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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

List of British Prime Ministers
1935-1937: Stanley Baldwin (National: Conservative, Liberal National, National Labour)
1935 election: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative), Clement Attlee (Labour), John Simon (Liberal National), Herbert Samuel (Liberal), Ramsay MacDonald (National Labour), James Maxton (Independent Labour Party), Harry Pollitt (Communist)
1937-1939: Neville Chamberlain (National: Conservative, Liberal National, National Labour)
1939-1940: Neville Chamberlain (War: Conservative, Liberal National, National Labour)
1940-1941: Sir Winston Churchill (War: Conservative, Labour, Liberal National, Liberal, National Labour)
1941-1943: Hastings Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford (Peace: British People's, Independent Labour Party, Common Wealth)

1943-1947: Hastings Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford (Peace: British People's, Independent Labour Party, Common Wealth)
1943 election: 97% Peace List, 3% Blank
1947-1951: Denis Kendall (Peace: British People's, Independent Labour Party, Common Wealth)
1948 election: 95% Peace List, 4% Independents, 1% Blank
1951-1952: William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield (Peace: British People's, Independent Labour Party, Common Wealth)
1952-1954: Sir Winston Churchill (Victory: National, Labour, Communist, Liberal)
1953 election: Sir Winston Churchill (National), H. C. Evatt (Labour), Harry Pollitt (Communist), Don Bennett (Liberal)
1954-1955: Sir Winston Churchill (National)
1955-1963: Malcolm MacDonald (National)
1958 election: Malcolm MacDonald (National), Harold Soref (Social Movement), H. C. Evatt (Popular Front)

what is happening here
 
what is happening here
That socialist Social Credit Anarchist pacifist dude David talked about in the British Politics Thread was successful in making his plan of uniting various pacifists together,taking down the government and brokering peace with Adolf,dominating British Politics with the Peace coalition till '52,when Winnie and the rest manage to defeat them under a Victory coalition and teach the Nazis/Soviets a lesson they'll never forget.
 
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what is happening here
Nothing very plausible, hence no write-up. Guy Aldred proposed in 1941 that Churchill should resign and be replaced by a coalition of pacifists and Socialists led by the, er, literal Fascist Duke of Bedford. This list is WI: That.

MPs not on board with the plan (those unable to flee to the Commonwealth) are sent to break rocks on Orkney, leaving the BPP to win lots of unopposed by-elections, along with an ILP which is rapidly taken over by ex-Labour collaborators and a Common Wealth Party which performs the same function for Liberals. Tom Wintringham fights a heroic last stand against the British Army, along with a small, doomed band of Home Guard guerillas. Corporatist electoral reform follows shortly after.

The Peace government, of course, is anything but - not only is there a large amount of Resistance activity, but the Nazis are quite keen for Britain to defend itself in the class war against the USSR, although the Soviets finally sue for peace in 1945, retreating to the borders of Brest-Litovsk. Intercontinental trade, however, dries up, leaving the UK in a particularly rough situation in the immediate post-war period - the only positive memories anyone has of the post-war Peace government are the building of the People's Car in Grantham, the sudden availability of a lot of housing in North London, and the popularisation of Tizer as an ersatz alternative to Coca-cola.

Finally, with Hitler dead and the Continent in the throes of an economic nightmare, Europe convulses and decides that things were in many ways a lot better before the rationing-induced rickets epidemic, and the Resistance overthrows the Axis in a revolutionary wave. Although Communists take over in much of liberated Europe and the Derby Soviet endures for several months, the ultimate will of the people is a return to normality in the form of Churchill's government in exile, imposed by a CANZUK Expeditionary Force.

MacDonald's pre-Exile colonial experience and Eden's gruesome death make the former a shoo-in to succeed Churchill when his health catches up with him, while Labour does its best to render itself unelectable - and collaborationist careers cut short by the Liberation begin to twitch into life again.
 
