Lord President of the Council explained

Post:
Lord President of the Council
Insignia:Royal Arms of the United Kingdom (Crown & Garter) (2022).svg
Insigniacaption:Arms used by the Privy Council Office
Insigniasize:80px
Incumbent:Lucy Powell
Incumbentsince:5 July 2024
Department:Privy Council of the United Kingdom
Privy Council Office
Style:The Right Honourable
Type:Great Officer of State
Appointer:The Sovereign
on advice of the Prime Minister
Termlength:At His Majesty's pleasure
First:The 1st Duke of Suffolk
Formation:1530
Salary:£159,038 per annum [1]
(including £86,584 MP salary)[2]

The Lord President of the Council is the presiding officer of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom and the fourth of the Great Officers of State, ranking below the Lord High Treasurer but above the Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal. The Lord President usually attends and is responsible for chairing the meetings of the Privy Council, presenting business for the approval of the Sovereign.

The office and its history

The Privy Council meets once a month, wherever the sovereign may be residing at the time, to give formal approval to Orders in Council.[3] Only a few privy counsellors need attend such meetings, and only when invited to do so at the government's request. As the duties of the Lord President are not onerous, the post has often been given to a government minister whose responsibilities are not department-specific. In recent years it has been most typical for the Lord President also to serve as Leader of the House of Commons or Leader of the House of Lords. The Lord President has no role in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.

In the history of British government, the President of the Council is a relatively recent creation. The first certain appointment to the office being that of the Duke of Suffolk in 1529.[4] Although there is a reference to Edmund Dudley serving as 'president of the council' in 1497, it was only in 1529 that the role was given the style and precedence of a Great Officer of State by act of Parliament (21 Hen. 8. c. 20).[5] Prior to 1679 there were several periods in which the office was left vacant.

In the 19th century, the Lord President was generally the cabinet member responsible for the education system, amongst his other duties. This role was gradually scaled back in the late 19th and early 20th centuries but remnants of it remain, such as the oversight of the governance of various universities.

During times of National or coalition government the office of Lord President has sometimes been held by the leader of a minority party (e.g. Baldwin 1931–1935, MacDonald 1935–1937, Attlee 1943–1945, Clegg 2010–2015). It has been suggested that the office has been intermittently used for Prime Ministerial deputies in the past.[6] [7]

A particularly vital role was played by the Lord President of the Council during the Second World War. The Lord President served as chairman of the Lord President's Committee. This committee acted as a central clearing house which dealt with the country's economic problems. This was vital to the smooth running of the British war economy and consequently the entire British war effort.

Winston Churchill, clearly believing that this wartime co-ordinating role was beneficial, introduced a similar but expanded system in the first few years of his post-war premiership.[8] The so-called 'overlord ministers' included Frederick Leathers as Secretary of State for the Co-ordination of Transport, Fuel and Power and Lord Woolton as Lord President. Woolton's job was to co-ordinate the then separate ministries of agriculture and food.[9] The historian Lord Hennessy of Nympsfield quotes a PhD thesis by Michael Kandiah saying that Woolton was "arguably the most successful of the Overlords" partly because his ministries were quite closely related; indeed, they were merged in 1955 as the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food.[10]

On several occasions since 1954, non-British Ministers have served briefly as acting Lords President of the Council, solely to preside over a meeting of the Privy Council held in a Commonwealth realm.[11] [12] [13] Examples of this practice are the meetings in New Zealand in 1990 and 1995, when Geoffrey Palmer and James Bolger respectively were acting Lords President.

Andrea Leadsom's appointment in June 2017 was the first in some time where the post holder was not a full Cabinet member.[14]

Role and responsibilities

Routine functions

The routine functions of the lord president are as follows:

