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Foreign Secretary (United Kingdom)

Member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom


Member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom

FieldValue
postUnited Kingdom
Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs
insigniaCoat of arms of the United Kingdom (2022, lesser arms).svg
insigniacaptionRoyal Arms of His Majesty's Government
imageYvette Cooper Official Cabinet Portrait, September 2025.jpg
incumbentYvette Cooper
incumbentsince5 September 2025
departmentForeign, Commonwealth and Development Office
residence
seatKing Charles Street
status
firstCharles James Fox (as Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs)
style
typeMinister of the Crown
member_of
reports_toThe Prime Minister
nominatorThe Prime Minister
appointerThe Monarch
appointer_qualified(on the advice of the Prime Minister)
termlengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
formation
salary£106,363 per annum (2022)
website
deputyMinister of State for Development

Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs The secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs, commonly known as the foreign secretary, is a secretary of state in the Government of the United Kingdom, with responsibility for the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. The role is one of the most senior ministers in the UK Government and is a Great Office of State. The incumbent is a member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom and National Security Council, and reports directly to the prime minister.

The officeholder works alongside the other Foreign Office ministers. The corresponding shadow minister is the shadow foreign secretary. The Foreign Affairs Select Committee also evaluates the secretary of state's performance.

The current foreign secretary is Yvette Cooper. She was appointed by Prime Minister Keir Starmer on 5 September 2025.

Responsibilities

In contrast to what is generally known as a foreign minister in many other countries, the foreign secretary's remit includes:

  • British relations with foreign countries and governments
  • Promotion of British interests abroad
  • Matters pertaining to the Commonwealth of Nations and the Overseas Territories
  • Oversight for the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) and the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ)

Residence

The official residence of the foreign secretary is 1 Carlton Gardens in London. The foreign secretary also has the use of Chevening House, a country house in Kent, South East England, and works from the Foreign Office in Whitehall.

History

The title of secretary of state in the government of England dates back to the early 17th century. The position of secretary of state for foreign affairs was created in the British governmental reorganisation of 1782, in which the Northern Department and Southern Department became the Foreign Office and Home Office respectively. The India Office was closed down in 1947. It had been a constituent predecessor department of the Foreign Office, like the Colonial Office and the Dominions Office.

The position of secretary of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs came into existence in 1968 with the merger of the functions of secretary of state for foreign affairs and the secretary of state for commonwealth affairs into a single department of state. Margaret Beckett, appointed in 2006 by Tony Blair, was the first woman to hold the post.

The post of secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs was created in 2020 when position holder Dominic Raab absorbed the responsibilities of the secretary of state for international development.

The deputy secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs, also known as the deputy foreign secretary, was a minister of state position in the Government of the United Kingdom deputised to the foreign secretary with responsibility to represent the foreign secretary in the House of Commons. It was created for Andrew Mitchell, who was the only holder of the office, due to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appointing former Prime Minister David Cameron a Life Peer in November 2023 to serve as Foreign Secretary from the House of Lords.

List of foreign secretaries

Secretaries of state for foreign affairs (1782–1968)

