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Leader of the Labour Party (UK)

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Leader of the Labour Party
since 4 April 2020
StatusParty leader
Member ofNational Executive Committee
PrecursorChair of the PLP
Inaugural holderKeir Hardie
Formation17 January 1906
DeputyDeputy Leader of the Labour Party

The leader of the Labour Party is the highest position within the United Kingdom's Labour Party. The current holder of the position is Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Keir Starmer, who was elected to the position on 4 April 2020, following his victory in the party's leadership election.

The post of Leader of the Labour Party was officially created in 1922. Before this, between when Labour MPs were first elected in 1906 and the general election in 1922, when substantial gains were made, the post was known as Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party.[1] In 1970, the positions of leader of the Labour Party and chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party were separated.

In 1921, John R. Clynes became the first leader of the Labour Party to have been born in England; all party leaders before him had been born in Scotland. In 1924, Ramsay MacDonald became the first Labour prime minister, leading a minority government which lasted nine months. Clement Attlee would become the first Labour leader to lead a majority government in 1945. The first to be born in Wales was Neil Kinnock, who was elected in 1983. The most recent party leader to not be from England is Gordon Brown, who was born in Scotland. The only Labour leaders not to contest a general election (excluding temporary acting leaders) are George Lansbury (who stood down) and John Smith (who died in office).[a]

Clement Attlee, Harold Wilson, Tony Blair and Sir Keir Starmer remain the only four leaders to have led the party to victory in general elections. Out of the four, Blair is the most successful, having won three consecutive electoral victories in 1997, 2001 (both landslide victories), and 2005. Wilson won four general elections out of five contested, in 1964, 1966, February 1974 and October 1974. Attlee, the first leader to lead Labour to a majority won the general elections of 1945 and 1950. In addition, Labour also won the popular vote in 1951 by securing nearly 49 percent of the voteshare (however Labour won fewer seats than the Conservatives). Starmer, having been appointed after a poor party result in 2019, led a revival in fortunes and oversaw a landslide in 2024.

When the Labour Party is in government, as it currently is, the leader usually becomes the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, first lord of the Treasury and minister for the civil service, as well as appointing the cabinet. Concordantly, when the Labour Party is in opposition, the leader would usually act (as the second-largest party) as the leader of the Opposition, and chair the shadow cabinet.

Selection process

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Unlike other British political party leaders, the Labour leader does not have the power to dismiss or appoint their deputy. Both the leader and deputy leader are elected by an alternative vote system. [2]

From 1980 to 2014 an electoral college was used, with a third of the votes allocated to the Party's MPs and MEPs, a third to individual members of the Labour Party, and a third to individual members of all affiliated organisations, including socialist societies and trade unions.

The 2015 leadership election used a "one member, one vote" system, in which the votes of party members and members of affiliated organisations are counted equally. MPs' and MEPs' votes are not counted separately, although a candidate needs to receive the support of 10% of Labour MPs in order to appear on the ballot.[3]

Leaders of the Labour Party (1906–present)

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Note: the right-hand column does not allocate height proportional to time in office.

A list of leaders (including acting leaders) since 1906.[4]

No. Leader
(birth–death)
Constituency Took office Left office Elections fought Tenure Prime Minister (term)
1 Keir Hardie
(1856–1915)
Merthyr Tydfil 17 February 1906 22 January 1908 1906 1 year, 339 days Campbell-Bannerman 1905–1908
2 Arthur Henderson
(1863–1935)
(1st time)
Barnard Castle 22 January 1908 14 February 1910 Jan 1910 2 years, 24 days
Asquith 1908–1916
3 George Barnes
(1859–1940)
Glasgow Blackfriars and Hutchesontown 14 February 1910 6 February 1911 Dec 1910 358 days
4 Ramsay MacDonald
(1866–1937)
(1st time)
Leicester 6 February 1911 5 August 1914 3 years, 181 days
(2) Arthur Henderson
(1863–1935)
(2nd time)
Barnard Castle 5 August 1914 24 October 1917 3 years, 81 days
Lloyd George 1916–1922
5 William Adamson
(1863–1936)
West Fife 24 October 1917 14 February 1921 1918 3 years, 113 days
6 J. R. Clynes
(1869–1949)
Manchester Platting 14 February 1921 21 November 1922 1922 1 year, 281 days
Law 1922–1923
(4) Ramsay MacDonald
(1866–1937)
(2nd time)
Aberavon 21 November 1922
(elected)
28 August 1931 1923

1924 1929

8 years, 280 days
Baldwin 1923–1924
Himself 1924
Baldwin 1924–1929
Himself 1929–1931
(2) Arthur Henderson
(1863–1935)
(3rd time)
Burnley
(1931)
None[b]
(1931–1932)
28 August 1931
(unopposed)
25 October 1932 1931 1 year, 59 days MacDonald 1931–1935
7 George Lansbury
(1859–1940)
Bow and Bromley 25 October 1932
(unopposed)
8 October 1935 2 years, 349 days
Baldwin 1935–1937
8 Clement Attlee
(1883–1967)
Limehouse
(1935–1950)
Walthamstow West
(1950–1955)
25 October 1935
(elected)
7 December 1955[5] 1935

