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1970 - 1972

William Whitelaw (1918-1999) entered the Commons in 1955, following war service and an increasing interest in Conservative politics. He became a junior whip in 1959, and a junior minister at the ministry of labour in 1962. In opposition after 1964 he was appointed chief whip; after the Conservative victory of 1970 he became Leader of the House. Whitelaw was moved to Northern Ireland in 1972, the first Secretary of State for the province after the suspension of the Stormont Parliament. He was back in London the following year, as Secretary of State for employment. After the Conservatives' two 1974 general election defeats and Heath's resignation, Whitelaw stood for election as party Leader, but was beaten by Margaret Thatcher. He accepted the position of deputy Leader, and in her first cabinet was home Secretary; after the 1983 election he went to the Lords as Viscount Whitelaw of Penrith and the Leader of the upper House. He resigned from the government in 1987, following a stroke.

 


In This Section
21st Century
- John Reid
- Robin Cook
- Geoff Hoon
- Jack Straw
- Peter Hain
20th Century
- Andrew Bonar Law
- John Biffen
- Fred Peart
- Andrew Bonar Law
- Margaret Beckett
- Iain Macleod
- Ann Tayler
- Norman St. John Stevas
- Francis Pym
- Robert Carr
- Sir Henry Campbell - Bannerman
- Austen Chamberlain
- Harry Crookshank
- Herbert Stanley Morrisno
- Selwyn Lloyd
- John MacGregor
- James Chuter Ede
- Sir Stafford Cripps
- Edward Short
- Ramsey MacDonald
19th Century
- Benjamin Disraeli
- Henry John Temple
- Benjamin Disraeli
- Arthur James Balfour
- Lord John Russell
- William Henry Smith
- Lord John Russell
- Sir Michael Hicks - Beach
- Sir Stafford Henry Northcote
- George Canning
- Spencer Perceval
- William Ewart Gladstone
- Charles Grey
- Robert Stewart
- William Pitt the Younger
- Lord John Russell
- Henry Addington
- William Ewart Gladstone
- Charles James Fox
- John Charles Spencer
18th Century
- William Pitt the Elder
- Sir Thomas Robinson
- George Grenville
- Lord Frederick North
- Robert Walpole
- George Grenville
- Charles James Fox
- Charles James Fox and Lord North
- Thomas Townshend
- Samuel Sandys
- Henry Pelham
- Henry Fox
- William Pitt the Younger
- Henry Seymour Conway