PortraitNameTerm of officePartyMinistryMonarch
(Reign)George III
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1801-1816).svg50px]]
(1760–1820)
Tories (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}; border:none"Tories (British political party)}}; border:none"Tories (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Independent (politician)}}"Tories (British political party)}}; border-bottom:none"Tories (British political party)}}; border-top:none"George IV
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1816-1837).svg50px]]Tories (British political party)}}; border:none"Tories (British political party)}}; border:none"Tories (British political party)}}; border-bottom:none"Tories (British political party)}}; border-top:none"William IV
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1816-1837).svg50px]]Whigs (British political party)}}"Tories (British political party)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}; border-bottom:none"Whigs (British political party)}}; border-top:none"Victoria
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837).svg50px]]
(1837–1901)Tories (British political party)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}"Whigs (British political party)}}; border:none"Whigs (British political party)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}; border:none"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Liberal Unionist Party}}; border:none"Liberal Unionist Party}}; border:none"Edward VII
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837-1952).svg50px]]
(1901–1910)Liberal Unionist Party}}; border:none"Liberal Party (UK)}}; border:none"Liberal Party (UK)}}; border:none"Liberal Party (UK)}}; border:none"George V
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837-1952).svg50px]]Liberal Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Labour Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Liberal Party (UK)}}"National Liberal Party (UK, 1931)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Edward VIII
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837-1952).svg50px]]
(1936)Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"George VI
[[File:Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837-1952).svg50px]]Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border-bottom: none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border-bottom:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border-top:none"Elizabeth II
[[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom.svg50px]]Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"
Whigs (British political party)}}"[[File:Charles James Fox00.jpg75px]]Charles James Fox
MP for Westminster27 March 17825 July 1782WhigRockingham II
Whigs (British political party)}}"[[File:Thomas Robinson 2nd Baron.jpg75px]]Thomas Robinson
2nd Baron Grantham13 July 17822 April 1783WhigShelburne
(Whig–Tory)
Whigs (British political party)}}"[[File:Charles James Fox00.jpg75px]]Charles James Fox
MP for Westminster2 April 178319 December 1783WhigFox–North
[[File:1stMarquessOfBuckingham.jpg75px]]George Nugent-Temple-Grenville
3rd Earl Temple19 December 178323 December 1783ToryPitt I
[[File:Francis Osborne cropped.jpg75px]]His Grace
Francis Osborne
5th Duke of Leeds23 December 1783May 1791Tory
[[File:1st Baron Grenville-cropped.jpg75px]]William Grenville
1st Baron Grenville8 June 179120 February 1801Tory
[[File:Earl jenkinson.jpg75px]]Robert Jenkinson
2nd Baron Hawkesbury
MP for Rye20 February 180114 May 1804Tory
Addington
[[File:Dudley Ryder, PA06355, frameless.jpg75px]]Dudley Ryder
2nd Baron Harrowby14 May 180411 January 1805ToryPitt II
[[File:Henry Phipps, 1st Earl of Mulgrave by Sir William Beechey.jpg75px]]Henry Phipps
3rd Baron Mulgrave11 January 18057 February 1806Tory
Whigs (British political party)}}"[[File:Charles James Fox00.jpg75px]]Charles James Fox
MP for Westminster7 February 180613 September 1806WhigAll the Talents
(Whig–Tory)
[[File:Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey by Sir Thomas Lawrence.jpg75px]]Charles Grey
Viscount Howick
