National Government | 1931 general election | |||||
7 Jun 1935 – 28 May 1937 | Third 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 1939 | Fourth National Government | Resignation of Baldwin (1937) | Neville Chamberlain | ||||
3 Sep 1939 – 10 May 1940 | Chamberlain war ministry | Restructuring for World War II | |||||
10 May 1940 – 23 May 1945 | Churchill war ministry | Fall of Chamberlain after the Norway Debate (1940) | Winston Churchill | Coalition | |||
23 May 1945 – 26 Jul 1945 | Churchill caretaker ministry | Coalition broke up over whether it should remain through Japanese defeat in World War II | National (caretaker) | ||||
26 Jul 1945 – 23 Feb 1950 | First Attlee ministry | 1945 general election | Clement Attlee | Labour | |||
23 Feb 1950 – 26 Oct 1951 | Second Attlee ministry | 1950 general election | |||||
26 Oct 1951 – 5 Apr 1955 | Third Churchill ministry | 1951 general election | Winston Churchill | Conservative | |||
Accession of Elizabeth II (1952) | Elizabeth II | ||||||
6 Apr 1955 – 9 Jan 1957 | Eden ministry |
|
Anthony Eden | ||||
9 Jan 1957 – 8 Oct 1959 | First Macmillan ministry | [data missing] | Harold Macmillan | ||||
8 Oct 1959 – 18 Oct 1963 | Second Macmillan ministry | 1959 general election | |||||
19 Oct 1963 – 16 Oct 1964 | Douglas-Home ministry | [data missing] | Alec Douglas-Home | ||||
16 Oct 1964 – 31 Mar 1966 | First Wilson ministry | 1964 general election | Harold Wilson | Labour | |||
31 Mar 1966 – 19 Jun 1970 | Second Wilson ministry | 1966 general election | |||||
19 Jun 1970 – 4 Mar 1974 | Heath ministry | 1970 general election | Edward Heath | Conservative | |||
Feb 1974 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | ||||||
4 Mar 1974 – 5 Apr 1976 | Third Wilson ministry | Fall of the Heath ministry (1974) | Harold Wilson | Labour (minority) | |||
Fourth Wilson ministry | Oct 1974 general election | Labour | |||||
5 Apr 1976 – 4 May 1979 | Callaghan ministry | 1976 Labour leadership election | James Callaghan | ||||
1977 Lib–Lab pact | Labour (minority) | ||||||
4 May 1979 – 10 Jun 1983 | First Thatcher ministry | 1979 general election | Margaret Thatcher | Conservative | |||
10 Jun 1983 – 11 Jun 1987 | Second Thatcher ministry | 1983 general election | |||||
11 Jun 1987 – 28 Nov 1990 | Third Thatcher ministry | 1987 general election | |||||
28 Nov 1990 – 10 Apr 1992 | First Major ministry | 1990 Conservative leadership election | John Major | ||||
10 Apr 1992 – 13 Dec 1996 | Second Major ministry | 1992 general election | |||||
13 Dec 1996 – 2 May 1997 | 1996 Barnsley East by-election | Conservative (minority) | |||||
2 May 1997 – 8 Jun 2001 | First Blair ministry | 1997 general election | Tony Blair | Labour | |||
8 Jun 2001 – 6 May 2005 | Second Blair ministry | 2001 general election | |||||
6 May 2005 – 27 Jun 2007 | Third Blair ministry | 2005 general election | |||||
28 Jun 2007 – 11 May 2010 | Brown ministry | 2007 Labour leadership election | Gordon Brown | ||||
2010 general election | Labour (caretaker) | ||||||
11 May 2010 – 8 May 2015 | Cameron–Clegg coalition | 2010 government formation | David Cameron | Conservative | Liberal Democrat | ||
8 May 2015 – 13 Jul 2016 | Second Cameron ministry | 2015 general election | Conservative | ||||
13 Jul 2016 – 8 Jun 2017 | First May ministry | 2016 Conservative leadership election | Theresa May | ||||
8 Jun 2017 – 11 Jun 2017 | 2017 general election | Conservative (caretaker) | |||||
11 Jun 2017 – 24 Jul 2019 | Second May ministry | Conservative–DUP agreement | Conservative (minority) | ||||
24 Jul 2019 – 16 Dec 2019 | First Johnson ministry | 2019 Conservative leadership election | Boris Johnson | ||||
16 Dec 2019 – 6 Sep 2022 | Second Johnson ministry | 2019 general election | Conservative | ||||
6 Sep 2022 – 25 Oct 2022 | Truss ministry | July–September 2022 Conservative Party leadership election | Liz Truss | ||||
Accession of Charles III (2022) | Charles III | ||||||
25 Oct 2022 – present | Sunak ministry | October 2022 Conservative Party leadership election | Rishi Sunak |
See also
- List of English ministries, for ministries of the Kingdom of England
- List of Scottish Governments, for ministries of the modern Scottish Government
- List of Northern Ireland Executives, for ministries of the Northern Ireland Executive
- List of Welsh Governments, for ministries of the modern Welsh Government
- List of British shadow cabinets, for a list of shadow cabinets
- List of votes of no confidence in British governments