1945 1950 1951 1955

20 years, 44 days
Chamberlain 1937–1940
Churchill 1940–1945
Himself 1945–1951
Churchill 1951–1955
Eden 1955–1957
Herbert Morrison[c]
(1888–1965)
Lewisham South 7 December 1955 14 December 1955 7 days
9 Hugh Gaitskell
(1906–1963)
Leeds South 14 December 1955
(elected)
18 January 1963
(died in office)
1959 7 years, 36 days
Macmillan 1957–1963
George Brown[c]
(1914–1985)
Belper 18 January 1963 14 February 1963 28 days
10 Harold Wilson
(1916–1995)
Huyton 14 February 1963
(elected)
5 April 1976 1964

1966 1970 Feb 1974 Oct 1974

13 years, 50 days
Douglas-Home 1963–1964
Himself 1964–1970
Heath 1970–1974
Himself 1974–1976
11 James Callaghan
(1912–2005)
Cardiff South East 5 April 1976
(elected)
10 November 1980 1979 4 years, 221 days Himself 1976–1979
Thatcher 1979–1990
12 Michael Foot
(1913–2010)
Ebbw Vale 10 November 1980
(elected)
2 October 1983 1983 2 years, 327 days
13 Neil Kinnock
(b. 1942)
Islwyn 2 October 1983
(elected)
18 July 1992 1987

1992

8 years, 291 days
Major 1990–1997
14 John Smith
(1938–1994)
Monklands East 18 July 1992
(elected)
12 May 1994
(died in office)
1 year, 299 days
Margaret Beckett[c]
(b. 1943)
(acting)
Derby South 12 May 1994 21 July 1994 71 days
15 Tony Blair
(b. 1953)
Sedgefield 21 July 1994
(elected)
24 June 2007 1997

2001 2005

12 years, 341 days
Himself 1997–2007
16 Gordon Brown
(b. 1951)
Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath 24 June 2007
(unopposed)
11 May 2010 2010 2 years, 319 days Himself 2007–2010
Harriet Harman[c]
(b. 1950)
(acting: 1st time)
Camberwell and Peckham 11 May 2010 25 September 2010 138 days Cameron 2010–2016
17 Ed Miliband
(b. 1969)
Doncaster North 25 September 2010
(elected)
8 May 2015 2015 4 years, 157 days
Harriet Harman[c]
(b. 1950)
(acting: 2nd time)
Camberwell and Peckham 8 May 2015 12 September 2015 128 days
18 Jeremy Corbyn
(b. 1949)
Islington North 12 September 2015
(elected)
4 April 2020 2017

2019

4 years, 226 days
May 2016–2019
Johnson 2019–2022
19 Sir Keir Starmer
(b. 1962)
Holborn and St Pancras 4 April 2020
(elected)
Incumbent 2024 4 years, 264 days[d]
Truss Sep–Oct 2022
Sunak 2022–2024
Himself 2024–present

Timeline

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Keir StarmerJeremy CorbynEd MilibandGordon BrownTony BlairJohn Smith (Labour Party leader)Neil KinnockMichael FootJames CallaghanHarold WilsonHugh GaitskellClement AttleeGeorge LansburyJ. R. ClynesWilliam AdamsonRamsay MacDonaldGeorge Barnes (British politician)Arthur HendersonKeir Hardie

Leaders in the House of Lords

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Retirement

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It is not uncommon for a retired leader of the Labour Party to be granted a peerage upon their retirement, particularly if they served as prime minister; examples of this include Clement Attlee and Harold Wilson. However, Neil Kinnock was also elevated to the House of Lords, despite never being prime minister, and Michael Foot declined a similar offer.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ See Labour's electoral performance.
  2. ^ Henderson was defeated in his Burnley seat in the 1931 election, and did not return to Parliament during his third term as leader. George Lansbury acted as the Labour parliamentary leader, until formally succeeding Henderson as party leader.
  3. ^ a b c d e Deputy Leaders who assumed the role of party leader temporarily because of the death or resignation of the incumbent, serving until the election of a new leader. As they were not elected or appointed in an official capacity, they are not included in the order count. Herbert Morrison acted as leader for the seven days between Clement Attlee's resignation and Hugh Gaitskell's election as leader. George Brown and Margaret Beckett acted as leader following deaths of Gaitskell and John Smith, respectively. Harriet Harman acted as leader twice when Gordon Brown and Ed Miliband resigned.
  4. ^ As of 24 December 2024

References

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  1. ^ Thorpe, Andrew. (2001) A History of the British Labour Party, Palgrave, ISBN 0-333-92908-X
  2. ^ Leeds de Melo, J (2003), Primary elections and party conferences — Democracy in political parties: UK, France, Germany and Italy, Routledge, 202 p.
  3. ^ "Labour proposals 'all-but guarantee leftwing Corbyn successor'". www.msn.com. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  4. ^ Boothroyd, David. "Leaders of the Labour Party". election.demon.co.uk. United Kingdom Election Results. Archived from the original on 6 August 2020. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  5. ^ Nicklaus Thomas-Symonds (2010), Attlee: A Life in Politics, London: I B Tauris, p. 260

Further reading

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  • Clarke, Charles; James, Toby S. (2015). British Labour Leaders. London: Biteback.