A bit of now punk in my head since the locals based on WI post-referendum levels of disillusionment plus Lib Dem and UKIP parties that weren't all fucked up by events
1997-2006: Tony Blair (Labour)
1997: Tony Blair (Labour) [370] John Major (Conservative) [221] Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrat) [38] David Trimble (UUP) [10] Alex Salmond (SNP) [6] Dafydd Wigley (Plaid Cymru) [4] John Hume (SDLP) [3] Ian Paisley (DUP) [2] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [2] Betty Boothroyd (Speaker) [1] Bob McCartney (UK Unionist) [1]
2001: Tony Blair (Labour) [338] William Hague (Conservative) [245] Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrat) [48] David Trimble (UUP) [6] John Swinney (SNP) [5] Ian Paisley (DUP) [5] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [4] Iuan Wynn Jones (Plaid Cymru) [4] John Hume (SDLP) [3]
Elected with a strong majority in his first term and a far weaker one in the second, Tony Blair is even so remembered as a transformative leader for introducing the minimum wage and devolution in Scotland, London and Wales. His reputation was later soured by the Iraq War.
2006-2008: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative)
2006: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative) [313] Tony Blair (Labour) [237] Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrat) [69] Ian Paisley (DUP) [9] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [5] Alex Salmond (SNP) [4] Iuan Wynn Jones (Plaid Cymru) [3] Mark Durkan (SDLP) [3] David Trimble (UUP) [1]
Iain Duncan Smith only managed to build a majority by working with the DUP, a decision that caused a large backlash in Northern Ireland and was unpopular in the rest of the UK. He achieved exactly one thing in power - a referendum on the EU that went the way he had hoped. That achieved, however, he was unable to capitalise on the decision, lacking the majority to push through any implementation - he was forced to call an election when the DUP pulled their support over the issue of the Northern Ireland backstop.
2007 EU Referendum: Leave 52.3% Remain 47.7%
2008-2010: Gordon Brown (Labour)
2008: Gordon Brown (Labour) [321] Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative) [203] Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) [91] Ian Paisley (DUP) [10] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [8] Alex Salmond (SNP) [6] Iuan Wynn Jones (Plaid Cymru) [4]
2010 EU Referendum: Remain: 51.2% Leave: 48.8%
Gordon Brown was elected on a cautious strategy of bringing about a soft Leave, something that was always difficult with his majority and in the end could only pass with a confirmatory referendum, which Gordon Brown lost. Nonetheless he hung onto power long enough for his government to lose a no confidence vote and for him to be forced into another election.
2010-2012: David Miliband (Labour) coalition with Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat)
2010: Theresa May (Conservative) [242] Gordon Brown (Labour) [204] Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) [145] Ian Paisley (DUP) [10] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [8] Alex Salmond (SNP) [21] Iuan Wynn Jones (Plaid Cymru) [6] Nigel Farage (UKIP) [5] Caroline Lucas (Green Party England and Wales) [2]
The 2010 election saw a surge in Remain and Leave parties at the expense of the two big parties. But as UKIP was still somewhat in its infancy the main beneficiary of this was the Lib Dems. Chris Huhne approached both the parties but found Theresa May unwilling to negotiate on her many red lines. Gordon Brown, however, was quite willing by this stage to stand down and be replaced with someone the Lib Dems could do business with.
Miliband's government saw at attempt to return to domestic policies other than Brexit, with funding for the NHS increased, equal marriage brought in and a gender recognition act. However the largest issue was the implementation of STV, something Labour had agreed to but could not create a majority for. This lead to a successful vote of no confidence in David Miliband and the calling of another election.
2012: David Cameron (Conservative) [201] Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) [172] David Miliband (Labour) [148] Alex Salmond (SNP) [50] Nigel Farage (UKIP) [37] Leanne Wood (Plaid Cymru) [11] Ian Paisley (DUP) [9] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [9] Caroline Lucas (Green Party England and Wales) [6]
With absolutely no hope of anyone forming a new government, David Miliband was forced to call another new election
2012-2013: David Cameron (Conservative) leading Olympics national coalition with Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) and David Miliband (Labour)
2012: David Cameron (Conservative) [196] Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) [194] David Miliband (Labour) [119] Nigel Farage (UKIP) [56] Alex Salmond (SNP) [50] Leanne Wood (Plaid Cymru) [13] Ian Paisley (DUP) [9] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [9] Caroline Lucas (Green Party England and Wales) [7]
Cameron's government had one simple task to get the country through the Jubilympics without the major embarrassment of impossible political deadlock. This was a fortunate task. Little was asked of Cameron, and criticism of what he did do was treated as unpatriotic. The fact that the opposition was made up of Nigel "the NHS shouldn't be celebrated" Farage and Alex "The UK should be abolished" Salmond helped a lot with this.
2013-????: David Cameron (Conservatives)
2013: David Cameron (Conservative) [334] Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrat) [161] David Miliband (Labour) [91] Alex Salmond (SNP) [22] Nigel Farage (UKIP) [10] Leanne Wood (Plaid Cymru) [9] Ian Paisley (DUP) [10] Gerry Adams (Sinn Fein) [8] Caroline Lucas (Green Party England and Wales) [6]
2018: David Cameron (Conservative) [348] Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrat) [137] Jeremy Corbyn (Labour) [123] Nicola Sturgeon (SNP) [18] Arlene Foster (DUP) [10] Michelle O'Neill (Sinn Fein) [8] Leanne Wood (Plaid Cymru) [4] Bill Etheridge (UKIP) [2] Caroline Lucas (Green Party England and Wales) [1]
David Cameron has held majority power since the Jubilympics, with a divided opposition. While UKIP and the Greens have fafded somewhat from their referendum era high, Jeremy Corbyn has done surprisingly well at rallying a resurgent leftwing anti-establishment Labour Party, despite a split in the party in 2017 and a widespread believe that his leadership would lead to electoral wipe-out in 2018.
Cameron has been pushing ahead with massive and far-reaching reforms to the NHS, education, the postal service, and all elements of British society. While some centrists feel he has moved away from the united vision of Britain that he represented in the Jubilympics most feel that his attempts to deal with the deficit are necessary and pragmatic, and nobody can question that he is the most transformative leader in British hostory since Thatcher.