MP for Northumberland24 September 180625 March 1807Whig
[[File:George Canning by Richard Evans - detail.jpg75px]]
George Canning
25 March 180711 October 1809ToryPortland II
[[File:Henry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst by William Salter.jpg75px]]Henry Bathurst
3rd Earl Bathurst11 October 18096 December 1809ToryPerceval
[[File:Richard Colley Wellesley, Marquess Wellesley by John Philip Davis ('Pope' Davis).jpg75px]]Richard Wellesley
1st Marquess Wellesley6 December 18094 March 1812Independent
[[File:Lord Castlereagh Marquess of Londonderry.jpg75px]]Robert Stewart
2nd Marquess of Londonderry4 March 181212 August 1822ToryLiverpool
Tories (British political party)}}"[[File:George Canning by Richard Evans - detail.jpg75px]]George Canning
MP for 3 constituencies respectively16 September 182230 April 1827Tory
[[File:1stEarlOfDudley.jpg75px]]John Ward
1st Earl of Dudley30 April 18272 June 1828ToryCanning
(Canningite–Whig)
Goderich
Wellington–Peel
[[File:Earlofaberdeen.jpg75px]]George Hamilton-Gordon
4th Earl of Aberdeen2 June 182822 November 1830Tory
[[File:Lord Palmerston 1855.jpg75px]]Henry John Temple
3rd Viscount Palmerston
MP for 3 constituencies respectively22 November 183014 November 1834WhigGrey
Melbourne I
[[File:Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington by John Jackson cropped.jpg75px]]Arthur Wellesley
1st Duke of Wellington14 November 183418 April 1835ToryWellington Caretaker
ConservativePeel I
[[File:Lord Palmerston 1855.jpg75px]]Henry John Temple
3rd Viscount Palmerston
MP for Tiverton18 April 18352 September 1841WhigMelbourne II
[[File:Earlofaberdeen.jpg75px]]George Hamilton-Gordon
4th Earl of Aberdeen2 September 18416 July 1846ConservativePeel II
[[File:Lord Palmerston 1855.jpg75px]]Henry John Temple
3rd Viscount Palmerston
MP for Tiverton6 July 184626 December 1851WhigRussell I
[[File:Second Earl Granville.jpg75px]]Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville26 December 185127 February 1852Whig
[[File:JH Harris 3rd Earl of Malmesbury by JG Middleton crop.jpg75px]]James Howard Harris
3rd Earl of Malmesbury27 February 185228 December 1852ConservativeWho? Who?
[[File:Lord john russell.jpg75px]]Lord John Russell
MP for the City of London28 December 185221 February 1853WhigAberdeen
(Peelite–Whig)
[[File:4thEarlOfClarendon.jpg75px]]George Villiers
4th Earl of Clarendon21 February 185326 February 1858Whig
Palmerston I
[[File:JH Harris 3rd Earl of Malmesbury by JG Middleton crop.jpg75px]]James Howard Harris
3rd Earl of Malmesbury26 February 185818 June 1859ConservativeDerby–Disraeli II
[[File:Lord john russell.jpg75px]]John Russell
1st Earl Russell18 June 18593 November 1865LiberalPalmerston II
[[File:4thEarlOfClarendon.jpg75px]]George Villiers
4th Earl of Clarendon3 November 18656 July 1866LiberalRussell II
[[File:Edward Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby 2.jpg75px]]Edward Stanley
Lord Stanley
MP for King's Lynn6 July 18669 December 1868ConservativeDerby–Disraeli III
[[File:4thEarlOfClarendon.jpg75px]]George Villiers
4th Earl of Clarendon9 December 18686 July 1870LiberalGladstone I
[[File:Second Earl Granville.jpg75px]]Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville6 July 187021 February 1874Liberal
[[File:Edward Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby 2.jpg75px]]Edward Stanley
15th Earl of Derby21 February 18742 April 1878ConservativeDisraeli II
[[File:Robert-Gascoyne-Cecil-3rd-Marquess-of-Salisbury (cropped).jpg75px]]Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
3rd Marquess of Salisbury2 April 187828 April 1880Conservative
[[File:Second Earl Granville.jpg75px]]Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville28 April 188024 June 1885LiberalGladstone II
[[File:Robert-Gascoyne-Cecil-3rd-Marquess-of-Salisbury (cropped).jpg75px]]Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
3rd Marquess of Salisbury24 June 18856 February 1886ConservativeSalisbury I
[[File:Archibald-Philip-Primrose-5th-Earl-of-Rosebery (cropped).jpg75px]]Archibald Primrose
5th Earl of Rosebery6 February 18863 August 1886LiberalGladstone III
