Sir Tony Blair

Gordon Brown

Gordon Brown was UK Chancellor from 1997 to 2007 and Prime Minister from 2007 to 2010. His career is defined by New Labour economics, the 2008 financial crisis, global education work, and debates over Britain's constitutional future.

Born
1951 CE
Role
British Prime Minister

British Prime Minister (born 1951)

Portrait of Gordon Brown in formal ministerial attire
Quick facts

Profile details

Additional identity and tagging details that are not already covered in the introduction.

Also known as
Prime Minister Brown, Chancellor Brown
Facts

Gordon Brown timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

1951–1967
Early years

Born in Scotland to a Church of Scotland minister's family, Brown showed exceptional academic promise and entered Edinburgh University unusually young.

1990s
Alliance with Blair

Brown's partnership and rivalry with Tony Blair helped create New Labour, joining electoral appeal to economic credibility before the 1997 victory.

2008–2009
Financial crisis

The 2008 financial crisis dominated Brown's premiership, leading to bank recapitalisation, nationalisations, stimulus measures, and the London G20 summit.

2010–present
Later influence

After leaving Parliament in 2015, Brown remained active on global education, poverty, Scottish constitutional questions, and international financial cooperation.

Life Journey

From intellectual prodigy to crisis-era prime minister

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1951–1967

Early years

Born in Scotland to a Church of Scotland minister's family, Brown showed exceptional academic promise and entered Edinburgh University unusually young.

Late 1960s–1970s

Student politics

At Edinburgh, Brown became rector, edited student publications, and developed the social-democratic convictions that shaped his later public life.

1983

Entering Parliament

Brown entered Parliament in 1983, the year of Labour's landslide defeat, and built his reputation as a serious economic moderniser.

1990s

Alliance with Blair

Brown's partnership and rivalry with Tony Blair helped create New Labour, joining electoral appeal to economic credibility before the 1997 victory.

1997–2007

Chancellor decade

As Chancellor from 1997 to 2007, Brown reshaped economic policy through Bank of England independence, fiscal rules, tax credits, and major public investment.

2007

Becoming prime minister

Brown became Prime Minister in June 2007 after Tony Blair resigned, inheriting both the achievements and fatigue of a decade in power.

2008–2009

Financial crisis

The 2008 financial crisis dominated Brown's premiership, leading to bank recapitalisation, nationalisations, stimulus measures, and the London G20 summit.

2010

Election defeat

Brown lost the 2010 general election after Labour finished second, then resigned as David Cameron formed a Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition.

2010–present

Later influence

After leaving Parliament in 2015, Brown remained active on global education, poverty, Scottish constitutional questions, and international financial cooperation.

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British Prime Ministers lineage
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British Prime Ministers
1721 CE–present

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Gordon Brown,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Gordon Brown,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Gordon Brown,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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