Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

Senior official in the British Civil Service


Summary

Senior official in the British Civil Service

FieldValue
postFlag of the United Kingdom.svg
Principal Private Secretary
to the Prime Minister
insigniaCoat of arms of the United Kingdom (2022, lesser arms).svg
insigniacaptionRoyal Arms as used by His Majesty's Government
incumbentDan York-Smith
incumbentsince1 September 2025
departmentPrime Minister's Office
appointerPrime Minister
formation1757
website10 Downing Street
reports_toPrime Minister
nominatorPrime Minister

Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister

The Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is a senior official in the civil service of the United Kingdom. As a principal private secretary, they are traditionally responsible for running the prime minister's private office in 10 Downing Street. In the Civil Service, the role is currently graded as director general.

The current principal private secretary is Dan York-Smith.

History

As the role of prime minister has evolved over time, so has the role of Principal Private Secretary. Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle appointed a private secretary during his second term of office as First Lord of the Treasury (1757–62), and his 18th-century successors for the most part did likewise. The Private Secretary at this time was not on the establishment of HM Treasury and he was not paid an official salary. This changed in 1806, when money was made available from public funds. In 1813 the funding available was doubled to enable a second private secretary to be employed, alongside the first (or 'principal') holder of the office.

At this time it became customary for one of the private secretaries to be appointed from within the Civil Service (more often than not from the Treasury) to provide administrative support, and the other to be recruited from outside the Civil Service (including on occasion from the House of Commons) to provide political support. (In today's terms the latter were more akin to special advisers or a Parliamentary Private Secretary.) A third Private Secretary was added in the 1870s.

Under Lloyd George (prime minister from 1916 to 1922), the duties of the Principal Private Secretary changed, as some responsibilities were transferred to a new Secretariat (the so-called 'Garden Suburb'), while others (particularly those relating to meetings of the Cabinet and the implementation of its decisions) were taken up by the newly established Cabinet Office and Cabinet Secretary. At the same time the number of clerical staff working in the office was substantially increased, which eased the administrative burden. The Principal Private Secretary was left to focus on arranging the prime minister's diary, offering advice and personal support, and overseeing certain particular areas (such as honours and appointments).

Up until the 1920s the private office of the prime minister was usually staffed by personal and/or political appointees; a new prime minister would often bring in his own people (either from the civil service or from outside), and there was invariably a change of staff with a change of government. Ronald Waterhouse and Patrick Gower, however, who were appointed to the office by the Conservative Bonar Law in 1922, remained in post not only under his Conservative successor Stanley Baldwin but also under the first Labour prime minister Ramsay MacDonald. Since then the Principal Private Secretary has been considered a member of the permanent Civil Service, rather than a political or personal appointee, and as such may remain in office in spite of any change of administration.

For many years, although there was a hierarchy of officials within the private office, it was not generally made public (instead the 'private secretaries' were simply listed in alphabetical order); but this changed in 1929 when Robert Vansittart was listed as 'principal' private secretary for the first time in the Imperial Calendar.

Recent history

During Tony Blair's administration, the prime minister (as Minister for the Civil Service) modified the law under which the Civil Service operated (through an Order in Council) which gave power to the newly created role of Downing Street Chief of Staff (a politically appointed special adviser) to give instructions to civil servants and outranked the principal private secretary in the Downing Street power structure. When Gordon Brown entered 10 Downing Street, he reversed the change to the Civil Service law.

When David Cameron became prime minister, he promoted his then principal private secretary to a new post of "Downing Street Permanent Secretary"; a position which took over as the top civil servant in the Prime Minister's Office and for the first time the head of the office held the highest rank in the UK's civil service.{{cite web | archive-url = http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20101013220256/http://download.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/organogram/co-organogram.pdf | archive-date = 13 October 2010 | access-date = 6 July 2010}} In 2012, when the post-holder, Jeremy Heywood, was appointed Cabinet Secretary; this new post ceased to exist, and the chief Civil Service official in 10 Downing Street reverted to being the Principal Private Secretary, which remains to this day.

The principal secretary runs the private office of the prime minister, which includes the Private Secretary for Foreign Affairs to the Prime Minister.