[[File:Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh.jpg75px]]Stafford Northcote
1st Earl of Iddesleigh3 August 188612 January 1887ConservativeSalisbury II
[[File:Robert-Gascoyne-Cecil-3rd-Marquess-of-Salisbury (cropped).jpg75px]]Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
3rd Marquess of Salisbury14 January 188711 August 1892Conservative
[[File:Archibald-Philip-Primrose-5th-Earl-of-Rosebery (cropped).jpg75px]]Archibald Primrose
5th Earl of Rosebery18 August 189211 March 1894LiberalGladstone IV
[[File:1st Earl of Kimberley 1897 (cropped).jpg109x109px]]John Wodehouse
1st Earl of Kimberley11 March 189421 June 1895LiberalRosebery
[[File:Robert-Gascoyne-Cecil-3rd-Marquess-of-Salisbury (cropped).jpg75px]]Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
3rd Marquess of Salisbury29 June 189512 November 1900ConservativeSalisbury
(III & IV)
(Con.–Lib.U.)
[[File:Marquess of Lansdowne crop.jpg75px]]Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice
5th Marquess of Lansdowne12 November 19004 December 1905Liberal Unionist
Balfour
[[File:Picture of Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon.jpg75px]]Sir Edward Grey, 3rd Bt.
MP for Berwick-upon-Tweed10 December 190510 December 1916LiberalCampbell-Bannerman
Asquith
(I–III)
Asquith Coalition
(Lib.–Con.–et al.)
[[File:Arthur-James-Balfour-1st-Earl-of-Balfour.jpg75px]]Arthur Balfour
MP for the City of London10 December 191623 October 1919ConservativeLloyd George
(I & II)
[[File:Curzon GGBain.jpg75px]]George Curzon
1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston23 October 191922 January 1924Conservative
Law
Baldwin I
[[File:Ramsay-MacDonald.jpg75px]]Ramsay MacDonald
MP for Aberavon22 January 19243 November 1924LabourMacDonald I
[[File:Austen Chamberlain nobel.jpg75px]]Austen Chamberlain
MP for Birmingham West6 November 19244 June 1929ConservativeBaldwin II
[[File:1910 Arthur Henderson.jpg75px]]Arthur Henderson
MP for Burnley7 June 192924 August 1931LabourMacDonald II
[[File:Rufus Isaacs.jpg75px]]Rufus Isaacs
1st Marquess of Reading25 August 19315 November 1931LiberalNational I
(N.Lab.–Con.–et al.)
[[File:Viscount Simon.jpg75px]]Sir John Simon
MP for Spen Valley5 November 19317 June 1935Liberal NationalNational II
[[File:Sir Samuel Hoare GGBain.jpg75px]]Sir Samuel Hoare, 2nd Bt.
MP for Chelsea7 June 193518 December 1935ConservativeNational III
(Con.–N.Lab.–et al.)
[[File:Anthony Eden (retouched).jpg75px]]Anthony Eden
MP for Warwick & Leamington22 December 193520 February 1938Conservative
National IV
[[File:1st Earl of Halifax 1947.jpg75px]]Edward Wood
3rd Viscount Halifax21 February 193822 December 1940Conservative
Chamberlain War
Churchill War
(All parties)
[[File:Anthony Eden (retouched).jpg75px]]Anthony Eden
MP for Warwick & Leamington22 December 194026 July 1945Conservative
Churchill Caretaker
(Con.–Lib.N.)
[[File:Ernest Bevin cph.3b17494.jpg75px]]Ernest Bevin
27 July 19459 March 1951LabourAttlee
(I & II)
[[File:Herbert Morrison 1947 (cropped).jpg75px]]Herbert Morrison
MP for Lewisham South9 March 195126 October 1951Labour
[[File:Anthony Eden (retouched).jpg75px]]Anthony Eden
MP for Warwick & Leamington28 October 19517 April 1955ConservativeChurchill III
[[File:Harold Macmillan in 1942.jpg75px]]Harold Macmillan
MP for Bromley7 April 195520 December 1955ConservativeEden
[[File:Selwyn Lloyd cropped.jpg75px]]Selwyn Lloyd
MP for Wirral20 December 195527 July 1960Conservative
Macmillan
(I & II)
[[File:Alec Douglas-Home (c1963).jpg75px]]Alec Douglas-Home
14th Earl of Home27 July 196018 October 1963Conservative
[[File:Rab Butler.jpg75px]]Richard Austen Butler
MP for Saffron Walden20 October 196316 October 1964ConservativeDouglas-Home
Patrick Gordon Walker
16 October 196422 January 1965LabourWilson
(I & II)
[[File:Michael Stewart (1966).jpg75px]]Michael Stewart
MP for Fulham22 January 196511 August 1966Labour
[[File:George Brown, 1967.jpg75px]]George Brown
MP for Belper11 August 196616 March 1968Labour
[[File:Michael Stewart (1966).jpg75px]]Michael Stewart
MP for Fulham16 March 196817 October 1968Labour