  1. Preside at Privy Council meetings, including any emergency meetings, and attend to both ministerial correspondence and parliamentary questions relating to Privy Council business.[15]
  2. Consider for approval prerogative and statutory Orders in Council.[16] Prerogative orders deal with the basic functioning of the British state and are thus applicable under a number of circumstances, including but not limited to the prorogation of Parliament, the granting, amendment, and revocation of royal charters, the appointment of high sheriffs, or the governance of British Overseas Territories.[17] [18] [19] [20] On the other hand, statutory orders are a form of delegated legislation conferred on His Majesty's Government by Parliament for the purposes of creating detailed regulations through rulemaking.[21] Unlike prerogative orders, statutory Orders in Council are subject to parliamentary scrutiny.[22] As a consequence, most Orders in Council operate on statutory footing as opposed to the common law authorities conferred by the royal prerogative.[23]
  3. Consider for approval Orders of Council concerning various matters of state, namely appointments to and regulation of professional bodies and institutions of higher education. Unlike Orders in Council which are enacted by the sovereign on the advice of the Privy Council, Orders of Council are enacted by the Privy Council itself pursuant to statutory authority conferred by Parliament.[24] [25] [26]
  4. As a member of the Privy Council's Committee for the Affairs of Jersey and Guernsey, review laws passed by the bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey, and make recommendations to the sovereign concerning their approval.[27] [28]

Visitorial functions

In addition to his or her routine functions, the lord president also serves as the visitor for several English universities, including:[29]

Partial list of Lords President of the Council

Lords President of the Council (c. 1530–1702)

Lord President! colspan=2
Term of office
Charles Brandon
1st Duke of Suffolk
1530
1545
William Paulet
1st Marquess of Winchester

1546

1550
John Dudley
1st Duke of Northumberland

1550

1553
Henry Montagu
1st Earl of Manchester

1621

1628
James Ley
1st Earl of Marlborough

1628

1628
Edward Conway
1st Viscount Conway

1628

1631
Anthony Ashley-Cooper
1st Earl of Shaftesbury

1679

1679
John Robartes
1st Earl of Radnor

1679

1684
Laurence Hyde
1st Earl of Rochester

1684

1685
George Savile
1st Marquess of Halifax

1685

1685
Robert Spencer
2nd Earl of Sunderland

1685

1688
Richard Graham
1st Viscount Preston

1688

1688
Thomas Osborne
1st Duke of Leeds

[30]

1689

1699
Thomas Herbert
8th Earl of Pembroke

1699

1702
Charles Seymour
6th Duke of Somerset

1702

1702

Lords President of the Council (1702–present)

Lord PresidentTerm of officeOther ministerial portfolios held during tenurePartyMinistryMonarch
Thomas Herbert
8th Earl of Pembroke

