Foreign Secretary (United Kingdom)
| United Kingdom Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs | |
|---|---|
Royal Arms of His Majesty's Government | |
| Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office | |
| Style |
|
| Type | Minister of the Crown |
| Status | Secretary of State Great Office of State |
| Member of |
|
| Reports to | The Prime Minister |
| Residence |
|
| Seat | King Charles Street |
| Nominator | The Prime Minister |
| Appointer | The Monarch (on the advice of the Prime Minister) |
| Term length | At His Majesty's pleasure |
| Formation |
|
| First holder | Charles James Fox (as Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs) |
| Deputy | Minister of State for Development |
| Salary | £106,363 per annum (2022)[1] |
| Website | Foreign Secretary |
The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs[a] is the Minister in charge of the United Kingdom's Foreign and Commonwealth Office. In many countries, this job is called Foreign minister.
History
The Foreign Secretary merely handled relations with foreign countries and international organisations until the 1960s. There was a separate Commonwealth Secretary and a Colonial Secretary, but all three have been joined into one. The Foreign Secretary's is one of the four Great Offices of State.[2]
List of foreign secretaries
Secretaries of state for foreign affairs (1782–1968)
| Portrait | Name[4] | Term of office | Party | Ministry | Monarch (Reign) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charles James Fox MP for Westminster |
27 March 1782 | 5 July 1782 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Rockingham II | George III (1760–1820) [1782 1] | ||
| Thomas Robinson 2nd Baron Grantham |
13 July 1782 | 2 April 1783 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Shelburne (Whig–Tory) | |||
| Charles James Fox MP for Westminster |
2 April 1783 | 19 December 1783 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Fox–North | |||
| George Nugent-Temple-Grenville 3rd Earl Temple |
19 December 1783 | 23 December 1783 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | Template:Party shading/Tories rowspan=4 | Pitt I | |||
| His Grace Francis Osborne 5th Duke of Leeds |
23 December 1783 | May 1791 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | ||||
| William Grenville 1st Baron Grenville |
8 June 1791 | 20 February 1801 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | ||||
| | Robert Jenkinson 2nd Earl of Liverpool MP for Rye[1782 2] |
20 February 1801 | 14 May 1804 | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | |||
| Template:Party shading/Tories | Addington | |||||||
| Dudley Ryder 2nd Baron Harrowby |
14 May 1804 | 11 January 1805 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Tories | Pitt II | |||
| Henry Phipps 3rd Baron Mulgrave |
11 January 1805 | 7 February 1806 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | ||||
| Charles James Fox MP for Westminster |
7 February 1806 | 13 September 1806† | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | All the Talents (Whig–Tory) | |||
| Charles Grey Viscount Howick MP for Northumberland |
24 September 1806 | 25 March 1807 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | ||||
George Canning MP for Newtown (Isle of Wight) → Hastings[1782 3] |
25 March 1807 | 11 October 1809 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | Template:Party shading/Tories | Portland II | |||
| Henry Bathurst 3rd Earl Bathurst |
11 October 1809 | 6 December 1809 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Tories | Perceval | |||
| Richard Wellesley 1st Marquess Wellesley |
6 December 1809 | 4 March 1812 | Independent | ||||
| Robert Stewart 2nd Marquess of Londonderry |
4 March 1812 | 12 August 1822† | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | rowspan=3 Template:Party shading/Tories | Liverpool | |||
| George IV | |||||||