: Died in office.

Secretaries of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs (1968–2020)

Post created through the merger of the Foreign Office and the Commonwealth Office.

PortraitName
(birthdeath)Term of officePartyMinistrySovereign
(Reign)Labour Party (UK)}}"Elizabeth II
[[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom.svg50px]]
(19522022)Conservative Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}; border:none"Labour Party (UK)}}; border:none"Labour Party (UK)}}; border:none"Labour Party (UK)}}"Labour Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border-top:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"Conservative Party (UK)}}; border:none"
[[File:Michael Stewart (1966).jpg75px]]Michael Stewart
MP for Fulham
(19061990)17 October 196819 June 1970LabourWilson
(I & II)
[[File:Alec Douglas-Home (c1963) (cropped).jpg75px]]Alec Douglas-Home
MP for Kinross and Western Perthshire
(19031995)20 June 19704 March 1974ConservativeHeath
[[File:James Callaghan (1975).jpg75px]]James Callaghan
MP for Cardiff South East
(19122005)5 March 19745 April 1976LabourWilson
(III & IV)
[[File:Charles-Anthony-Raven-Crosland (cropped).jpg75px]]Anthony Crosland
MP for Great Grimsby
(19181977)8 April 197619 February 1977LabourCallaghan
[[File:David Owen-1.jpg103x103px]]David Owen
MP for Plymouth Devonport
(born 1938)22 February 19774 May 1979Labour
[[File:Peter Carington 1984.jpg75px]]Peter Carington
6th Baron Carrington
(19192018)4 May 19795 April 1982ConservativeThatcher I
[[File:Francis Leslie Pym.jpg75px]]Francis Pym
MP for Cambridgeshire
(19222008)6 April 198211 June 1983Conservative
[[File:Geoffrey Howe (1985).jpg75px]]Geoffrey Howe
MP for East Surrey
(19262015)11 June 198324 July 1989ConservativeThatcher II
Thatcher III
[[File:John Major Feb. 1993.jpg75px]]John Major
MP for Huntingdon
(born 1943)24 July 198926 October 1989Conservative
[[File:Douglas Hurd, November 2007 cropped.jpg75px]]Douglas Hurd
MP for Witney
(born 1930)26 October 19895 July 1995Conservative
Major I
Major II
[[File:Malcolm Rifkind 2011 (cropped).jpg75px]]Malcolm Rifkind
MP for Edinburgh Pentlands
(born 1946)5 July 19952 May 1997Conservative
[[File:Robin Cook official portrait.jpg75px]]Robin Cook
MP for Livingston
(19462005)2 May 19978 June 2001LabourBlair I
[[File:Jack Straw.jpg101x101px]]Jack Straw
MP for Blackburn
(born 1946)8 June 20015 May 2006LabourBlair II
Blair III
[[File:Margaret Beckett May 2007 cropped.jpg109x109px]]Margaret Beckett
MP for Derby South
(born 1943)5 May 200627 June 2007Labour
[[File:David Miliband 2.jpg75px]]David Miliband
MP for South Shields
(born 1965)28 June 200711 May 2010LabourBrown
[[File:William Hague (2010).jpg75px]]William Hague
MP for Richmond (Yorks)
(born 1961)12 May 201014 July 2014ConservativeCameron–Clegg
(Con.L.D.)
[[File:Philip Hammond 2016.jpg108x108px]]Philip Hammond
MP for Runnymede and Weybridge
(born 1955)14 July 201413 July 2016Conservative
Cameron II
[[File:Boris Johnson MP.jpg75px]]Boris Johnson
MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip
(born 1964)13 July 20169 July 2018ConservativeMay I
May II
[[File:Jeremy Hunt with Abdulla bin Zayed Al Nahyan in London - 2018 (29653209427) (cropped).jpg100x100px]]Jeremy Hunt
MP for South West Surrey
(born 1966)9 July 201824 July 2019Conservative
[[File:Official portrait of Rt Hon Dominic Raab MP crop 2.jpg100x100px]]Dominic Raab
MP for Esher and Walton
(born 1974)24 July 20192 September 2020ConservativeJohnson I
Johnson II

Secretaries of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs (2020–present)

Post created through the merger of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department for International Development.

PortraitName
(BirthDeath)Term of officePartyMinistrySovereign
(Reign)Conservative Party (UK)}}Elizabeth II
[[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom.svg50px]]
(19522022)Conservative Party (UK)}}Conservative Party (UK)}}Charles III
[[File:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (2022).svg60px]]
(2022–present)Conservative Party (UK)}}Labour Party (UK)}}Labour Party (UK)}}
[[File:Official portrait of Rt Hon Dominic Raab MP crop 2.jpg75px]]Dominic Raab
MP for Esher and Walton
(born 1974)2 September 202015 September 2021ConservativeJohnson II
[[File:Liz Truss Official Portrait.jpg100x100px]]Liz Truss
MP for South West Norfolk
(born 1975)15 September 20216 September 2022Conservative
[[File:Official portrait of James Cleverly MP crop 2, 2024.jpg75px]]James Cleverly
MP for Braintree
(born 1969)6 September 202213 November 2023ConservativeTruss
Sunak
[[File:David Cameron Official Portrait 2023 (cropped).jpg75px]]David Cameron
Sits in the House of Lords
(born 1966)13 November 20235 July 2024Conservative
[[File:David Lammy Official Cabinet Portrait, September 2025 (cropped).jpg75px]]David Lammy
MP for Tottenham
(born 1972)5 July 20245 September 2025LabourStarmer
[[File:Yvette Cooper Official Cabinet Portrait, September 2025 (cropped).jpg99x99px]]Yvette Cooper
MP for Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley
(born 1969)5 September 2025IncumbentLabour

