The office currently a
Minister of State at the
Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. Despite being a junior ministerial role, the position has sometimes conferred the right to attend meetings of the
Cabinet, which is occasionally granted to other such ministers at the Prime Minister's discretion. This first occurred when
Denis MacShane was replaced by
Douglas Alexander after the
2005 general election, although Alexander's successor ceased to have this right. When
Chris Bryant held the office, it was not as Minister of State but as
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Europe and Asia. The responsibilities of the office were next appointed to a Minister of State in 2010 by then
Prime Minister David Cameron. He appointed
David Lidington, who held the office for over six years. In July 2016, the responsibility for the relationship with the European Union, which represented the greater part of British policy towards Europe, became the brief of a new Cabinet level post,
Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, or more informally, Brexit Secretary. With the winding up of DEXEU, the department led by the Brexit Secretary, responsibility was transferred to the Cabinet Office, first under
Michael Gove, and then under
Lord Frost who was made a member of the Cabinet and held the ministerial position of
Minister of State at the Cabinet Office. Through this period, any residual responsibilities for European relations that remained with the Foreign Office were combined with the portfolio of the traditionally more junior
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs. The post of
Minister of State for Europe and the Americas was held by
Alan Duncan until he resigned on 22 July 2019; Duncan was largely regarded as the second most senior-ranking Foreign Office Minister behind the Foreign Secretary. On 25 July 2019,
newly elected Prime Minister Boris Johnson appointed
Conservative MP for
Tamworth,
Christopher Pincher to the role as part of his ministerial reshuffle. Johnson promoted Wendy Morton to the role of
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for European Neighbourhood and the Americas to replace Pincher in February 2020. In December 2021, upon the resignation of Lord Frost, ministerial responsibility returned to the Foreign Secretary
Liz Truss and
Chris Heaton-Harris became Minister of State for Europe as responsibility for the United Kingdom's relations with the European Union was moved from the
Cabinet Office back to the Foreign Office. In February 2022,
James Cleverly was appointed
Minister of State for Europe and North America. His former position as
Minister of State for Middle East, North Africa and North America was the second highest position in the Foreign Office; his new position as Europe Minister then took its place as the deputy to the
Foreign Secretary. The post is not to be confused with the
Minister of State within the
Department for Exiting the European Union, the department created by Prime Minister
Theresa May following the
UK's vote to leave the EU in 2016 and abolished by Boris Johnson following the
UK's exit from the EU on 31 January 2020. They supported the work of the department overseeing the UK's exit from the EU rather than overseeing government policy towards all-European affairs. ==List of ministers==