1702

1708
Godolphin–Marlborough
Anne
John Somers
1st Baron Somers

1708

1710
Whig
Laurence Hyde
1st Earl of Rochester

1710

1711
ToryOxford–Bolingbroke
John Sheffield
1st Duke of Buckingham and Normanby

1711

1714
rowspan=2
George I
Daniel Finch
2nd Earl of Nottingham

1714

1716
ToryTownshend
William Cavendish
2nd Duke of Devonshire

1716

1718
Whig
Stanhope–Sunderland I
Charles Spencer
3rd Earl of Sunderland

1718

1719
WhigStanhope–Sunderland II
Evelyn Pierrepont
1st Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull

1719

1720
Whig
Charles Townshend
2nd Viscount Townshend

1720

1721
Whig
Walpole–Townshend
Henry Boyle
1st Baron Carleton

1721

1725
Whig
William Cavendish
2nd Duke of Devonshire

1725

1729
Whig
George II
Thomas Trevor
1st Baron Trevor

1730

1730
Tory
Spencer Compton
1st Earl of Wilmington

1730

1742
WhigWalpole
William Stanhope
1st Earl of Harrington

1742

1745
WhigCarteret
Broad Bottom
Lionel Sackville
1st Duke of Dorset

1745

1751
Whig
John Carteret
2nd Earl Granville

1751

1763
Whig
Newcastle I
Pitt–Devonshire
1757 Caretaker
Pitt–Newcastle
George III
Bute
John Russell
4th Duke of Bedford

1763

1765
WhigGrenville
Daniel Finch
8th Earl of Winchilsea

1765

1766
WhigRockingham I
Robert Henley
1st Earl of Northington

1766

1767
WhigChatham
Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Gower

1767

1779
Tory
Grafton
North
Henry Bathurst
2nd Earl Bathurst

1779

1782
Tory
Charles Pratt
1st Baron Camden

1782

1783
WhigRockingham II
Shelburne
David Murray
7th Viscount Stormont

1783

1783
ToryFox–North
Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Gower

1783

1784
ToryPitt I
Charles Pratt
1st Earl Camden

1784

1794
Tory
William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam
4th Earl Fitzwilliam

1794

1794
Whig
David Murray
2nd Earl of Mansfield

1794

1796
Tory
rowspan=2 John Pitt
2nd Earl of Chatham

1796

1801
Addington
William Cavendish-Bentinck
3rd Duke of Portland

1801

1805
Tory
Pitt II
Henry Addington
1st Viscount Sidmouth

1805

1805
Tory
John Pratt
2nd Earl Camden

1805

1806
Tory
William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam
4th Earl Fitzwilliam

1806

1806
WhigAll the Talents
Henry Addington
1st Viscount Sidmouth

1806

1807
Tory
John Pratt
2nd Earl Camden

1807

1812
ToryPortland II
Perceval
Henry Addington
1st Viscount Sidmouth

1812

1812
Tory
Dudley Ryder
1st Earl of Harrowby

1812

1827
ToryLiverpool
George IV
Canning

1827

1828
ToryGoderich
Henry Bathurst
3rd Earl Bathurst

1828

1830
ToryWellington–Peel
William IV
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice
3rd Marquess of Lansdowne

1830

1834
WhigGrey
Melbourne I
James St Clair-Erskine
2nd Earl of Rosslyn

1834

1835
ConservativePeel I
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice
3rd Marquess of Lansdowne

1835

1841
WhigMelbourne II
Victoria
James Stuart-Wortley
1st Baron Wharncliffe

1841

1845
ConservativePeel II
Walter Montagu Douglas Scott
5th Duke of Buccleuch

1846

1846
Conservative
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice
3rd Marquess of Lansdowne

1846

1852
WhigRussell I
William Lowther
2nd Earl of Lonsdale

1852

1852
ConservativeWho? Who?
Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville

1852

1854
WhigAberdeen
Lord John Russell

1854

1855
Whig
Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville

1855

1858
WhigPalmerston I
James Gascoyne-Cecil
2nd Marquess of Salisbury

1858

1859
ConservativeDerby–Disraeli II
Granville Leveson-Gower
2nd Earl Granville

1859

1866
LiberalPalmerston II
Russell II
Richard Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville
3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos

1866

1867
ConservativeDerby–Disraeli III
John Spencer-Churchill
7th Duke of Marlborough

1867

1868
Conservative
George Robinson
1st Marquess of Ripon

1868

1873
LiberalGladstone I
Henry Bruce
1st Baron Aberdare

1873

1874
Liberal
Charles Gordon-Lennox
6th Duke of Richmond

1874

1880
ConservativeDisraeli II
John Spencer
5th Earl Spencer

1880

1883
LiberalGladstone II
Chichester Parkinson-Fortescue
1st Baron Carlingford

1883

1885
Liberal
Gathorne Gathorne-Hardy
1st Viscount Cranbrook

1885

1886
ConservativeSalisbury I
John Spencer
5th Earl Spencer

1886

1886
LiberalGladstone III
Gathorne Gathorne-Hardy
1st Viscount Cranbrook

1886

1892
ConservativeSalisbury II
John Wodehouse
1st Earl of Kimberley

1892

1894
LiberalGladstone IV
Archibald Primrose
5th Earl of Rosebery

1894

1895
LiberalRosebery
Spencer Cavendish
8th Duke of Devonshire

1895

1903
Liberal UnionistSalisbury

Edward VII
Balfour
Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart
6th Marquess of Londonderry

