Lineage

List of British Prime Ministers in Order

Explore all British prime ministers in chronological order, from Sir Robert Walpole in 1721 to the present day.

This timeline shows every premiership, including repeat terms, with party affiliation, key dates, and concise summaries. Switch between a visual timeline and a structured party view to understand how leadership in Britain has evolved over time.

78 premierships listed
1721 to present
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Collage of British prime ministers from Walpole to the present day

Key facts about British prime ministers

  • First prime minister: Sir Robert Walpole (1721–1742)
  • Current prime minister: Sir Keir Starmer (2024–present)
  • Longest-serving: Sir Robert Walpole (over 20 years)
  • Total premierships listed: 78

How the role of prime minister developed

The role of prime minister was not formally defined at first. Sir Robert Walpole is generally considered the first holder of the office, though the position evolved gradually from senior ministers advising the monarch.

Over time, power shifted from the Crown to Parliament, and the prime minister became the central figure in British government. The rise of organised political parties, electoral reform in the nineteenth century, and the expansion of democracy all reshaped the office into its modern form.

This page lists every premiership in order, including multiple terms served by the same individual, to give a complete picture of political leadership in Britain.

Portrait of Sir Robert Walpole in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 1

Sir Robert Walpole

1721–1742 · Whig

Generally regarded as Britain’s first prime minister, Walpole dominated early Georgian politics and brought long-lasting stability after financial crisis.

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Portrait of Spencer Compton in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 2

Spencer Compton

1742–1743 · Whig

The Earl of Wilmington succeeded Walpole, but his short premiership was limited by ill health and stronger figures around him.

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Portrait of Henry Pelham in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 3

Henry Pelham

1743–1754 · Whig

Pelham presided over a relatively stable period, managing war finance and preserving a broad governing coalition.

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Portrait of George Grenville in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 8

George Grenville

1763–1765 · Whig

Grenville tightened imperial administration after war, including new taxation in America that sharpened colonial anger.

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Portrait of Lord North in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 12

Lord North

1770–1782 · Tory

North led Britain through most of the American War of Independence and fell after defeat reshaped imperial politics.

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Portrait of Henry Addington in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 17

Henry Addington

1801–1804 · Tory

Addington governed during a brief peace in the Napoleonic era, but his ministry was overshadowed by renewed war.

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Portrait of Lord Grenville in formal Georgian attire

PRIME MINISTER 19

Lord Grenville

1806–1807 · Whig

Grenville led the Ministry of All the Talents, remembered especially for abolishing the British slave trade.

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Portrait of Spencer Perceval in formal Regency-era attire

PRIME MINISTER 21

Spencer Perceval

1809–1812 · Tory

Perceval led Britain through the Napoleonic Wars until he was assassinated in the House of Commons lobby.

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Portrait of Lord Liverpool in formal Regency-era attire

PRIME MINISTER 22

Lord Liverpool

1812–1827 · Tory

Liverpool oversaw victory over Napoleon and then the difficult politics of postwar unrest, reform pressure, and recovery.

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Portrait of George Canning in formal Regency-era attire

PRIME MINISTER 23

George Canning

1827 · Tory

Canning’s short premiership revealed the fragmentation of old Tory unity, but his death cut short any broader realignment.

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Portrait of Sir Robert Peel in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 29

Sir Robert Peel

1834–1835 · Conservative

Peel’s first ministry was short, but it helped define the modern Conservative Party and its political outlook.

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Portrait of Sir Robert Peel in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 31

Sir Robert Peel

1841–1846 · Conservative

Peel modernised administration and repealed the Corn Laws, splitting his party but changing Britain’s economic direction.

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Portrait of Lord John Russell in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 32

Lord John Russell

1846–1852 · Whig

Russell’s ministry confronted the Irish Famine, European revolution, and the growing pressures of reform politics.

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Portrait of Lord John Russell in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 38

Lord John Russell

1865–1866 · Liberal

Russell’s second premiership fell over reform, showing how rapidly the old political order was changing.

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Portrait of Benjamin Disraeli in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 40

Benjamin Disraeli

1868 · Conservative

Disraeli’s first spell was brief, but he soon emerged as one of the defining Conservative leaders of the century.

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Portrait of Benjamin Disraeli in formal Victorian attire

PRIME MINISTER 42

Benjamin Disraeli

1874–1880 · Conservative

Disraeli’s second ministry linked conservatism with empire, social reform, and a more theatrical national politics.

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Portrait of Arthur Balfour in formal Edwardian attire

PRIME MINISTER 50

Arthur Balfour

1902–1905 · Conservative

Balfour inherited office from Salisbury but saw his party weakened by education, tariff, and imperial controversies.

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Portrait of H. H. Asquith in formal Edwardian attire

PRIME MINISTER 52

H. H. Asquith

1908–1916 · Liberal

Asquith governed through constitutional conflict, social reform, and the first traumatic years of the First World War.

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Portrait of David Lloyd George in formal Edwardian attire

PRIME MINISTER 53

David Lloyd George

1916–1922 · Liberal Coalition

Lloyd George led Britain to victory in the First World War and then into an unstable and difficult peace.

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Portrait of Bonar Law in formal Edwardian attire

PRIME MINISTER 54

Bonar Law

1922–1923 · Conservative

Bonar Law ended the wartime coalition era, but ill health meant his premiership lasted only a short time.

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Portrait of Stanley Baldwin in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 55

Stanley Baldwin

1923–1924 · Conservative

Baldwin’s first ministry fell after seeking a tariff mandate, opening the way for Labour’s first government.