1990 - July 2nd, 1996: John Major (Conservative)

July 2nd, 1996: John Major (wartime coalition), w/ Deputy PM Tony Blair

July 3rd, 1996 - July 5th, 1996: William Hague (wartime coalition), w/ Deputy PM Helen Liddell [emergency royal appointment]

July 5th 1996 - 1st May 1997: William Hague (Government of National Stability, Tory leadership)

1997 - 2002: John Hume (Social & Labour coalition) [elected]

2002 - 2005: Theresa May (One Nation party)

2005 - 2006: Jeremy Clarkson (One Nation) [party coup]

2006 - 2015: Lady Becky Johnson, KCBE VC (Social & Labour Party) [elected]

2015 - July 2nd, 2016: Ben Houchan (One Nation)

July 3rd - July 11th, 2016: HRH Harry I emergency decrees

July 12th, 2016 - 2018: Wing Commander Tim Peake (Government of National Stability) [appointed]

2018 - present: Siân Gwenllian (Homeland Party) [elected]
 
Nothing very plausible, hence no write-up. Guy Aldred proposed in 1941 that Churchill should resign and be replaced by a coalition of pacifists and Socialists led by the, er, literal Fascist Duke of Bedford. This list is WI: That.

MPs not on board with the plan (those unable to flee to the Commonwealth) are sent to break rocks on Orkney, leaving the BPP to win lots of unopposed by-elections, along with an ILP which is rapidly taken over by ex-Labour collaborators and a Common Wealth Party which performs the same function for Liberals. Tom Wintringham fights a heroic last stand against the British Army, along with a small, doomed band of Home Guard guerillas. Corporatist electoral reform follows shortly after.

The Peace government, of course, is anything but - not only is there a large amount of Resistance activity, but the Nazis are quite keen for Britain to defend itself in the class war against the USSR, although the Soviets finally sue for peace in 1945, retreating to the borders of Brest-Litovsk. Intercontinental trade, however, dries up, leaving the UK in a particularly rough situation in the immediate post-war period - the only positive memories anyone has of the post-war Peace government are the building of the People's Car in Grantham, the sudden availability of a lot of housing in North London, and the popularisation of Tizer as an ersatz alternative to Coca-cola.

Finally, with Hitler dead and the Continent in the throes of an economic nightmare, Europe convulses and decides that things were in many ways a lot better before the rationing-induced rickets epidemic, and the Resistance overthrows the Axis in a revolutionary wave. Although Communists take over in much of liberated Europe and the Derby Soviet endures for several months, the ultimate will of the people is a return to normality in the form of Churchill's government in exile, imposed by a CANZUK Expeditionary Force.

MacDonald's pre-Exile colonial experience and Eden's gruesome death make the former a shoo-in to succeed Churchill when his health catches up with him, while Labour does its best to render itself unelectable - and collaborationist careers cut short by the Liberation begin to twitch into life again.

I cannot help but to pity poor William Lyon Mackenzie King in this scenario. FDR was genuinely concerned about Britain falling and a Quisling-style puppet government be set up, and tried to recruit Mackenzie King and the other Commonwealth Prime Ministers to set up a contingency plan--essentially behind Churchill's back--for how the Royal Navy was to be dispersed immediately following the Fall of Britain, and how an exilic British government set up in Ottawa was to operate.

Seeing Mackenzie King was having massive problems at home with the French-speaking part of his country's population, with whom the war was very unpopular, he was not particularly happy with FDR's overtures at all.
 
Think I mentioned before when I did my Ken Livingstone list that I wanted to do more OTL electoral history lists for prominent OTL people to facilitate editing them to make ATL ones - the Livingstone one was basically just OTL with a twist at the end.