| George Canning MP for 3 constituencies respectively |
16 September 1822 | 30 April 1827 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | ||||
| John Ward 1st Earl of Dudley |
30 April 1827 | 2 June 1828 | rowspan=3 Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | Canning (Canningite–Whig) | |||
| Goderich | |||||||
| | Template:Party shading/Tories rowspan=3 | Wellington–Peel | ||||||
| George Hamilton-Gordon 4th Earl of Aberdeen |
2 June 1828 | 22 November 1830 | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | ||||
| William IV | |||||||
| Henry John Temple 3rd Viscount Palmerston MP for 3 constituencies respectively |
22 November 1830 | 14 November 1834 | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Grey | |||
| Template:Party shading/Whigs | Melbourne I | |||||||
| Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington |
14 November 1834 | 18 April 1835 | Template:Party shading/Tories | Tory | Template:Party shading/Tories | Wellington Caretaker | |||
| Conservative | Peel I | ||||||
| Henry John Temple 3rd Viscount Palmerston MP for Tiverton |
18 April 1835 | 2 September 1841 | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Template:Party shading/Whigs rowspan=2 | Melbourne II | |||
| Victoria (1837–1901) | |||||||
| George Hamilton-Gordon 4th Earl of Aberdeen |
2 September 1841 | 6 July 1846 | Conservative | Peel II | |||
| Henry John Temple 3rd Viscount Palmerston MP for Tiverton |
6 July 1846 | 26 December 1851 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Template:Party shading/Whigs rowspan=2 | Russell I | |||
| Granville Leveson-Gower 2nd Earl Granville |
26 December 1851 | 27 February 1852 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | ||||
| James Howard Harris 3rd Earl of Malmesbury |
27 February 1852 | 28 December 1852 | Conservative | Who? Who? | |||
| Lord John Russell MP for the City of London |
28 December 1852 | 21 February 1853 | Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | Aberdeen (Peelite–Whig) | |||
| | George Villiers 4th Earl of Clarendon |
21 February 1853 | 26 February 1858 | rowspan=2 Template:Party shading/Whigs | Whig | |||
| Template:Party shading/Whigs | Palmerston I | |||||||
| James Howard Harris 3rd Earl of Malmesbury |
26 February 1858 | 18 June 1859 | Conservative | Derby–Disraeli II | |||
| John Russell 1st Earl Russell |
18 June 1859 | 3 November 1865 | Liberal | Palmerston II | |||
| George Villiers 4th Earl of Clarendon |
3 November 1865 | 6 July 1866 | Liberal | Russell II | |||
| Edward Stanley Lord Stanley MP for King's Lynn |
6 July 1866 | 9 December 1868 | Conservative | Derby–Disraeli III | |||
| George Villiers 4th Earl of Clarendon |
9 December 1868 | 6 July 1870 | Liberal | Gladstone I | |||
| Granville Leveson-Gower 2nd Earl Granville |
6 July 1870 | 21 February 1874 | Liberal | ||||
| Edward Stanley 15th Earl of Derby |
21 February 1874 | 2 April 1878 | Conservative | Disraeli II | |||
| Robert Gascoyne-Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury |
2 April 1878 | 28 April 1880 | Conservative | ||||
| Granville Leveson-Gower 2nd Earl Granville |
28 April 1880 | 24 June 1885 | Liberal | Gladstone II | |||
| Robert Gascoyne-Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury |
24 June 1885 | 6 February 1886 | Conservative | Salisbury I | |||
| Archibald Primrose 5th Earl of Rosebery |
6 February 1886 | 3 August 1886 | Liberal | Gladstone III | |||
| Stafford Northcote 1st Earl of Iddesleigh |
3 August 1886 | 12 January 1887† | Conservative | Salisbury II | |||
| Robert Gascoyne-Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury |
14 January 1887 | 11 August 1892 | Conservative | ||||
| Archibald Primrose 5th Earl of Rosebery |
18 August 1892 | 11 March 1894 | Liberal | Gladstone IV | |||
| John Wodehouse 1st Earl of Kimberley |
11 March 1894 | 21 June 1895 | Liberal | Rosebery | |||
| Robert Gascoyne-Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury |
29 June 1895 | 12 November 1900 | Conservative | Salisbury (III & IV) (Con.–Lib.U.) | |||
| | Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice 5th Marquess of Lansdowne |
12 November 1900 | 4 December 1905 | Template:Party shading/Liberal Unionist rowspan=3 | Liberal Unionist | |||
| | Edward VII (1901–1910) | ||||||
| Balfour | |||||||
| Edward Grey MP for Berwick-upon-Tweed |
10 December 1905 | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | Campbell-Bannerman | |||
| | Asquith (I–III) | ||||||
| | George V | ||||||
| Asquith Coalition (Lib.–Con.–et al.) | |||||||
| Arthur Balfour MP for the City of London |
10 December 1916 | 23 October 1919 | Conservative | Lloyd George (I & II) | |||
| | George Curzon 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston |
23 October 1919 | 22 January 1924 | Conservative | |||
| Law | |||||||
| Baldwin I | |||||||
| Ramsay MacDonald MP for Aberavon |
22 January 1924 | 3 November 1924 | Labour | MacDonald I | |||
| Austen Chamberlain MP for Birmingham West |
6 November 1924 | 4 June 1929 | Conservative | Baldwin II | |||
| Arthur Henderson MP for Burnley |
7 June 1929 | 24 August 1931 | Labour | MacDonald II | |||
| Rufus Isaacs 1st Marquess of Reading |
25 August 1931 | 5 November 1931 | Liberal | National I (N.Lab.–Con.–et al.) | |||
| John Simon MP for Spen Valley |
5 November 1931 | 7 June 1935 | Template:Party shading/Liberal National | Liberal National | National II | |||
| Samuel Hoare MP for Chelsea |
7 June 1935 | 18 December 1935 | Conservative | National III (Con.–N.Lab.–et al.) | |||
| | Anthony Eden MP for Warwick & Leamington |
22 December 1935 | 20 February 1938 | Conservative | |||
| Edward VIII (1936) | |||||||
| | George VI | ||||||
| | National IV | ||||||
| | Edward Wood 3rd Viscount Halifax |
21 February 1938 | 22 December 1940 | Conservative | |||
| Chamberlain War | |||||||
| Churchill War (All parties) | |||||||
| Anthony Eden MP for Warwick & Leamington |
22 December 1940 | 26 July 1945 | Conservative | ||||
| Churchill Caretaker (Con.–Lib.N.) | |||||||
| Ernest Bevin MP for Wandsworth Central → Woolwich East[1782 4] |
27 July 1945 | 9 March 1951 | Labour | Attlee (I & II) | |||
| Herbert Morrison MP for Lewisham South |
9 March 1951 | 26 October 1951 | Labour | ||||
| Anthony Eden MP for Warwick & Leamington |
28 October 1951 | 7 April 1955 | Conservative | Churchill III | |||
| Elizabeth II | |||||||
| Harold Macmillan MP for Bromley |
7 April 1955 | 20 December 1955 | Conservative | Eden | |||
| Selwyn Lloyd MP for Wirral |
20 December 1955 | 27 July 1960 | Conservative | ||||
| Macmillan (I & II) | |||||||
| Alec Douglas-Home 14th Earl of Home |
27 July 1960 | 18 October 1963 | Conservative | ||||
| Richard Austen Butler MP for Saffron Walden |
20 October 1963 | 16 October 1964 | Conservative | Douglas-Home | |||
| Patrick Gordon Walker Neither an MP nor a Lord[1782 5] |
16 October 1964 | 22 January 1965 | Labour | Wilson (I & II) | |||
| Michael Stewart MP for Fulham |
22 January 1965 | 11 August 1966 | Labour | ||||
| George Brown MP for Belper |
11 August 1966 | 16 March 1968 | Labour | ||||
| Michael Stewart MP for Fulham |
16 March 1968 | 17 October 1968 | Labour | ||||
- ^† Died in office.
- ↑ The Prince of Wales served as prince regent from 5 February 1811.
- ↑ Elevated to the Peerage of the United Kingdom in November 1803.
- ↑ Elected to a new constituency in the 1807 general election.
- ↑ Elected to a new constituency in the 1950 general election.
- ↑ Walker was the MP for Smethwick and Labour's shadow Foreign Secretary, prior to the 1964 general election. He lost his seat in the election but was appointed to the post anyway. He resigned after fighting and losing a 1965 by-election in Leyton.
Secretaries of state for foreign and Commonwealth affairs (1968–2020)
Post created through the merger of the Foreign Office and the Commonwealth Office.
