, twice
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and founder of the Conservative Party
Origins Some writers trace the party's origins to the
Tory Party, which it soon replaced. Other historians point to a faction, rooted in the 18th-century
Whig Party, that coalesced around
William Pitt the Younger in the 1780s. They were known as "Independent Whigs", "
Friends of Mr Pitt" or "Pittites", and never used terms such as "Tory" or "Conservative". From about 1812 the name "Tory" was commonly used for a new party that, according to the historian Robert Blake, "are the ancestors of Conservatism". Blake adds that Pitt's successors after 1812 "were not in any sense standard-bearers of 'true Toryism'".
Tory was an insult that entered
English politics during the
Exclusion Bill crisis of 1678–1681, which derived from the
Middle Irish word (modern
Irish: ) meaning
outlaw or
robber, which in turn derived from the Irish word , meaning
pursuit, since outlaws were "pursued men". The term "
Conservative" was suggested as a title for the party in an article by
J. Wilson Croker published in the
Quarterly Review in 1830. The name immediately caught on and was formally adopted under the aegis of
Robert Peel around 1834. Peel is acknowledged as the founder of the Conservative Party, which he created with the announcement of the
Tamworth Manifesto. The term "Conservative Party" rather than Tory was the dominant usage by 1845.
1867–1914: Conservatives and Unionists The widening of the electoral franchise in the 19th century forced the Conservative Party to popularise its approach under
Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, and
Benjamin Disraeli, who carried through their own expansion of the franchise with the
Reform Act 1867. The party was initially opposed to further expansion of the electorate but eventually allowed passage of
William Ewart Gladstone's
Representation of the People Act 1884. In 1886 the party formed an alliance with
Spencer Cavendish's and
Joseph Chamberlain's new
Liberal Unionist Party and, under the statesmen
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil and
Arthur Balfour, held power for all but three of the following twenty years before suffering a heavy defeat in
1906, when it split over the issue of
free trade. Young
Winston Churchill denounced Chamberlain's attack on free trade, and helped to organise the opposition inside the Unionist/Conservative Party. Nevertheless, Balfour, as party leader, introduced protectionist legislation. Churchill crossed the floor and formally joined the Liberal Party (he rejoined the Conservatives in 1925). In December, Balfour lost control of his party, as the defections multiplied. He was replaced by Liberal Prime Minister
Henry Campbell-Bannerman who called
an election in January 1906, which produced a massive Liberal victory. Liberal Prime Minister
H. H. Asquith enacted a great deal of reform legislation, but the Unionists worked hard at grassroots organizing. Two general elections were held in 1910,
in January and
in December. The two main parties were now almost dead equal in seats, but the Liberals kept control with a coalition with the
Irish Parliamentary Party. In 1912 the Liberal Unionists merged with the Conservative Party. In Ireland the
Irish Unionist Alliance had been formed in 1891 which merged Unionists who were opposed to
Irish Home Rule into one political movement. Its MPs took the Conservative
whip at Westminster, essentially forming the Irish wing of the party until 1922. In Britain the Conservative Party was known as the Unionist Party because of its opposition to home rule. Under
Bonar Law's leadership in 1911–1914, the party morale improved, the "radical right" wing was contained, and the party machinery strengthened. It made some progress toward developing constructive social policies.
First World War While the
Liberals were mostly against the
First World War until the invasion of Belgium, Conservative leaders were strongly in favour of aiding
France and stopping
Germany. The Liberal party was in full control of the government until its mismanagement of the war effort under the
Shell Crisis badly hurt its reputation. An all-party coalition government was formed in May 1915. In late 1916 the Liberal
David Lloyd George became prime minister, but the Liberals soon split and the Conservatives dominated the government, especially after their
landslide in the 1918 election. The Liberal party never recovered, but the
Labour Party gained strength after 1920. Nigel Keohane finds that the Conservatives were bitterly divided before 1914 but the war pulled the party together, allowing it to emphasise patriotism as it found new leadership and worked out its positions on the Irish question, socialism, electoral reform, and the issue of intervention in the economy. The fresh emphasis on
anti-socialism was its response to the growing strength of the Labour Party. When electoral reform was an issue, it worked to protect their base in rural England. It aggressively sought female voters in the 1920s, often relying on patriotic themes.
