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Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Full name
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (abbreviated PM), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom or Coyett (meaning Prime Minister),
Britain
Head of government
Is represented by
British royal family
And the people run the country
Administrative power
The highest officials.
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is usually
British parliament
parliamentary
Majority party
chieftain
Ruling coalition
The head of the Council automatically becomes the Prime Minister, who is officially appointed by the King/Queen.
October 25, 2022 local time, United Kingdom
Conservative Party
chieftain
Rishi Sunak
in
Buckingham Palace
Accept
King of England
Charles III
As the new Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
[17]
- Chinese name
- British prime minister
- Foreign name
- Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
- Official residence
- 10 Downing Street ; Chequers
- First prime minister
- Robert Walpole
- Incumbent prime minister
- Rishi Sunak
British prime minister
Walpole
77 in total by 2019, the prime minister is increasingly powerful, he can choose his ministers, he can
Dissolution of parliament
If he is
Conservative Party
He can also appoint the chairman of the party, and what kind of people are these prime ministers who hold the power of the country? They are all different. They include an amateur scientist, a philosopher, horse racing fans and debauchery, a novelist, and a man
historian
And a member of the general (respectively
Salisbury
,
Balfour
, Rothbury,
Oh, Palmerston
,
Disraeli
,
Churchill
and
Wellington
A few mediocrities and a few geniuses.
Charles James Fox
,
Edmund Burke
, Viscount Castle Ray,
John Carterey
,
Richard Cobden
,
George Curzon
,
Ernest Bevan
,
Aneurin Bevan
, Hugh Gaitskell,
Labo Butler
For one reason or another, health or status, temperament or simply did not reach the top of the political pole. They are not without
achiever
Comparable talent, it just means that in the process of selection, some people must be eliminated, even some of the best people. Only one horse won in the big race.
As one might expect, British prime ministers have been motley, not overtly brilliant or imaginative, and occasionally some of them have shown a bit of genius. Just think of old Pete,
Lloyd George
and
Churchill
I know. But the fact that they are, on the whole, ordinary people is nothing surprising. Buchthout said, "A politician is one who combines the strength of the first with the credo of the second." In other words, by the nature of their profession, their views are destined to be brought down to the level of the average person. It is the job of the prime minister to manage a group of ambitious and temperamental people - some of whom will consider themselves not his mortal enemies but also his opponents (e.g
Richard Attlee
governmental
Herbert Morrison
). Stick together in tough times and make sure every member of this band contributes to the big ensemble. The strongest of them said, "As long as we all say the same thing, it doesn't matter what we say." Above all, the prime minister must avoid the temptation to act as a one-man show. It's a job that requires a lot of diplomacy and even a little trickery.
In a democracy where the government values being in conflict with the opposition, the prime minister should give the impression; He was a leader in a brutal struggle. So, whatever his personal views, he must appear scrappy. Balfour lost his Conservative party because of this lack of success
Leading position
. He must avoid being agreeable to all, and at the same time must remember that his government, like any other, is made up of all kinds of people with different opinions, from
ultra-left
to
ultra-right
, everything.
According to the survey, to
Margaret Thatcher
Forty-five of the 49 prime ministers to date have been married, and most of them enjoy family life and have many children. among
The Duke of Grafton
17 children from two marriages, and
Earl Grey
Charlie, though married only once, had 15 children.
Spencer Percival
He was the father of 12 children when he was assassinated in the corridors of the House of Commons. A surname
Prince of Wales
Lord Bute, who played cards to win the premiership, had 11 children.
Most of the prime ministers graduated from aristocratic public schools, 20 of them
Eton College
Twenty-two graduated from other public schools. Many have college degrees: 24 graduated
University of Oxford
, 15 graduated
University of Cambridge
. These two ancient universities have produced three-quarters of Britain's prime ministers. The experience of the six prime ministers, who have no university education at all, is a curious one. The British commander who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo
Wellington
The Duke, after graduating from Eton College, went to a military school in France, where the only course for two years was dancing and riding, with the aim of becoming a standard gentleman. Under British control
Suez Canal
the
Disraeli
Be born into
Jew
Family, conversion
Anglicanism
After only one year of religious school.
World War II
Prime minister of the time
Churchill
Because of...
Harrow School
It's too special. I have to pay for it
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
Mixed diploma.