With that in mind:

Electoral history of Tony Blair

1982: Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Beaconsfield by-election
1982: Tim Smith (Con) def. Paul Tyler (Lib), Tony Blair (Lab), Michael Byrne (New Britain), Bill Boaks (Democratic Monarchist), Thomas Keen (Benn in Ten Unless Proportional Representation)
1983: Selected as Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Sedgefield
1983 def: Les Huckfield
1983-2007: Labour Member of Parliament for Sedgefield
1983 def: Gavin Horton (Con), David Shand (SDP), Maurice Logan-Salton (Ind)
1987 def: Nigel Hawkins (Con), Ralph Andrew (SDP)
1992 def: Nicholas Jopling (Con), Gary Huntington (Lib Dem)
1997 def: Elizabeth Pitman (Con), Ronald Beadle (Lib Dem), Miriam Hall (Referendum), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour)
2001 def: Douglas Carswell (Con), Andrew Duffield (Lib Dem), Andrew Spence (UKIP), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour), Christopher Driver (Rock 'n' Roll Loony), Helen John (Ind)
2005 def: Al Lockwood (Con), Robert Woodthorpe Browne (Lib Dem), Reg Keys (Ind), William Brown (UKIP), Mark Farrell (NF), Fiona Luckhurst-Matthews (Veritas), Berony Abraham (Ind), Melodie Staniforth (Monster Raving Loony), Jonathan Cockburn (Blair Must Go Party), Terrence Pattison (Senior Citizens Party), Cherri Gilham (UK Pensioners Party), Helen John (Ind), John Barker (Ind), Julian Brennan (Ind)

1994-2007: Leader of the Labour Party
1994 def: John Prescott, Margaret Beckett
1994-1997: Leader of the Opposition (Labour)
1997-2007: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Labour)
1997 def: John Major (Con), Paddy Ashdown (Lib Dem)
2001 def: William Hague (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)
2005 def: Michael Howard (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)


Can anyone think of anything else that should be in there or any thoughts on the format? The only other thing I couldn't find was if he was selected over anyone else in the Beaconsfield by-election of 1982 - @Ingsoc ? @iainbhx ?
 
That reminds me of an old idea of mine...

Electoral history of Carl Hagen
1964-65: Member of the Student Representative Council, Sunderland Technical College
1967-68: President of the Students' Union, Newcastle College of Commerce
1968-69: Vice President of the National Union of Students
1968 def. Jack Straw (RSA)
1969: Candidate for President of the National Union of Students
1969: Trevor Fisk (Mod) def. Carl Hagen (ind), Jack Straw (RSA)
1970-72: President of the National Union of Students
1970 def. Trevor Fisk (Mod), Jack Straw (RSA)
1971 def. Digby Jacks (RSA)

1974: Selected as Conservative candidate for Louth
1974-83: Conservative Member of Parliament for Louth
Feb 1974 def. John Sellick (Liberal), A. G. Dowson (Labour)
Oct 1974 def. John Sellick (Liberal), R. Mitchell (Labour)
1979 def. John Sellick (Liberal), Clive Betts (Labour)

1979-81: Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
1981-83: Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
1983-97: Conservative Member of Parliament for Brigg and Cleethorpes
1983 def. Gavin Wigginton (Liberal), John Hough (Labour)
1987 def. Ian Powney (Liberal), Terence Geraghty (Labour)
1992 def. Ian Cawsey (Labour), Margaret Cockbill (Liberal), Douglas Jacques (Green)

1983-85: Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
1985-87: Secretary of State for Agriculture, Fisheries and the Environment
1987-88:

Still a bit unsure how to represent positions in government.
 
Think I mentioned before when I did my Ken Livingstone list that I wanted to do more OTL electoral history lists for prominent OTL people to facilitate editing them to make ATL ones - the Livingstone one was basically just OTL with a twist at the end.