Timeline

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bar:Fox from: 1782 till: 1782 color:Whig from: 1783 till: 1783 color:Whig from: 1806 till: 1806 color:Whig text:"Charles James Fox" bar:Grantham from: 1782 till: 1783 color:Whig text:"Thomas Robinson bar:Temple from: 1783 till: 1783 color:Tory text:"George Nugent-Temple-Grenville bar:Leeds from: 1783 till: 1791 color:Tory text:"Francis Osborne" bar:Grenville from: 1791 till: 1801 color:Tory text:"William Grenville" bar:Liverpool from: 1801 till: 1804 color:Tory text:"Robert Jenkinson" bar:Harrowby from: 1804 till: 1805 color:Tory text:"Dudley Ryder" bar:Mulgrave from: 1805 till: 1806 color:Tory text:"Henry Phipps" bar:Grey from: 1806 till: 1807 color:Whig text:"Charles Grey" bar:Canning from: 1807 till: 1809 color:Tory from: 1822 till: 1827 color:Tory text:"George Canning" bar:Bathurst from: 1809 till: 1809 color:Tory text:"Henry Bathurst bar:Wellesley from: 1809 till: 1812 color:Independent text:"Richard Wellesley" bar:Londonderry from: 1812 till: 1822 color:Tory text:"Robert Stewart" bar:Dudley from: 1827 till: 1828 color:Tory text:"John Ward" bar:Aberdeen from: 1828 till: 1830 color:Tory from: 1841 till: 1846 color:Conservative text:"George Hamilton-Gordon" bar:Palmerston from: 1830 till: 1834 color:Whig from: 1835 till: 1841 color:Whig from: 1846 till: 1851 color:Whig text:"Henry John Temple" bar:Wellington from: 1834 till: 1834 color:Tory from: 1834 till: 1835 color:Conservative text:"Arthur Wellesley" bar:Granville from: 1851 till: 1852 color:Whig from: 1870 till: 1874 color:Liberal from: 1880 till: 1885 color:Liberal text:"Granville Leveson-Gower" bar:Malmesbury from: 1852 till: 1852 color:Conservative from: 1858 till: 1859 color:Conservative text:"James Howard Harris" bar:Russell from: 1852 till: 1853 color:Whig from: 1859 till: 1865 color:Liberal text:"John Russell" bar:Clarendon from: 1853 till: 1858 color:Whig from: 1865 till: 1866 color:Liberal from: 1868 till: 1870 color:Liberal text:"George Villiers" bar:Derby from: 1866 till: 1868 color:Conservative from: 1874 till: 1878 color:Conservative text:"Edward Stanley" bar:Salisbury from: 1878 till: 1880 color:Conservative from: 1885 till: 1886 color:Conservative from: 1887 till: 1892 color:Conservative from: 1895 till: 1900 color:Conservative text:"Robert Gascoyne-Cecil" bar:Rosebery from: 1886 till: 1886 color:Liberal from: 1892 till: 1894 color:Liberal text:"Archibald Primrose" bar:Iddesleigh from: 1886 till: 1887 color:Conservative text:"Stafford Northcote" bar:Kimberley from: 1894 till: 1895 color:Liberal text:"John Wodehouse" bar:Lansdowne from: 1900 till: 1905 color:Libunionist text:"Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice bar:EGrey from: 1905 till: 1916 color:Liberal text:"Edward Grey" bar:Balfour from: 1916 till: 1919 color:Conservative text:"Arthur Balfour" bar:Curzon from: 1919 till: 1924 color:Conservative text:"George Curzon" bar:MacDonald from: 1924 till: 1924 color:Labour text:"Ramsay MacDonald" bar:Chamberlain from: 1924 till: 1929 color:Conservative text:"Austen Chamberlain" bar:Henderson from: 1929 till: 1931 color:Labour text:"Arthur Henderson" bar:Reading from: 1931 till: 1931 color:Liberal text:"Rufus Isaacs" bar:Simon from: 1931 till: 1935 color:Natliberal text:"John Simon" bar:Hoare from: 1935 till: 1935 color:Conservative text:"Samuel Hoare" bar:Eden from: 1935 till: 1938 color:Conservative from: 1940 till: 1945 color:Conservative from: 1951 till: 1955 color:Conservative text:"Anthony Eden" bar:Halifax from: 1938 till: 1940 color:Conservative text:"Edward Wood bar:Bevin from: 1945 till: 1951 color:Labour text:"Ernest Bevin bar:Morrison from: 1951 till: 1951 color:Labour text:"Herbert Morrison" bar:Macmillan from: 1955 till: 1955 color:Conservative text:"Harold Macmillan" bar:Lloyd from: 1955 till: 1960 color:Conservative text:"Selwyn Lloyd" bar:Douglas-Home from: 1960 till: 1963 color:Conservative from: 1970 till: 1974 color:Conservative text:"Alec Douglas-Home" bar:RAB from: 1963 till: 1964 color:Conservative text:"Rab Butler" bar:Gordon-Walker from: 1964 till: 1965 color:Labour text:"Patrick Gordon Walker" bar:Stewart from: 1965 till: 1966 color:Labour from: 1968 till: 1970 color:Labour text:"Michael Stewart" bar:Brown from: 1966 till: 1968 color:Labour text:"George Brown" bar:Callaghan from: 1974 till: 1976 color:Labour text:"James Callaghan" bar:Crosland from: 1976 till: 1977 color:Labour text:"Anthony Crosland" bar:Owen from: 1977 till: 1979 color:Labour text:"David Owen" bar:Carrington from: 1979 till: 1982 color:Conservative text:"Peter Carington" bar:Pym from: 1982 till: 1983 color:Conservative text:"Francis Pym" bar:Howe from: 1983 till: 1989 color:Conservative text:"Geoffrey Howe" bar:Major from: 1989 till: 1989 color:Conservative text:"John Major" bar:Hurd from: 1989 till: 1995 color:Conservative text:"Douglas Hurd" bar:Rifkind from: 1995 till: 1997 color:Conservative text:"Malcolm Rifkind" bar:Cook from: 1997 till: 2001 color:Labour text:"Robin Cook" bar:Straw from: 2001 till: 2006 color:Labour text:"Jack Straw" bar:Backett from: 2006 till: 2007 color:Labour text:"Margaret Beckett" bar:Milliband from: 2007 till: 2010 color:Labour text:"David Miliband" bar:Hague from: 2010 till: 2014 color:Conservative text:"William Hague" bar:Hammond from: 2014 till: 2016 color:Conservative text:"Philip Hammond" bar:Johnson from: 2016 till: 2018 color:Conservative text:"Boris Johnson" bar:Hunt from: 2018 till: 2019 color:Conservative text:"Jeremy Hunt" bar:Raab from: 2019 till: 2021 color:Conservative text:"Dominic Raab" bar:Truss from: 2021 till: 2022 color:Conservative text:"Liz Truss" bar:Cleverly from: 2022 till: 2023 color:Conservative text:"James Cleverly" bar:Cameron from: 2023 till: 2024 color:Conservative text:"David Cameron" bar:Lammy from: 2024 till: 2025 color:Labour text:"David Lammy" bar:Cooper from: 2025 till: $Now color:Labour text:"Yvette Cooper"