By birth, the only British prime ministers before 1834 were Addington and
Canning
They were all of noble birth, and Addington's father was a doctor and had a wide circle of friends. Canning's mother was an unpopular actress who had to rely entirely on her uncle to put her through college. from
Peale
To begin, to be born
Big bourgeoisie
People have come to power. Peel's father was a very wealthy cotton magnate, and his political opponents nicknamed him "Jenny the Loom." And in a sense, his family is, too
British industrial revolution
The products of this class also belong to
Gladstone
His father became a shipping magnate by trading slaves. Early 20th century
Henry Campbell Bannerman
After forming a cabinet,
Middle class
Family origin
People gradually won many victories, followed by prime ministers including
Lloyd George
,
Chamberlain
, Heath and
Margaret Thatcher
They're all from this class. By middle class, I mean mainly their
Mental outlook
Not property. These people did not rely on the prestige and financial resources of their families, but mainly on their own efforts and struggles to reach the pinnacle of power. Of all these prime ministers, only one actually came from
Working people
Family, he is
MacDonald
MacDonald's father was
Scotland
A sharecropper whose mother was a maid. Largely self-taught, he was later elected chairman of the Labour Party and then elected prime minister.
Even more surprising is that 15 of the 49 prime ministers trace back to the same ancestor. This person is
Elizabeth I
A common squire of the period
George Villiers
. He had a handsome son, also named George
Villiers
Later, he won the King of England
James I
I'm a favorite. I jumped a few steps when I was 30
Duke of Buckingham
He was later
Charles I
A close friend, so notorious that in 1628 a
Puritan
Assassinate. Some of George Villiers' fifteen prime ministerial descendants were mediocre in their achievements, while others were brilliant, such as the Petes, Lord Russell, Churchill, Eden and Home. Even the Queen
Queen Elizabeth II
Also with this family
Blood relation
. In addition, the novelist
Henry Fielding
And famous mathematicians
Bertram Russell
All descendants of Villiers.
Successive prime ministers
Religious belief
The first 26 prime ministers were all Anglican, though
The Duke of Grafton
I later converted
Unitarian
. Addington, the 27th Prime Minister, was
Presbytery
Brother. Gladstone and Salisbury are
Higher church
The disciples, after whom were Presbyterians: Rothbury, Balfour, Bannerman, Bona Law. Next came Wilson (
Congregational Church
Callahan
The Baptist Church
) and Margaret Thatcher (Methodist).
July 11, 2022 local time, United Kingdom
Conservative Party
"
1922 Committee
The CHAIRMAN
Brady
The committee will announce a new party leader and prime minister on September 5
7 [8]
. On September 5th, the results of the election for a new leader of Britain's ruling Conservative Party were announced.
Foreign minister
Elizabeth Truss
Won, will take over
Boris Johnson
Become prime minister of the United Kingdom
[9]
.
On October 24, 2022 local time, the results of the leadership election of the ruling Conservative Party in the United Kingdom were released. before
Finance minister
Rishi Sunak
As the only candidate,
Automatic election
The new leader of Britain's Conservative Party, he will replace Elizabeth Truss, who resigned as Prime Minister after just 45 days in office. This will also be
British history
The first Asian prime minister.
[19]
British cabinet
The head of state. It is customary for the King to appoint Parliament
Majority party
The leader serves. British establishment
Constitutional monarchy
Later, in 1714
Germany
Hanover
Elector
George I
Inherit the throne of England. Because he did not understand English and did not understand the English state, he stopped attending cabinet meetings in 1717.
1714, Queen of England
Annie
Dead without an heir, George I was preceded by 50 relatives and
Queen Anne
Closer to the aristocracy, but they all are
Catholic
George I was the closest relative to Queen Anne
Protestant
Nobility, so according to the 1714
Testamentary succession
The British throne, said
George I
He became the first king of the House of Hanover and was also a native speaker
German language
And the king cannot speak fluent English. He resigns
Whig
Leaders
Robert Walpole
He is the head of the cabinet and does not attend cabinet meetings. And has since started
British monarch
Without precedent, the meeting was presided over by a trusted minister of the King, which became the beginning of the British prime minister system.
Leader of the House of Commons in 1721
Finance minister
, the leader
Robert Walpole
Sir By the King of England
George I
The appointment of the head of the Cabinet is the beginning of the British prime minister's office,
[1]
However, the official title of the position is not Prime Minister, but "Chief Secretary of the Treasury". Since then, the Cabinet has usually consisted of
First Lord of the Treasury
Host, but not absolutely. Old Pete is known for
Lord privy seal
As prime minister.
