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- Alec Douglas-Home [r]: (2 July 1903 - 9 October 1995) British Conservative prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving 12 months between 1964 to 1965. [e]
- Alistair Darling [r]: Former British Chancellor of the Exchequer, responsible for the Government's fiscal policy. [e]
- Clement Attlee [r]: (3 January 1883 – 8 October 1967), British Labour prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving one term 1945 to 1951. [e]
- Conservative Party (UK) [r]: A right-wing political party which espouses conservatism. [e]
- David Miliband [r]: Former UK foreign minister; born 1965. [e]
- Deselection [r]: Refusal of a local party association to continue supporting a candidate who had previously been elected under their banner. [e]
- Edward Heath [r]: (9 July 1916 – 17 July 2005), British Conservative prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving one term 1970 to 1974. [e]
- Gordon Brown [r]: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Labour Party from June 2007 to May 2010; previously Chancellor of the Exchequer from May 1997. [e]
- Government of the United Kingdom [r]: Constitutional government where executive authority notionally lies with the monarch but is exercised in practice by his ministers, and is the collective name for these ministers. [e]
- Harold Wilson [r]: (11 March 1916 – 24 May 1995), British Labour prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving two non-consecutive terms 1964 to 1970 and 1974 to 1976. [e]
- James Callaghan [r]: (27 March 1912 - 26 March 2005), British Labour prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving one term 1976 to 1980. [e]
- John Major [r]: (b. 29 March 1943), British Conservative prime minister of the United Kingdom, serving two terms 1990 to 1997. [e]
- Labour (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Margaret Thatcher [r]: The first woman Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, famous for her free market views and for successfully waging the Falklands War, frequently called the "Iron Lady". [e]
- Minority government [r]: Parliamentary government in which the governing party has fewer votes than the parties of the opposition. [e]
- Northern Rhodesia [r]: British protectorate in south central Africa which became Zambia on independence in 1964. [e]
- Oswald Mosley [r]: British 20th century politician, founder of the British Union of Fascists. [e]
- Pound sterling [r]: The currency of the United Kingdom, its Crown dependencies (the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands) and the British Overseas Territories of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and British Antarctic Territory, subdivided into 100 pence, with the symbol £. [e]
- Prime Minister of the United Kingdom [r]: The head of the British government, usually the leader of the largest political party in the House of Commons. [e]
- Regions of England [r]: the first level of administrative division, below the U.K. national government, within England. [e]
- Socialism [r]: Any socio-economic system in which property and distribution of wealth are controlled by a community, by cooperation law. [e]
- Tony Blair [r]: Former Labour Party politician and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1997-2007). [e]
- United Kingdom [r]: Constitutional monarchy which includes England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. [e]
- William Hague [r]: Former UK foreign minister (2010-2014) and leader of the Conservative Party (1997-2001) amongst other roles; formally, Baron Hague of Richmond as a member of the House of Lords (born 1961). [e]
- Winter of Discontent [r]: Add brief definition or description
- York [r]: Add brief definition or description