Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs | |
|---|---|
| Image:Her Majesty's Government.gif Logo of Her Majesty's Government | |
|
| |
| Image:David Miliband 11 April 2007.JPG | |
| Incumbent: David Miliband Took office: 28 June 2007 | |
| Style: | The Right Honourable |
| Appointed by: | Gordon Brown as Prime Minister |
| First : | Charles James Fox |
| Formation: | 27 March 1782 |
| United Kingdom |
| Image:Her Majesty's Government Coat of Arms.svg This article is part of the series: |
|
|
| Her Majesty's Government |
|---|
| Sovereign (Queen Elizabeth II) |
| Parliament |
| State Opening of Parliament |
| Bureaucracy |
| Government departments |
| Judiciary |
| Courts of the United Kingdom |
| Constituent countries |
| Politics of Scotland |
| Elections |
| Parliament constituencies |
| Other |
| Foreign relations |
|
Other countries · Atlas Politics Portal |
The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, commonly referred to as the Foreign Secretary, is a member of the British Government responsible for relations with foreign countries, heading the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Contents |
[edit] Position
The Foreign Secretary is a member of the Cabinet, and the posit is considered one of the Great Offices of State. It came into existence in 1968 with the merger of the functions of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs into a single Department of State. The India Office was a predecessor department of the Foreign Office.
The Foreign Secretary works out of the Foreign Office in Whitehall. The post's official residences are 1 Carlton Gardens in London and Chevening House in Kent.
In the Cabinet reshuffle on 5 May 2006 Margaret Beckett became the first woman to hold the post.
David Miliband was appointed to the post on 28 June 2007 by the new Prime Minister, Gordon Brown.
[edit] Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (1782-1968)
The position of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs was created in the United Kingdom's governmental reorganization of 1782, in which the Northern and Southern Departments became the Home and Foreign Offices.
1Resigned
²Died in office
³Lord John Russell was later elevated to the Peerage as the Earl Russell
4Lord Stanley later succeeded to the Peerage as the Earl of Derby
5Defeated for election to the House of Commons
[edit] Secretaries of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1968 - present)
1 Became Prime Minister
2 Resigned
3 Cabinet Reshuffled
4 Died in Office
5 Change of Ministry
[edit] See also
- Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
- Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office
- Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs
- Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations
- Secretary of State for the Colonies
- Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs
- Foreign minister
- Great Offices of State
[edit] External links
Great Offices of State of the United Kingdom | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
fr:Secrétaire d'État aux Affaires étrangères ja:外務英連邦大臣 no:Liste over Storbritannias utenriksministre pl:Ministrowie spraw zagranicznych Wielkiej Brytanii sv:Storbritanniens utrikesminister zh:外交及聯邦事務大臣