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Portrait of Ramsay MacDonald in formal attire

PRIME MINISTER 56

Ramsay MacDonald

1924 · Labour

MacDonald became Britain’s first Labour prime minister, marking a profound shift in party politics.

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Portrait of Stanley Baldwin in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 57

Stanley Baldwin

1924–1929 · Conservative

Baldwin returned with a stronger mandate and presided over a calmer, though still uneasy, interwar politics.

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Portrait of Ramsay MacDonald in formal attire

PRIME MINISTER 58

Ramsay MacDonald

1929–1931 · Labour

MacDonald’s second government began under Labour but was overwhelmed by the crisis of the Great Depression.

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Portrait of Ramsay MacDonald in formal attire

PRIME MINISTER 59

Ramsay MacDonald

1931–1935 · National Labour

MacDonald stayed in office at the head of a National Government, a move that split Labour and reshaped politics.

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Portrait of Stanley Baldwin in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 60

Stanley Baldwin

1935–1937 · Conservative

Baldwin returned again and managed the abdication crisis of Edward VIII before retiring from politics.

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Portrait of Neville Chamberlain in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 61

Neville Chamberlain

1937–1940 · Conservative

Chamberlain is inseparable from appeasement, though his fall came in the first desperate phase of the Second World War.

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Portrait of Sir Winston Churchill in formal wartime attire

PRIME MINISTER 62

Sir Winston Churchill

1940–1945 · Conservative Coalition

Churchill’s wartime leadership made him one of the central political figures in British and global history.

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Portrait of Clement Attlee in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 63

Clement Attlee

1945–1951 · Labour

Attlee’s government built the postwar welfare state, founded the NHS, and oversaw reconstruction and decolonisation.

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Portrait of Sir Anthony Eden in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 65

Sir Anthony Eden

1955–1957 · Conservative

Eden’s reputation was badly damaged by the Suez Crisis, which exposed the limits of Britain’s postwar power.

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Portrait of Harold Macmillan in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 66

Harold Macmillan

1957–1963 · Conservative

Macmillan projected calm prosperity at home while steering Britain through decolonisation and strategic change abroad.

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Portrait of Harold Wilson in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 68

Harold Wilson

1964–1970 · Labour

Wilson presented Labour as the party of modernisation, technology, and social change in the 1960s.

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Portrait of Sir Edward Heath in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 69

Sir Edward Heath

1970–1974 · Conservative

Heath took Britain into the European Economic Community but was weakened by industrial conflict and economic crisis.

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Portrait of Harold Wilson in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 70

Harold Wilson

1974–1976 · Labour

Wilson returned in a divided decade, governing amid inflation, union pressure, and economic strain.

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Portrait of James Callaghan in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 71

James Callaghan

1976–1979 · Labour

Callaghan struggled through austerity and unrest, ending with the Winter of Discontent and Labour’s defeat.

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Portrait of Margaret Thatcher in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 72

Margaret Thatcher

1979–1990 · Conservative

Thatcher transformed the economy, the state, and the tone of British politics more radically than any postwar prime minister.

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Portrait of Sir John Major in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 73

Sir John Major

1990–1997 · Conservative

Major combined unexpected electoral success with deep party division over Europe and the strains of a long Conservative era.

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Portrait of Sir Tony Blair in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 74

Sir Tony Blair

1997–2007 · Labour

Blair led New Labour to three election victories, pairing domestic reform with the divisive Iraq War.

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Portrait of Gordon Brown in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 75

Gordon Brown

2007–2010 · Labour

Brown’s premiership was dominated by the global financial crisis and the politics of recession and recovery.

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Portrait of David Cameron in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 76

David Cameron

2010–2016 · Conservative

Cameron governed first in coalition and then alone, but his legacy was transformed by the Brexit referendum.

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Portrait of Theresa May in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 77

Theresa May

2016–2019 · Conservative

May tried to deliver Brexit while managing a divided parliament, but could not secure support for her withdrawal deal.

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Portrait of Boris Johnson in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 78

Boris Johnson

2019–2022 · Conservative

Johnson won a large majority, completed Brexit, and led through the pandemic before scandal drove him from office.

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Portrait of Liz Truss in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 79

Liz Truss

2022 · Conservative

Truss’s premiership collapsed with extraordinary speed after market turmoil followed her government’s mini-budget.

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Portrait of Rishi Sunak in formal ministerial attire

PRIME MINISTER 80

Rishi Sunak

2022–2024 · Conservative

Sunak sought to restore stability after Truss, but the Conservatives suffered a heavy defeat at the 2024 general election.

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Portrait of Sir Keir Starmer in formal attire

PRIME MINISTER 81

Sir Keir Starmer

2024–present · Labour

Starmer entered Downing Street after Labour’s 2024 victory, promising stability, reform, and a reset in government.

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Frequently asked questions

Who was the first British prime minister?

Robert Walpole is generally treated as the first British prime minister. He took office in 1721 and set the pattern for the role as it developed in the eighteenth century.

Who is the current British prime minister?

Sir Keir Starmer became prime minister in 2024 following a Labour general election victory.

Why do some prime ministers appear more than once?

Several prime ministers returned to office after losing power, resigning, or heading a new ministry later on. This page lists each separate premiership in chronological order.

Which party has produced the most prime ministers?

Historically, Whig, Tory, Conservative, and Liberal traditions have dominated, with Labour emerging in the twentieth century as a major governing party.

Who served the longest as prime minister?

Sir Robert Walpole is usually counted as the longest-serving British prime minister, with a tenure of more than twenty years.

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