1903

1905
Conservative
Robert Crewe-Milnes
1st Earl of Crewe

1905

1908
LiberalCampbell-Bannerman
Edward Marjoribanks
2nd Baron Tweedmouth

1908

1908
LiberalAsquith
Henry Fowler
1st Viscount Wolverhampton

1908

1910
Liberal
George V
William Lygon
7th Earl Beauchamp

1910

1910
Liberal
John Morley
1st Viscount Morley of Blackburn

1910

1914
Liberal
William Lygon
7th Earl Beauchamp

1914

1915
Liberal
Robert Crewe-Milnes
1st Marquess of Crewe

1915

1916
LiberalAsquith Coalition
George Curzon
1st Earl Curzon of Kedleston

1916

1919
ConservativeLloyd George
(I & II)

Arthur Balfour
1st Earl of Balfour

1919

1922
Conservative
James Gascoyne-Cecil
4th Marquess of Salisbury

1922

1924
ConservativeLaw
Baldwin I
Charles Cripps
1st Baron Parmoor

1924

1924
LabourMacDonald I
George Curzon
1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston

1924

1925
ConservativeBaldwin II
Arthur Balfour
1st Earl of Balfour

1925

1929
Conservative
Charles Cripps
1st Baron Parmoor

1929

1931
LabourMacDonald II
Stanley Baldwin

1931

1935
ConservativeNational I
National II
Ramsay MacDonald

1935

1937
National LabourNational III
Edward VIII
George VI
Edward Wood
3rd Viscount Halifax

1937

1938
ConservativeNational IV
Douglas Hogg
1st Viscount Hailsham

1938

1938
Conservative
Walter Runciman
1st Viscount Runciman of Doxford

1938

1939
National Liberal
James Stanhope
7th Earl Stanhope

1939

1940
ConservativeChamberlain War
Neville Chamberlain

1940

1940
ConservativeChurchill War
John Anderson

1940

1943
National
Clement Attlee

1943

1945
Labour
Frederick Marquis
1st Baron Woolton

1945

1945
NationalChurchill Caretaker
Herbert Morrison

1945

1951
LabourAttlee
Christopher Addison
1st Viscount Addison

1951

1951
Labour
Frederick Marquis
1st Baron Woolton

1951

1952
ConservativeChurchill III
Elizabeth II
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
5th Marquess of Salisbury