The position and name of the Prime Minister was formalized by the Cabinet of Peter the Younger in 1783. Prime Minister in 1878
Disraeli
Sign the"
Treaty of Berlin
The Prime Minister's name was first used in official documents. In the early years, the Prime Minister was mostly a peer, and later the Prime Minister was mostly a member of the House of Commons. Since 1902 the Prime Minister can only be the leader of the majority Party in the House of Commons and is appointed by the Crown
Constitutional convention
.
In 1905, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman was appointed Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. In the royal decree appointing him, the term Prime Minister appeared for the first time as an official United Kingdom
Official title
. It was not until 1937 that the King's Ministers Act was enacted that the term Prime minister became legally recognized.
By convention, after the general election, the King summons the majority leader, appoints him as Prime Minister and authorizes the formation of a government. The Prime Minister proposed a list of cabinet members from his own party and asked the King to appoint them. Ministers are divided into cabinet ministers and non-cabinet ministers. The number of ministers in the Cabinet is determined by the Prime Minister, and the composition of the cabinet changes frequently. In addition to the Prime Minister, there are usually ministers of foreign affairs, defense, finance, home affairs and other important departments; Lord Chancellor who is not responsible for the head of a specific department; President of the Privy Council;
Lord privy seal
In charge of district affairs
Scotland
Minister of State,
Welsh
Minister of State,
Northern Ireland
Minister of State. Before a cabinet meeting, the prime minister sometimes convenes a small number of close ministers to discuss important policies
Inner cabinet
.
The functions of the Cabinet include: making final decisions on policies submitted to parliament; In accordance with the policy set by Parliament
Administrative power
; To coordinate and define the functions and responsibilities of government ministries. In addition, the state is in
State of emergency
It has the authority to take urgent action. The Cabinet consists of various standing committees and temporary committees. With the exception of individual committees, their composition and terms of reference are confidential and shall not be disclosed during the term of office. The office has a general office, which is in charge of arranging the agenda and communicating with the cabinet and other important internal departments of the government
Administrative affairs
. Cabinet meetings are convened by the Prime Minister at any time, and usually meet once or twice a week during the parliamentary session. The contents of the meetings are kept secret, the discussions are not recorded, there is never a vote, and the final decision is made by the Prime Minister according to his own views. Cabinet members are jointly and severally responsible for government policies and actions. Whether or not there are differences of opinion among the Cabinet members, there must be unanimity externally.
Although most of the powers of the prime minister are not formally defined by law, by convention the prime Minister has a very wide range of powers and holds the REINS of state.
British political system
The prime minister's position is created by constitutional convention, and his power is determined by constitutional convention.
According to constitutional convention, the Prime Minister enjoys the following powers:
3. Report to the King on behalf of the Government.
4. Defending major government policies on behalf of the government in Parliament.
5. To present to the Crown a list of appointments to the Cabinet and other ministers, and to ask them to resign or change their posts.
6. Preside over Cabinet meetings and decide the agenda of the Cabinet.
Seven. To recommend to the King the appointment of high judges, bishops and certain other officials.
8. To decide on the division of functions and powers of ministries, and to decide on the establishment, merger and abolition of ministries.
9. Provide general guidance to the operations of each department and resolve disputes between departments.
However, the Prime Minister, as leader of the majority party, controls Parliament and has the power to advise the King to dissolve Parliament and call a new election. In 1742, Walpole's cabinet resigned en masse after losing parliamentary support, setting the precedent that the forming party must have a parliamentary majority and be held collectively accountable. In 1784, Pitt's cabinet was not supported by the House of Commons, and asked the king to dissolve the House of Commons, and called an early election, and continued to form a government after winning, which became the practice. In fact, the British prime minister has more power than
President of the United States
The power is great. The president of the United States has only
nomination
The British prime minister has the power to appoint.
October 25, local time, United Kingdom
The ruling party
Conservative Party
New party leader
Rishi Sunak
As Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Be located at
London
Of Buckingham Palace,
Elizabeth Truss
To King Charles III of England
resignation
And was approved to step down as Prime Minister. Sunak then accepted the King's mandate to form a new cabinet and formally assumed office as Prime Minister.
