Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs explained

Post:Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs
Department:Shadow Cabinet
Incumbent:Andrew Mitchell
Incumbentsince:8 July 2024
Appointer:Leader of the Opposition
Inaugural:Alfred Robens
Formation:14 December 1955
Website:The Shadow Cabinet

In UK politics, the shadow secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs is a position within the opposition's shadow cabinet that deals mainly with issues surrounding the Foreign Office. If elected, the person serving as shadow foreign secretary may be designated to serve as the new foreign secretary.

The current Shadow Secretary of State of foreign, commonwealth and development affairs is vacant, immediately following the 2024 General Election. Prior to this, the shadow foreign secretary was MP David Lammy, who is currently the Foreign Secretary. The shadow secretary (usually with one or more junior shadow ministers) holds the secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs and other FCDO ministers to account in Parliament.

Although DFID and the role of international development secretary were abolished by the second Johnson government in 2020, the shadow secretary of state did not have responsibility for development until Lammy was appointed in November 2021. His predecessor, Lisa Nandy, served alongside the shadow secretary of state for international development, Preet Gill. This however is no longer the case after the November 2021 British shadow cabinet reshuffle.

List of shadow foreign secretaries

Namewidth=60PortraitTerm of officePolitical partyShadow Cabinet
Alfred Robens14 December 19556 November 1956LabourGaitskell
Aneurin Bevan6 November 195611 October 1959Labour
Denis Healey11 October 19592 November 1961Labour
Harold Wilson2 November 196114 February 1963Labour
Patrick Gordon Walker14 February 196315 October 1964LabourWilson I
R. A. Butler15 October 196416 February 1965[1] ConservativeDouglas-Home
Reginald Maudling16 February 196511 November 1965ConservativeHeath I
Christopher Soames11 November 196513 April 1966Conservative
Alec Douglas-Home13 April 196618 June 1970Conservative
Denis Healey20 June 197019 April 1972LabourWilson II
James Callaghan19 April 19724 March 1974Labour
Geoffrey Rippon4 March 197411 February 1975ConservativeHeath II
Reginald Maudling11 February 197511 April 1976ConservativeThatcher
John Davies11 April 19766 November 1978Conservative
Francis Pym6 November 19784 May 1979Conservative
David Owen4 May 197914 July 1979LabourCallaghan
Peter Shore14 July 19798 December 1980Labour
Denis Healey8 December 198013 June 1987LabourFoot
Kinnock
Gerald Kaufman13 June 198724 July 1992Labour
Jack Cunningham24 July 199220 October 1994LabourSmith
Beckett
Robin Cook20 October 19942 May 1997LabourBlair
John Major7 May 199711 June 1997ConservativeMajor
Michael Howard11 June 199715 June 1999ConservativeHague
John Maples15 June 19992 February 2000Conservative
Francis Maude2 February 200018 September 2001Conservative
Michael Ancram18 September 200110 May 2005ConservativeDuncan Smith
Howard
Liam Fox10 May 20056 December 2005Conservative
William Hague6 December 200511 May 2010ConservativeCameron
David Miliband11 May 20108 October 2010LabourHarman I
Yvette Cooper8 October 201020 January 2011LabourMiliband
Douglas Alexander20 January 201111 May 2015Labour
Hilary Benn11 May 201526 June 2016Labour
Corbyn
Emily Thornberry27 June 20165 April 2020Labour
Lisa Nandy5 April 202029 November 2021LabourStarmer
David Lammy29 November 20215 July 2024Labour
Andrew Mitchell8 July 2024IncumbentConservativeSunak

Notes and References

  1. Book: Baston, Lewis . 2004 . Reggie: The Life of Reginald Maudling . Sutton Publishing . 246 . 0-7509-2924-3.