1952

1957
Conservative
Eden
Macmillan
Alec Douglas-Home
14th Earl of Home

1957

1957
Conservative
Quintin Hogg
2nd Viscount Hailsham

1957

1959
Conservative
Alec Douglas-Home
14th Earl of Home

1959

1960
Conservative
Quintin Hogg

1960

1964
Conservative
Douglas-Home
Herbert Bowden

1964

1966
LabourWilson
Richard Crossman

1966

1968
Labour
Fred Peart

1968

1970
Labour
William Whitelaw

1970

1972
ConservativeHeath
Robert Carr

1972

1972
Conservative
Jim Prior

1972

1974
Conservative
Edward Short

1974

1976
LabourWilson
Michael Foot

1976

1979
LabourCallaghan
Christopher Soames
Baron Soames

1979

1981
ConservativeThatcher I
Francis Pym

1981

1982
Conservative
John Biffen

1982

1983
Conservative
William Whitelaw
1st Viscount Whitelaw

1983

1988
ConservativeThatcher II
Thatcher III
John Wakeham

1988

1989
Conservative
Geoffrey Howe

1989

1990
Conservative
John MacGregor

1990

1992
Conservative
Major I
Tony Newton

1992

1997
ConservativeMajor II
Ann Taylor

1997

1998
LabourBlair I
Margaret Beckett

1998

2001
Labour
Robin Cook

2001

2003
LabourBlair II
John Reid

2003

2003
Labour
Gareth Williams
Baron Williams of Mostyn

2003

2003
Labour
Valerie Amos
Baroness Amos


2003

2007
Labour
Blair III
Catherine Ashton
Baroness Ashton of Upholland


2007

2008
LabourBrown
Janet Royall
Baroness Royall of Blaisdon


2008

2009
Labour
Peter Mandelson
Baron Mandelson


2009

2010
Labour
Nick Clegg

2010

2015
Liberal DemocratCameron–Clegg
Chris Grayling

2015

2016
ConservativeCameron II
David Lidington

2016

2017
ConservativeMay I
Andrea Leadsom

2017

2019
ConservativeMay II
Mel Stride

2019

2019
Conservative
Jacob Rees-Mogg

2019

2022
ConservativeJohnson I
Johnson II
Mark Spencer

2022

2022
Conservative
Penny Mordaunt

2022

2024
ConservativeTruss
Charles III
Sunak
Lucy Powell

2024
IncumbentLabourStarmer

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Salaries of Members of His Majesty's Government – Financial Year 2022–23 . 15 December 2022.
  2. Web site: Pay and expenses for MPs . 15 December 2022 . parliament.uk.
  3. News: Privy Council: Guide to its origins, powers and members. BBC News. 1 January 2018. 8 October 2015. The body convenes, on average, about once a month and its meetings – known as councils – are presided over by The Queen..
  4. Book: Fryde. E. B.. Handbook of British Chronology. 1986. 1941. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.
  5. An Act that the President of the King's Counsel shall be associate with the Chancellor and Treasurer of England, and the Keeper of the King's Privy Seal.
  6. Book: Seldon, Anthony. The Impossible Office? The History of the British Prime Minister. Meakin. Jonathan. Thoms. Illias. Cambridge University Press. 2021. 9781316515327. 157. Anthony Seldon.
  7. Book: Norton, Philip. Governing Britain: Parliament, Ministers and Our Ambiguous Constitution. Manchester University Press. 2020. 9-781526-145451. 144. Philip Norton, Baron Norton of Louth.
  8. Hennessy, Peter. The Prime Minister: The Office and Its Holders Since 1945 (2000), pp.189–190.
  9. Hennessy, p.191
  10. Hennessy, p. 193
  11. House of Lords . Her Majesty's Return . 18 May 1954 . 187 . 645 . . ... there has been constitutional work done, there have been acts of State: ... meetings of the Privy Council, an organ of the Constitution older than Parliament itself, for wherever the Sovereign is, and three Privy Counsellors are present, there may be meetings of the Council and Orders passed. So, during this tour there have been sessions of the Privy Council in Australia, in New Zealand and in Ceylon, with their own local Privy Council members – members of the one single Imperial Privy Council, but their own local members..
  12. Cox . Noel . 1998–1999 . The Dichotomy of Legal Theory and Political Reality: The Honours Prerogative and Imperial Unity . Australian Journal of Law and Society . 1 . 14 . 15–42 . 19 November 2011 . The Queen has in fact regularly presided over meetings of the Privy Council in New Zealand, since her first in 1954. That was the first held by the Sovereign outside the United Kingdom, although in 1920 Edward Prince of Wales held a Council in Wellington to swear in the Earl of Liverpool as Governor-General..
  13. Book: Kumarasingham, Harshan . Onward with Executive Power: Lessons from New Zealand 1947–57 . 2010 . Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington. . Wellington, New Zealand . 978-1-877347-37-5 . 71 . 19 November 2011 . The Queen held a meeting of the Privy Council [on 13 January 1954] at the 'Court at Government House at Wellington' with her New Zealand prime minister as 'acting Lord President' of the council. The deputy prime minister, Keith Holyoake, 'secured for himself a place in constitutional history by becoming the first member to be sworn of Her Majesty’s Council outside the United Kingdom'. . https://web.archive.org/web/20120111092801/http://ips.ac.nz/publications/files/7018d92ee2b.pdf . 11 January 2012 . dead .
  14. Web site: Election 2017: Prime Minister and Cabinet appointments . GOV.UK . 9 September 2017.
  15. Web site: Lord President. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  16. Web site: Meetings & Orders. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  17. Web site: What are Orders in Council. David Torrance. House of Commons Library. September 14, 2023. December 27, 2023.
  18. Web site: About the Privy Council. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  19. Web site: High Sheriffs. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  20. Web site: British Orders in Council and International Law. James Brown Scott. The American Journal of International Law. 10. 3. 560–569. July 1916. December 27, 2023.
  21. Web site: House of Commons Research Paper: Statutory Instruments. Richard Kelly. December 15, 2016. December 27, 2023.
  22. Web site: What is a Statutory Instrument. Public Law Project. December 27, 2023.
  23. Web site: About the Privy Council. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  24. Web site: About the Privy Council Office. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  25. Web site: Professional bodies. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  26. Web site: Higher education. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  27. Web site: Committees. Privy Council Office. December 27, 2023.
  28. Web site: Channel Islands. Privy Council. December 27, 2023.
  29. Web site: Universities . Privy Council . 1 January 2005 . 9 September 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170909233320/https://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/work-of-the-privy-council-office/higher-education/universities/ . 9 September 2017.
  30. Marquess of Carmarthen from 1689, created Duke of Leeds in 1694