List of principal private secretaries to the prime minister (from 1757, incomplete)

Principal Private SecretaryYearsPrime Minister
Montagu Corry1868Benjamin Disraeli
Algernon West1868–1872William Gladstone
Montagu Corry1874–1880Benjamin Disraeli
Arthur Godley1880–1882William Gladstone
Edward Walter Hamilton1882–1885
Henry Manners, Marquess of Granby1885–1886Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
post vacant1886William Gladstone
Henry Manners, Marquess of Granby1886–1888Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
Schomberg Kerr McDonnell1888–1892
Sir Algernon West1892–1894William Gladstone
George Herbert Murray1894–1895Archibald Primrose
Schomberg Kerr McDonnell1895–1902Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
John Satterfield Sandars1902–1905Arthur Balfour
Arthur Ponsonby1905–1908Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Vaughan Nash1908–1911H. H. Asquith
Maurice Bonham-Carter1911–1916
Sir John T Davies1916–1922David Lloyd George
Edward Grigg [dubious – discuss]1921–1922
Sir Patrick Gower
Lt Col Sir Ronald Waterhouse1922–1923Bonar Law
1923–1924Stanley BaldwinConservative Party (UK)}}"
1924Ramsay MacDonaldLabour Party (UK)}}"
1924–1928Stanley BaldwinConservative Party (UK)}}"
Sir Robert Vansittart1928–1929
1929–1930Ramsay MacDonaldLabour Party (UK)}}"
Sir Patrick Duff1930–1933
Alan Barlow1933–1934
Harold Vincent1934–1935
1935–1936Stanley BaldwinConservative Party (UK)}}"
Osmund Cleverly1935–1937
1937–1939Neville ChamberlainConservative Party (UK)}}"
Arthur Rucker1939–1940
Eric Seal1940–1941Winston Churchill
John Martin1941–1945
Leslie Rowan1945
1945–1947Clement AttleeLabour Party (UK)}}"
Laurence Helsby1947–1950
Denis Rickett1950–1951
David Pitblado1951
Jock Colville (PPS: defence and external affairs)1951–1955Winston Churchill
David Pitblado1955–1956Anthony Eden
Frederick Bishop1956–1957
1957–1959Harold MacmillanConservative Party (UK)}}"
Timothy Bligh1959–1963
1963–1964Alec Douglas-HomeConservative Party (UK)}}"
Derek Mitchell1964–1966Harold Wilson
Lt Col Arthur Norman Halls1966–1970
Alexander Isserlis1970
1970Edward HeathConservative Party (UK)}}"
Robert Armstrong1970–1974
1974–1975Harold WilsonLabour Party (UK)}}"
Kenneth Stowe1975–1976
1976–1979James CallaghanLabour Party (UK)}}"
1979Margaret ThatcherConservative Party (UK)}}"
Clive Whitmore1979–1982
Robin Butler1982–1985
Nigel Wicks1985–1988
Andrew Turnbull1988–1990
1990–1992John MajorConservative Party (UK)}}"
Alex Allan1992–1997
1997Tony BlairLabour Party (UK)}}"
Sir John Holmes1997–1999
Jeremy Heywood1999–2003
Ivan Rogers2003–2006
Oliver Robbins2006–2007
2007Gordon BrownLabour Party (UK)}}"
Tom Scholar2007–2008
Jeremy Heywood2008–2010
James Bowler2010–2011David Cameron
Chris Martin2011–2015
Simon Case2016
2016–2017Theresa MayConservative Party (UK)}}"
Peter Hill2017–2019
2019Boris JohnsonConservative Party (UK)}}"
Martin Reynolds2019–2022
Peter Wilson2022
Nick Catsaras2022Liz Truss
Elizabeth Perelman2022–2024Rishi Sunak
2024Keir StarmerLabour Party (UK)}}"
Nin Pandit2024–2025

References

References

  1. [https://news.sky.com/story/sir-keir-starmer-reshuffles-his-downing-street-team-13422929]
  2. "The Institution of Prime Minister".
  3. (1976). "From Policy to Administration: Essays in honour of William A. Robson". Routledge.
  4. "THE CABINET CRISIS.{{!}}1894-03-06{{!}}The South Wales Daily Post – Welsh Newspapers".
  5. "TO-DAY'S INCIDENTS.___I{{!}}1894-03-06{{!}}South Wales Echo – Welsh Newspapers".
  6. "Premier and ex-Premier.{{!}}1894-03-06{{!}}Evening Express – Welsh Newspapers".
  7. ''British Political Facts 1900–1994'', Butler & Butler, 1994, p. 284
  8. (14 March 2005). "The secret 'that could have toppled Wilson'".
  9. "WHEN I WAS RUDE TO CIVIL SERVANTS » 16 Dec 1995 » The Spectator Archive".
  10. Colman, Jonathan. (2018-07-30). "Dissociation, January–July 1966". Manchester University Press.
  11. (2019). "Stowe, Sir Kenneth Ronald (Ken) (1927–2015), civil servant".
  12. "Martin Reynolds Government Profile". UK Government.
  13. "Peter Wilson appointed Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report