| Portrait | Name[5] (birth–death) |
Term of office | Party | Ministry | Sovereign (Reign) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Michael Stewart MP for Fulham (1906–1990) |
17 October 1968 | 19 June 1970 | Labour | Wilson (I & II) |
Elizabeth II (1952–2022) | ||
| Alec Douglas-Home MP for Kinross and Western Perthshire (1903–1995) |
20 June 1970 | 4 March 1974 | Conservative | Heath | |||
| James Callaghan MP for Cardiff South East (1912–2005) |
5 March 1974 | 5 April 1976 | Labour | Wilson (III & IV) | |||
| Anthony Crosland MP for Great Grimsby (1918–1977) |
8 April 1976 | 19 February 1977† | Labour | Callaghan | |||
| David Owen MP for Plymouth Devonport (born 1938) |
22 February 1977 | 4 May 1979 | Labour | ||||
| Peter Carington 6th Baron Carrington (1919–2018) |
4 May 1979 | 5 April 1982 | Conservative | Thatcher I | |||
| Francis Pym MP for Cambridgeshire (1922–2008) |
6 April 1982 | 11 June 1983 | Conservative | ||||
| Geoffrey Howe MP for East Surrey (1926–2015) |
11 June 1983 | 24 July 1989 | Conservative | Thatcher II | |||
| | Thatcher III | ||||||
| John Major MP for Huntingdon (born 1943) |
24 July 1989 | 26 October 1989 | Conservative | ||||
| | Douglas Hurd MP for Witney (born 1930) |
26 October 1989 | 5 July 1995 | Conservative | |||
| Major I | |||||||
| | Major II | ||||||
| Malcolm Rifkind MP for Edinburgh Pentlands (born 1946) |
5 July 1995 | 2 May 1997 | Conservative | ||||
| Robin Cook MP for Livingston (1946–2005) |
2 May 1997 | 8 June 2001 | Labour | Blair I | |||
| Jack Straw MP for Blackburn (born 1946) |
8 June 2001 | 5 May 2006 | Labour | Blair II | |||
| | Blair III | ||||||
| Margaret Beckett MP for Derby South (born 1943) |
5 May 2006 | 27 June 2007 | Labour | ||||
| David Miliband MP for South Shields (born 1965) |
28 June 2007 | 11 May 2010 | Labour | Brown | |||
| William Hague MP for Richmond (Yorks) (born 1961) |
12 May 2010 | 14 July 2014 | Conservative | Cameron–Clegg (Con.–L.D.) | |||
| | Philip Hammond MP for Runnymede and Weybridge (born 1955) |
14 July 2014 | 13 July 2016 | Conservative | |||
| Cameron II | |||||||
| Boris Johnson[6] MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip (born 1964) Tenure |
13 July 2016 | 9 July 2018 | Conservative | May I | |||
| | May II | ||||||
| Jeremy Hunt[7] MP for South West Surrey (born 1966) |
9 July 2018 | 24 July 2019 | Conservative | ||||
| Dominic Raab[8] MP for Esher and Walton (born 1974) |
24 July 2019 | 2 September 2020 | Conservative | Johnson 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.
| Portrait | Name[5] (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Ministry | Sovereign (Reign) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dominic Raab MP for Esher and Walton (born 1974) |
2 September 2020 | 15 September 2021 | Conservative | Johnson II | Elizabeth II (1952–2022) | ||
| Liz Truss MP for South West Norfolk (born 1975) |
15 September 2021 | 6 September 2022 | Conservative | ||||
| James Cleverly MP for Braintree (born 1969) |
6 September 2022 | 13 November 2023 | Conservative | Truss | |||
| Charles III (2022–present) | |||||||
| Sunak | |||||||
| David Cameron Sits in the House of Lords (born 1966) |
13 November 2023 | 5 July 2024 | Conservative | ||||
| David Lammy MP for Tottenham (born 1972) |
5 July 2024 | 5 September 2025 | Labour | Starmer | |||
| Yvette Cooper MP for Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley (born 1969) |
5 September 2025 | Incumbent | Labour | ||||
Footnotes
- ↑ Known as the Foreign Secretary
References
- ↑ "Salaries of Members of His Majesty's Government – Financial Year 2022–23" (PDF). 15 December 2022.
- ↑ "Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs". UK Government. Retrieved June 21, 2025.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Past Foreign Secretaries". gov.uk. Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- ↑ Including honorifics and constituencies for elected MPs.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Including honorifics and constituencies for elected MPs.
- ↑ "Boris Johnson quits to add to pressure on May over Brexit". BBC News. 9 July 2018.
- ↑ "Jeremy Hunt replaces Boris Johnson as foreign secretary". BBC News. 9 July 2018.
- ↑ Andrew Sparrow (24 July 2019). "Raab appointed foreign secretary and first secretary of state". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 August 2019.