[20]
Serial number
|
Prime minister
|
Term of office
|
Political party
|
---|---|---|---|
1
|
(Robert Walpole)
|
April 4, 1721 - February 11, 1742
|
|
2
|
(Spencer Compton)
|
February 16, 1742 - July 2, 1743
|
Whig
|
3
|
(Henry Pelham)
|
27 August 1743-7 March 1754
|
Whig
|
4
|
(Thomas Pelham-Holles)
|
16 March 1754-16 November 1756
|
Whig
|
5
|
(William Cavendish)
|
November 16, 1756 - June 25, 1757
|
Whig
|
6
|
(Thomas Pelham-Holles)
|
2 July 1757-26 May 1762
|
Whig
|
7
|
(John Stuart)
|
May 26, 1762 - April 16, 1763
|
Tory
|
8
|
(George Grenville)
|
April 16, 1763 - July 13, 1765
|
Whig
|
9
|
(Charles Watson-Wentworth)
|
July 13, 1765 - July 30, 1766
|
Whig
|
10
|
(William Pitt 'the Elder')
|
July 30, 1766 - October 14, 1768
|
Whig
|
11
|
(Augustus Henry FitzRoy)
|
October 14, 1768 - January 28, 1770
|
Whig
|
12
|
(Frederick North)
|
28 January 1770-22 March 1782
|
|
13
|
(William Petty)
|
July 4, 1782 - April 2, 1783
|
Whig
|
14
|
(Charles Watson-Wentworth)
|
27 March 1782-1 July 1782
|
Whig
|
15
|
(Spencer Perceval)
|
April 2, 1783 - December 19, 1783
|
Tory/Fox-North coalition Cabinet
|
16
|
(William Pitt 'the Younger')
|
December 19, 1783 - March 14, 1801
|
Tory
|
17
|
(Henry Addington)
|
March 17, 1801 - May 10, 1804
|
Tory
|
18
|
(William Pitt 'the Younger')
|
May 10, 1804 - January 23, 1806
|
Tory
|
19
|
(William Wyndham Grenville)
|
February 11, 1806 - March 31, 1807
|
Whig/Wise Men coalition Cabinet
|
20
|
(William Cavendish-Bentinck)
|
31 March 1807-4 October 1809
|
Tory
|
21
|
(Spencer Perceval)
|
October 4, 1809 - May 11, 1812
|
Tory
|
22
|
(Robert Banks Jenkinson)
|
June 9, 1812 - April 10, 1827
|
Tory
|
23
|
(George Canning)
|
April 10, 1827 - August 8, 1827
|
Tory
|
24
|
(Frederick John Robinson)
|
August 31, 1827 - January 22, 1828
|
Tory
|
25
|
(Arthur Wellesley)
|
January 22, 1828 - November 22, 1830
|
Tory
|
26
|
(Charles Grey)
|
November 22, 1830 - July 16, 1834
|
Whig
|
27
|
(Arthur Wellesley)
|
November 17, 1834 - December 9, 1834
|
|
28
|
(William Lamb)
|
July 16, 1834 - November 17, 1834
|
Whig
|
29
|
(Robert Peel)
|
December 10, 1834 - April 18, 1835
|
Conservative Party
|
30
|
(William Lamb)
|
April 18, 1835 - August 30, 1841
|
Whig
|
31
|
(Robert Peel)
|
August 30, 1841 - June 30, 1846
|
Conservative Party
|
32
|
(John Russell)
|
June 30, 1846 - February 23, 1852
|
Whig
|
33
|
(Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley)
|
February 23, 1852 - December 19, 1852
|
Conservative Party
|
34
|
(George Hamilton-Gordon)
|
December 19, 1852 - February 6, 1855
|
Peel Conservative/Coalition cabinet
|
35
|
(Henry John Temple)
|
February 6, 1855 - February 20, 1858
|
Whig
|
36
|
(Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley)
|
February 20, 1858 - June 12, 1859
|
Conservative Party
|
37
|
(Henry John Temple)
|
June 12, 1859 - October 18, 1865
|
|
38
|
(John Russell)
|
October 29, 1865 - June 28, 1866
|
Liberal Party
|
39
|
(Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley)
|
June 28, 1866 - February 27, 1868
|
Conservative Party
|
40
|
(Benjamin Disraeli)
|
February 27, 1868 - December 3, 1868
|
Conservative Party
|
41
|
(William Ewart Gladstone)
|
December 3, 1868 - February 20, 1874
|
Liberal Party
|
42
|
(Benjamin Disraeli)
|
February 20, 1874 - April 23, 1880
|
Conservative Party
|
43
|
(William Ewart Gladstone)
|
April 23, 1880 - June 23, 1885
|