1920–1945 , who was Prime Minister during World War II and in the 1950s In 1922 Bonar Law and
Stanley Baldwin led the breakup of the coalition, and the Conservatives governed until 1923, when a minority Labour government led by
Ramsay MacDonald came to power. The Conservatives regained power in 1924 but were defeated in 1929 as a minority Labour government took office. In 1931, following the collapse of the Labour minority government, it entered another coalition, which was dominated by the Conservatives with some support from factions of both the Liberal Party and the Labour Party (
National Labour and
National Liberals). In May 1940, during the
Second World War, a more balanced coalition was formed The concept of the "property-owning democracy" was coined by
Noel Skelton in 1923 and became a core principle of the party.
1945–1975: Post-war consensus Popular dissatisfaction While serving in Opposition during the late 1940s, the Conservative Party exploited and incited growing public anger at
food rationing, scarcity, controls,
austerity and government bureaucracy. It used the dissatisfaction with the
socialist and
egalitarian policies of the Labour Party to rally middle-class supporters and build a political comeback that won them the
1951 general election.
Modernising the party is closely associated with the post-war settlement. In 1947 the party published its
Industrial Charter which marked its acceptance of the "
post-war consensus" on the
mixed economy and
labour rights.
David Maxwell Fyfe chaired a committee into Conservative Party organisation that resulted in the Maxwell Fyfe Report (1948–49). The report required the party to do more fundraising, by forbidding constituency associations from demanding large donations from candidates, with the intention of broadening the
diversity of MPs. In practice it may have had the effect of lending more power to
constituency parties and making candidates more uniform.
Winston Churchill, the party leader, brought in a
party chairman to modernise the party:
Frederick Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton, rebuilt the local organisations with an emphasis on membership, money, and a unified national propaganda appeal on critical issues. With a narrow victory at the
1951 general election, despite losing the popular vote, Churchill was back in power. Apart from rationing, which was ended in 1954, most of the
welfare state enacted by Labour was accepted by the Conservatives and became part of the "post-war consensus" that was satirised as
Butskellism and that lasted until the 1970s. The Conservatives were conciliatory towards
trade unions, but they did privatise the steel and road haulage industries in 1953. During the Conservatives' thirteen-year tenure in office, pensions went up by 49% in real terms, sickness and unemployment benefits by 76% in real terms, and supplementary benefits by 46% in real terms. However, family allowances fell by 15% in real terms. "Thirteen Wasted Years" was a popular slogan attacking the Conservative record, primarily from Labour. In addition, there were attacks by the right wing of the Conservative Party itself for its tolerance of socialist policies and reluctance to curb the legal powers of labour unions. The Conservatives were re-elected
in 1955 and
in 1959 with larger majorities. The Conservative prime ministers Churchill,
Anthony Eden,
Harold Macmillan and
Alec Douglas-Home promoted relatively liberal trade regulations and less state involvement throughout the 1950s and early 1960s. The
Suez Crisis of 1956 was a humiliating defeat for Eden, but his successor, Macmillan, minimised the damage and focused attention on domestic issues and prosperity. Following controversy over the selections of Macmillan and Douglas-Home via a process of consultation known as the 'Magic Circle', a formal election process was created and
the first leadership election was held in 1965, won by
Edward Heath.
1965–1975: Edward Heath Heath's 1970–74 government was known for taking the UK into the
European Economic Community (EEC), although the right wing of the party objected to his failure to control the trade unions at a time when a declining British industry saw many strikes, as well as the
1973–75 recession. Since accession to the EEC, which developed into the European Union, British membership has been a source of heated debate within the party. Heath had come to power in
June 1970 and the last possible date for the next general election was not until mid-1975. However, a general election was held in
February 1974 in a bid to win public support during
a national emergency caused by the miners' strike. Heath's attempt to win a second term at this "snap" election failed, as a deadlock result
left no party with an overall majority. Heath resigned within days, after failing to gain
Liberal Party support to form a coalition government. Labour won the
October 1974 election with an overall majority of three seats.
