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Great Offices of State
Four senior ministerial offices in the UK government
Four senior ministerial offices in the UK government
The Great Offices of State are senior offices in the UK government. They are the Prime Minister, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Foreign Secretary and the Home Secretary, or the three offices excluding the prime minister.
History
The Great Offices of State are derived from the most senior positions in the Royal Household – the Great Officers of State. These eventually became hereditary and honorary titles, while the substantive duties of the Officers passed to individuals who were appointed on behalf of the Crown. James Callaghan is the first and, to date, only person to have served in all four positions.
According to a YouGov poll conducted in 2017, the British public view the three most senior Cabinet ministers as the Chancellor, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, and the Secretary of State for Defence, with the office of Home Secretary coming in fourth place, and that of Foreign Secretary in just ninth place, preceded by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and followed by the Secretary of State for International Trade. The office of Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport was viewed as least important, with just 3% of respondents saying they viewed it as one of the most important positions.
The Truss ministry formed on 6 September 2022 and initially had no white men holding positions in the Great Offices of State, for the first time in British political history.
This remained the case for just 38 days until the appointment of Jeremy Hunt as Chancellor of the Exchequer on 14 October 2022, replacing Kwasi Kwarteng who had been the first black Chancellor. Five days later on 19 October 2022, Grant Shapps was appointed Home Secretary, replacing Suella Braverman, although Braverman was then reappointed by incoming Prime Minister Rishi Sunak just six days later. Following Sunak's reshuffle in November 2023, this marked the first instance since May 2010 where no women occupied a Great Office of State. It also marked the first 21st century instance of a former prime minister holding a Great Office of State, with David Cameron being appointed as Foreign Secretary in the Sunak ministry, becoming the first former prime minister to serve in a ministerial post since Alec Douglas-Home in 1970−1974.
Following the general election on 4 July, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer appointed Rachel Reeves as Chancellor of the Exchequer, thus making Reeves the first female Chancellor in the 708 year history of HM Treasury. Starmer appointed women to a record half of the Cabinet, including three of the five top positions in the British government. Besides Reeves, this included Angela Rayner as Deputy Prime Minister and Yvette Cooper as Home Secretary.
Following a cabinet reshuffle on 5 September 2025, Prime Minister Keir Starmer appointed David Lammy as the new Deputy Prime Minister, and Shabana Mahmood as the new Home Secretary. The changes followed the resignation of Angela Rayner as Deputy PM following an investigation into her alleged breach of the Ministerial Code.
Current
| Great Offices of State of His Majesty's Government | Office | Officeholder | Took office | Concurrent government office(s) | Previous government office | Prime Minister | Chancellor of the Exchequer | Foreign Secretary | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs) | Home Secretary | ||||||||
| (Secretary of State for the Home Department) | |||||||||
| [[File:Coat of arms of the United Kingdom (2022, lesser arms).svg | 136x136px]] | ||||||||
| Starmer ministry | |||||||||
| [[File:Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer Official Portrait (cropped).jpg | 136x136px | alt=Keir Starmer]] | The Right Honourable | ||||||
| Sir Keir Starmer | |||||||||
| MP for Holborn and St Pancras | |||||||||
| [[File:Rachel Reeves Official Cabinet Portrait, July 2024 (cropped 2) (cropped).jpg | 136x136px]] | The Right Honourable | |||||||
| Rachel Reeves | |||||||||
| MP for Leeds West and Pudsey | Second Lord of the Treasury | ||||||||
| [[File:Yvette Cooper Official Cabinet Portrait, July 2024 (cropped) 2.jpg | 136x136px]] | The Right Honourable | |||||||
| Yvette Cooper | |||||||||
| MP for Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley | Home Secretary | ||||||||
| (2024–25) | |||||||||
| [[File:Shabana Mahmood Official Cabinet Portrait, July 2024 (cropped) 2.jpg | 136x136px]] | The Right Honourable | |||||||
| Shabana Mahmood | |||||||||
| MP for Birmingham Ladywood | Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain | ||||||||
| (2024–25) |
References
References
- McKie, David. (28 March 2005). "Lord Callaghan". The Guardian.
- Eason, Gary. (27 March 2005). "Callaghan's great education debate". BBC News.
- (10 February 2010). "The Conservative Party {{!}} People {{!}} Members of Parliament {{!}} Kenneth Clarke".
- "The Cabinet - Cabinet and the Great Offices of State".
- "The Great Offices of State".
- (1952). "The Constitutional Law of Great Britain and the Commonwealth". Sweet & Maxwell.
- (30 March 2005}}{{dead link). "Lady Callaghan of Cardiff". The Independent.
- "What do the public think are the real Great Offices of State?". YouGov.
- Khan, Aina J.. (5 September 2022). "UK's four great offices of state may soon not feature a white man for first time".
- Zeffman, Henry. (5 September 2022). "Great offices of state set to contain no white men". [[The Times]].
- Martin, Daniel. (6 September 2022). "Liz Truss forms most diverse Cabinet in history with no white males in top jobs". The Telegraph.
- "PM confirms Hunt as new chancellor". BBC News.
- "Liz Truss's government on the brink after Suella Braverman's parting shot". The Guardian.
- (5 July 2024). "Rachel Reeves: Who is the UK's new chancellor?".
- (5 July 2024). "Who is in Keir Starmer's new cabinet".
- (5 July 2024). "Who is in Keir Starmer's new U.K. government?". The Washington Post.
- (5 September 2025). "Angela Rayner resigns after underpaying tax on Hove flat". BBC News.
- "Starmer government reshuffle: PM changes top team after Rayner's exit".
- "Ministers".
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