Liberal Party
|
44
|
(Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil)
|
June 23, 1885 - February 1, 1886
|
Conservative Party
|
45
|
(William Ewart Gladstone)
|
February 1, 1886 - July 25, 1886
|
Liberal Party
|
46
|
(Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil)
|
August 3, 1886 - August 15, 1892
|
Conservative Party
|
47
|
(William Ewart Gladstone)
|
August 15, 1892 - March 5, 1894
|
Liberal Party
|
48
|
(Archibald Philip Primrose)
|
March 5, 1894 - June 25, 1895
|
Liberal Party
|
49
|
(Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil)
|
June 25, 1895 - July 12, 1902
|
Conservative Party
|
50
|
(Arthur James Balfour)
|
July 12, 1902 - December 5, 1905
|
Conservative Party
|
51
|
(Henry Campbell-Bannerman)
|
December 5, 1905 - April 7, 1908
|
Liberal Party
|
52
|
(Herbert Henry Asquith)
|
April 7, 1908 - December 7, 1916
|
Liberal Party
|
53
|
(David Lloyd George)
|
December 7, 1916 - October 23, 1922
|
Liberal Party
|
54
|
(Andrew Bonar Law)
|
October 23, 1922 - May 22, 1923
|
Conservative Party
|
55
|
(Stanley Baldwin)
|
May 22, 1923 - January 22, 1924
|
Conservative Party
|
56
|
(James Ramsay MacDonald)
|
January 22, 1924 - November 4, 1924
|
|
57
|
(Stanley Baldwin)
|
November 4, 1924 - June 5, 1929
|
Conservative Party
|
58
|
(James Ramsay MacDonald)
|
June 5, 1929 - June 7, 1935
|
Labour Party/National Labour Party
|
59
|
(Stanley Baldwin)
|
June 7, 1935 - May 28, 1937
|
Conservative Party
|
60
|
(Arthur Neville Chamberlain)
|
May 28, 1937 - May 10, 1940
|
Conservative Party
|
61
|
(Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill)
|
May 10, 1940 - July 26, 1945
|
Conservative/Coalition Cabinet
|
62
|
(Clement Richard Attlee)
|
26 July 1945-26 October 1951
|
The Labour Party
|
63
|
(Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill)
|
October 26, 1951 - April 6, 1955
|
Conservative Party
|
64
|
(Robert Anthony Eden)
|
April 6, 1955 - January 10, 1957
|
Conservative Party
|
65
|
(Maurice Harold Macmillan)
|
January 10, 1957 - October 19, 1963
|
Conservative Party
|
66
|
(Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home)
|
October 19, 1963 - October 16, 1964
|
Conservative Party
|
67
|
(James Harold Wilson)
|
October 16, 1964 - June 19, 1970
|
The Labour Party
|
68
|
(Edward Richard George Heath)
|
June 19, 1970 - March 4, 1974
|
Conservative Party
|
69
|
(James Harold Wilson)
|
March 4, 1974 - April 5, 1976
|
The Labour Party
|
70
|
(Leonard James Callaghan)
|
April 5, 1976 - May 4, 1979
|
The Labour Party
|
71
|
(Margaret Hilda Thatcher)
|
May 4, 1979 - November 28, 1990
|
Conservative Party
|
72
|
(John Major)
|
28 November 1990-2 May 1997
|
Conservative Party
|
73
|
(Anthony Charles Lynton Blair)
|
May 2, 1997 - June 27, 2007
|
The Labour Party
|
74
|
(James Gordon Brown)
|
June 27, 2007 - May 11, 2010
|
The Labour Party
|
75
|
(David William Donald Cameron)
|
May 11, 2010 - July 13, 2016
|
Conservative/Coalition Cabinet
|
76
|
(Theresa Mary May)
|
July 13, 2016 - July 24, 2019
|
Conservative/Coalition Cabinet
|
77
|
(Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson)
|
July 24, 2019 - September 6, 2022
|
Conservative Party
|
78
|
(Elizabeth Truss)
|
September 6, 2022 - October 25, 2022
[15 to 16]
[18]
[21]
|
Conservative Party
|
79
|
(Rishi Sunak)
|
October 25, 2022 - present
[17]
|
Conservative Party
|
Reference materials:
[2-6]
[10-14]
|