1975–1990: Margaret Thatcher is the first woman to be Prime Minister and the
longest-serving of the 20th century. Loss of power weakened Heath's control over the party and
Margaret Thatcher deposed him at the
1975 leadership election. Thatcher led her party to victory at the
1979 general election with a manifesto which concentrated on the party's philosophy. As prime minister, Thatcher focused on rejecting the mild liberalism of the
post-war consensus that tolerated or encouraged nationalisation, strong labour unions, heavy regulation, and high taxes. She did not challenge the
National Health Service, and supported the
Cold War policies of the consensus, but otherwise tried to dismantle and delegitimise it. She built a right-wing political ideology that became known as
Thatcherism, based on social and economic ideas from British and American intellectuals such as
Friedrich Hayek and
Milton Friedman. Thatcher believed that too much socially democratic-oriented government policy was leading to a long-term decline in the British economy. As a result, her government pursued a programme of
economic liberalism, adopting a free-market approach to public services based on the sale of publicly owned industries and utilities, as well as a reduction in trade union power. One of Thatcher's largest and most successful policies assisted council house tenants in public housing to purchase their homes at favourable rates. The "Right to Buy" had emerged in the late 1940s but was too great a challenge to the post-war consensus to win Conservative endorsement. Thatcher favoured the idea because it would lead to a "property-owning democracy", an important idea that had emerged in the 1920s. Thatcher led the Conservatives to two further electoral victories
in 1983 and
in 1987. She was deeply unpopular in certain sections of society due to high unemployment and her response to the
miners' strike. Unemployment had doubled between 1979 and 1982, largely due to Thatcher's
monetarist battle against inflation. At the time of the
1979 general election inflation had been at 9% or under for the previous year, then increased to over 20% in the first two years of the Thatcher ministry, but it had fallen again to 5.8% by the start of 1983. The period of unpopularity of the Conservatives in the early 1980s coincided with a crisis in the Labour Party, which then formed the main opposition. Victory in the
Falklands War in June 1982, along with the recovering British economy, saw the Conservatives returning quickly to the top of the opinion polls and winning the 1983 general election with a landslide majority, due to a split opposition vote. The introduction of the
Community Charge (known by its opponents as the
poll tax) in 1989 is often cited as contributing to her political downfall. Internal party tensions led to a leadership challenge by the Conservative MP
Michael Heseltine and she resigned on 28 November 1990.
1990–1997: John Major succeeded Thatcher and led the Conservative government for seven years.
John Major won the party leadership election on 27 November 1990, and his appointment led to an almost immediate boost in Conservative Party fortunes. The
election was held on 9 April 1992 and the Conservatives won a fourth successive electoral victory, contrary to predictions from opinion polls. The Conservatives became the first party to attract 14 million votes in a general election. On 16 September 1992 the Government suspended Britain's membership of the
European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), after the pound fell lower than its minimum level in the ERM, a day thereafter referred to as
Black Wednesday. Soon after, approximately one million householders faced repossession of their homes during a recession that saw a sharp rise in unemployment, taking it close to 3 million people. The party subsequently lost much of its reputation for good financial stewardship. The end of the recession was declared in April 1993. Major survived a leadership challenge in 1995 by Redwood, but Redwood received 89 votes, further undermining Major's influence. The Conservative government was increasingly accused in the media of "
sleaze". Their support reached its lowest ebb in late 1994. Over the next two years the Conservatives gained some credit for the strong economic recovery and fall in unemployment. But an effective opposition campaign by the Labour Party culminated in a landslide defeat for the Conservatives
in 1997, their worst defeat since the
1906 general election. The 1997 election left the Conservative Party as an England-only party, with all Scottish and Welsh seats having been lost, and not a single new seat having been gained anywhere.
