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Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer

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Member of the British Shadow Cabinet

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(April 2011)
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
Portrait of Mel Stride
Incumbent
Mel Stride
since 4 November 2024
StyleShadow Chancellor (informal)
Member ofOfficial Opposition Shadow Cabinet
AppointerLeader of the Opposition
Inaugural holderRab Butler
DeputyShadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury

Theshadow chancellor of the exchequer in the British Parliamentary system is the member of theShadow Cabinet who is responsible for shadowing thechancellor of the exchequer. The title is given at the gift of theleader of the Opposition and has no formal constitutional role, but is generally considered the second-most senior position, unless ashadow deputy prime minister is chosen, on theopposition frontbench, after the leader. Past shadow chancellors includeHarold Wilson,James Callaghan,Edward Heath,Geoffrey Howe,Kenneth Clarke,Gordon Brown,John McDonnell andRachel Reeves.

The name for the position has a mixed history. It is used to designate the lead economic spokesman for the Opposition. The name 'Shadow Chancellor' has also been used for the corresponding position for theLiberal Democrats, theLiberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson.[1] This was a source of humour forChancellorGordon Brown, who in 2005 played the two off against one another in Parliament, saying, "I, too, have a great deal of time for the shadow chancellor who resides in Twickenham [Liberal DemocratVince Cable], rather than the shadow chancellor for the Conservative Party."[2]

List of shadow chancellors

[edit]
NamePortraitEntered officeLeft officePartyShadow Cabinet
Oliver StanleyUnknown10 December 1950ConservativeChurchill
Rab Butler10 December 195026 October 1951
Hugh Gaitskell26 October 195115 February 1956LabourAttlee
Gaitskell
Harold Wilson15 February 195630 November 1961[3]
James Callaghan30 November 1961[4]16 October 1964
Wilson I
Reginald Maudling16 October 196416 February 1965[5]ConservativeDouglas-Home
Edward Heath16 February 1965[6]28 July 1965
Iain Macleod28 July 196520 June 1970Heath
Roy Jenkins20 June 197019 April 1972LabourWilson II
Denis Healey19 April 19724 March 1974
Anthony Barber4 March 197411 March 1974[7]ConservativeHeath II
Robert Carr11 March 197411 February 1975
Sir Geoffrey Howe11 February 19754 May 1979Thatcher
Denis Healey4 May 19798 December 1980LabourCallaghan
Peter Shore8 December 198031 October 1983Foot
Roy Hattersley31 October 198313 July 1987Kinnock
John Smith13 July 198724 July 1992
Gordon Brown24 July 19922 May 1997Smith
Beckett
Blair
Ken Clarke2 May 199711 June 1997ConservativeMajor
Peter Lilley11 June 19972 June 1998Hague
Francis Maude2 June 19981 February 2000
Michael Portillo1 February 200018 September 2001
Michael Howard18 September 20016 November 2003Duncan Smith
Oliver Letwin6 November 200310 May 2005Howard
George Osborne10 May 200511 May 2010
Cameron
Alistair Darling11 May 20108 October 2010LabourHarman I
Alan Johnson8 October 201020 January 2011Miliband
Ed Balls20 January 201111 May 2015
Chris Leslie11 May 201512 September 2015Harman II
John McDonnell13 September 20155 April 2020Corbyn
Anneliese Dodds5 April 20209 May 2021Starmer
Rachel Reeves9 May 20215 July 2024
Jeremy Hunt8 July 20244 November 2024ConservativeSunak
Mel Stride4 November 2024IncumbentBadenoch

References

[edit]
  1. ^Parker, George (18 October 2014)."Alexander to replace Cable as LibDem shadow chancellor".Financial Times. London. Retrieved5 July 2015.
  2. ^Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster (5 December 2005)."House of Commons Hansard Debates for 5 Dec 2005 (pt 8)". Publications.parliament.uk. Archived fromthe original on 28 October 2016. Retrieved5 September 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^"Wilson - Foreign Spokesman".Evening Times. 30 November 1961. p. 1. Retrieved28 April 2025.
  4. ^"Wilson - Foreign Spokesman".Evening Times. 30 November 1961. p. 1. Retrieved28 April 2025.
  5. ^Baston 2004, 246
  6. ^Baston 2004, 246
  7. ^"Barber Prepares to Quit".The Glasgow Herald. 12 March 1974. pp. 1, 30. Retrieved16 April 2025.

Book

[edit]
  • Lewis Baston (2004)Reggie: The Life of Reginald Maudling. Sutton Publishing.ISBN 0-7509-2924-3
Current
Former
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