References

References

  1. (15 December 2022). "Salaries of Members of His Majesty's Government – Financial Year 2022–23".
  2. "Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs".
  3. (1 September 2021). "Afghanistan: The questions facing Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab". BBC News.
  4. "Senior Cabinet posts".
  5. "Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs". Government of the United Kingdom.
  6. (23 March 2016). "Ministerial responsibility". GCHQ.
  7. (6 May 2009). "Written Answers to Questions: Foreign and Commonwealth Office: 1 Carlton Gardens".
  8. (13 October 2021). "Dominic Raab and Liz Truss agree to share 115-room mansion". BBC News.
  9. (25 December 2021). "Britain's Foreign Office has badly lost its way, say critics". Financial Times.
  10. Sainty, J. C.. (1973). "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 2 – Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660–1782". University of London.
  11. "India Office". British Museum.
  12. "Margaret Beckett". European Leadership Network.
  13. "Merging success: Bringing together the FCO and DFID : Government Response to Committee's Second Report". UK Parliament.
  14. "Deputy Foreign Secretary - GOV.UK".
  15. "Past Foreign Secretaries". Government of the United Kingdom.
  16. (9 July 2018). "Boris Johnson quits to add to pressure on May over Brexit".
  17. (9 July 2018). "Jeremy Hunt replaces Boris Johnson as foreign secretary".
  18. Andrew Sparrow. (24 July 2019). "Raab appointed foreign secretary and first secretary of state". [[The Guardian]].
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