1997–2010: Political wilderness Major resigned as party leader and was succeeded by
William Hague. The
2001 general election resulted in a net gain of one seat for the Conservative Party and returned a mostly unscathed Labour Party back to government. This all occurred months after the
fuel protests of September 2000 had seen the Conservatives briefly take a narrow lead over Labour in the opinion polls. In 2001
Iain Duncan Smith was
elected leader of the party. during his tenure, Europe ceased to be an issue of division in the party as it united behind calls for a referendum on the proposed
European Union Constitution. However, before he could lead the party into a general election, Duncan Smith lost the vote on a
motion of no confidence by MPs. This was despite the Conservative support equalling that of Labour in the months leading up to his departure from the leadership. Under Howard's leadership at the
2005 general election, the Conservative Party increased their total vote share and—more significantly—their number of parliamentary seats, reducing Labour's majority. The day following the election, Howard resigned.
David Cameron won the
2005 leadership election. He then announced his intention to reform and realign the Conservatives. For most of 2006 and the first half of 2007, polls showed leads over Labour for the Conservatives. Polls became more volatile in summer 2007 with the accession of
Gordon Brown as prime minister. The Conservatives gained control of the
London mayoralty for the first time in 2008 after
Boris Johnson defeated the Labour incumbent,
Ken Livingstone.
2010–2024: Austerity, Brexit, and the pandemic The Conservative Party came to government in May 2010, first under
a coalition with the
Liberal Democrats and later as a series of majority and minority governments. During this period there were five Conservative Prime Ministers: Cameron,
Theresa May, Johnson,
Liz Truss and
Rishi Sunak. The initial period of this time, primarily during
Cameron's premiership, was marked by the ongoing effects of the
2008 financial crisis and the implementation of
austerity measures in response. From 2015 the predominant political event was the
Brexit referendum and the process to implement the decision to leave the trade bloc. Subsequent to the EU referendum vote, and through the premierships of May, Johnson and their successors, the party shifted right on the political spectrum. and Johnson governments, a number of Conservative MPs were accused or convicted of sexual misconduct, with cases including the consumption of pornography in parliament, rape, groping and sexual harassment. In 2017 a list of 36 sitting Conservative MPs accused of inappropriate sexual behaviour was leaked. The list is believed to have been compiled by party staff. Following accusations of multiple cases of rape against an unnamed Conservative MP in 2023 and allegations of a cover-up,
Baroness Warsi, who has served as the party's co-chairman under Cameron, stated that the Conservative Party has had a problem handling complaints of sexual misconducts against members appropriately.
2010–2016: David Cameron implemented
austerity programme after the financial crisis.The election in May 2010 resulted in a
hung parliament with the Conservatives having the most seats but short of an overall majority. Following the resignation of
Gordon Brown, Cameron was named prime minister, and the Conservatives
entered government in a coalition with the
Liberal Democrats—the first postwar
coalition government. Cameron's premiership was marked by the effects of the
2008 financial crisis; these involved a large deficit in government finances that his government sought to reduce through controversial
austerity measures. In September 2014 the Unionist side, championed by Labour as well as by the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats, won in the
Scottish Independence referendum by 55% No to 45% Yes on the question "Should Scotland be an independent country?" At the
2015 general election the Conservatives formed a majority government under Cameron. After speculation of a referendum on the UK's EU membership throughout his premiership, a vote was announced for June 2016 in which Cameron campaigned to remain in the EU. On 24 June 2016 Cameron announced his intention to resign as prime minister after he failed to convince the British public to
stay in the European Union.
2016–2022: Theresa May and Boris Johnson On 11 July 2016
Theresa May became the leader of the Conservative Party. May promised social reform and a more centrist political outlook for the Conservative Party and its government. May's early cabinet appointments were interpreted as an effort to reunite the party in the wake of the UK's
vote to leave the European Union. She began the process of
withdrawing the UK from the European Union in March 2017. In April 2017 the Cabinet agreed to hold
a general election on 8 June. In a shock result, the election resulted in a
hung parliament, with the Conservative Party needing a
confidence and supply arrangement with the
Democratic Unionist Party to support a minority government. May's premiership was dominated by Brexit as she carried out negotiations with the European Union, adhering to the
Chequers Plan, which resulted in her draft
Brexit withdrawal agreement. May survived two votes of no confidence in December 2018 and January 2019, but after versions of her draft withdrawal agreement were
rejected by Parliament three times, May announced her resignation on 24 May 2019. In July 2019
Boris Johnson became the leader of the party and the prime minister. Johnson had made withdrawal from the EU by 31 October "with no ifs, buts or maybes" a key pledge during
his campaign for the party leadership. He lost his working majority in the
House of Commons on 3 September 2019. Later that same day,
21 Conservative MPs had the Conservative whip withdrawn after voting with the Opposition to grant the Commons control over its order paper. Johnson would later halt the
Withdrawal Agreement Bill, calling for a general election. The
2019 general election resulted in the Conservatives winning a majority, the party's largest since
1987. It won several constituencies, particularly in
formerly traditional Labour seats. Johnson presided over the UK's response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. From late 2021 onwards, Johnson received huge public backlash for the
Partygate scandal, in which staff and senior members of government were pictured holding gatherings during lockdown contrary to Government guidance. The
Metropolitan Police eventually fined Johnson for breaking lockdown rules in April 2022. In July 2022 Johnson admitted to having appointed
Chris Pincher as deputy chief whip while being aware of allegations of sexual assault against him. This, along with Partygate and increasing criticisms on Johnson's handling of the cost-of-living crisis, provoked
a government crisis following a loss in confidence and nearly 60 resignations from government officials, eventually leading to Johnson announcing his resignation on 7 July.
2022–24: Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak Johnson's successor as leader was confirmed as
Liz Truss on 5 September, following
a leadership election. In a strategy labelled
Trussonomics she introduced policies in response to the
cost-of-living crisis, including price caps on energy bills and government help to pay them.
Truss's mini-budget on 23 September faced severe criticism and markets reacted poorly; the pound fell to a record low of 1.03 against the US dollar, and
UK government gilt yields rose to 4.3 per cent, prompting the
Bank of England to trigger an emergency bond-buying programme. After condemnation from the public, the Labour Party and her own party, Truss reversed some aspects of the mini-budget, including the abolition of the top rate of income tax. Following
a government crisis Truss announced her resignation as prime minister on 20 October after 44 days in office, the shortest premiership in British history. Truss also oversaw the worst polling the Conservatives had ever received, with Labour polling as high as 36 per cent above the Conservatives amidst the crisis. On 24 October 2022
Rishi Sunak was declared leader, the first
British Asian leader of the Conservatives and the first British Asian prime minister. On 22 May 2024 Sunak announced a general election to be held on 4 July 2024. During the
2024 general election, public opinion in favour of a change in government was reflected by poor polling from the Conservative Party, with
Reform UK making strong polling gains. The Conservative manifesto focused on the economy, taxes, welfare, expanding free childcare, education, healthcare, environment, energy, transport and crime. It pledged to lower taxes, increase education and NHS spending, deliver 92,000 more nurses and 28,000 more doctors, introduce a new model of
National Service, and to treble Britain's offshore wind capacity and support solar energy. The final result was the lowest seat total at a general election in the history of the Conservative Party, with well below the previous record low of 156 seats won at the
1906 general election. Sunak resigned as Prime Minister and the Conservative Party is ousted from the government.
2024–present: In opposition Kemi Badenoch became party leader, leading the Conservatives in opposition. As Reform UK surged and topped the opinion polls, the Conservatives faced a
number of defections of MPs, including former Home Secretary
Suella Braverman and shadow Justice Secretary
Robert Jenrick. == Policies ==