With that in mind:

Electoral history of Tony Blair

1982: Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Beaconsfield by-election
1982: Tim Smith (Con) def. Paul Tyler (Lib), Tony Blair (Lab), Michael Byrne (New Britain), Bill Boaks (Democratic Monarchist), Thomas Keen (Benn in Ten Unless Proportional Representation)
1983: Selected as Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Sedgefield
1983 def: Les Huckfield
1983-2007: Labour Member of Parliament for Sedgefield
1983 def: Gavin Horton (Con), David Shand (SDP), Maurice Logan-Salton (Ind)
1987 def: Nigel Hawkins (Con), Ralph Andrew (SDP)
1992 def: Nicholas Jopling (Con), Gary Huntington (Lib Dem)
1997 def: Elizabeth Pitman (Con), Ronald Beadle (Lib Dem), Miriam Hall (Referendum), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour)
2001 def: Douglas Carswell (Con), Andrew Duffield (Lib Dem), Andrew Spence (UKIP), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour), Christopher Driver (Rock 'n' Roll Loony), Helen John (Ind)
2005 def: Al Lockwood (Con), Robert Woodthorpe Browne (Lib Dem), Reg Keys (Ind), William Brown (UKIP), Mark Farrell (NF), Fiona Luckhurst-Matthews (Veritas), Berony Abraham (Ind), Melodie Staniforth (Monster Raving Loony), Jonathan Cockburn (Blair Must Go Party), Terrence Pattison (Senior Citizens Party), Cherri Gilham (UK Pensioners Party), Helen John (Ind), John Barker (Ind), Julian Brennan (Ind)

1994-2007: Leader of the Labour Party
1994 def: John Prescott, Margaret Beckett
1994-1997: Leader of the Opposition (Labour)
1997-2007: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Labour)
1997 def: John Major (Con), Paddy Ashdown (Lib Dem)
2001 def: William Hague (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)
2005 def: Michael Howard (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)


Can anyone think of anything else that should be in there or any thoughts on the format? The only other thing I couldn't find was if he was selected over anyone else in the Beaconsfield by-election of 1982 - @Ingsoc ? @iainbhx ?

I might wrap it up with something like 2007-Present: Private Citizen (Labour) but that's just me personally.
 
1970: Edward Heath (Conservative)
Election 1970: Harold Wilson (Labour); Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
Election 1974: Harold Wilson (Labour); Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)


1976: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative)

1979: Shirley Williams (Labour)
Election 1979: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative); David Steel (Liberal)
Election 1983: Keith Joseph (Conservative); David Steel & Ian Gilmour (Liberal - One Nation Party Alliance)
Election 1987: Douglas Hurd (Conservative); David Steel & Michael Heseltine (Liberal - One Nation Party Alliance)


1990: Neil Kinnock (Labour)
Election 1992: Douglas Hurd (Conservative); Paddy Ashdown (United Liberal)


1997: Michael Portillo (Conservative)
Election 1997: Neil Kinnock (Labour); Paddy Ashdown (United Liberal)
Election 2001: Alan Johnson (Labour); Charles Kennedy (United Liberal)
Election 2005: Jack Straw (Labour); Charles Kennedy (United Liberal)


2007: Francis Maude (Conservative)

2010: David Miliband (Labour) (Coalition 2010-15)
Election 2010: Francis Maude (Conservative); Nick Clegg (United Liberal)
Election 2015: George Osborne (Conservative); Suzanne Evans (UKIP); Nick Clegg (United Liberal)


2016: Yvette Cooper (Minority 2016-19)
Election 2017: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative); Suzanne Evans (UKIP); Tim Farron (United Liberal)


2019: TBC
Either Sir Keir Starmer, Douglas Alexander, Owen Smith, Chuka Umunna or Clive Lewis



Guess what I've done here...
 
This reminds me of one I've wanted to do for a while:

Electoral History of James Hacker
1961: Selected as Conservative candidate for Bristol South East
1961-63: Conservative Member of Parliament for Bristol South East
1961 by-election: Wedgwood Benn, 2nd Viscount Stansgate (Labour) (disqualified) def. James Hacker (Conservative)
1963-65: Private Citizen, Editor of Reform magazine, Lecturer at Bristol College of Science and Technology
1965: Selected as Conservative candidate for Birmingham East
1965-91: Conservative Member of Parliament for Birmingham East
1965 by-election def. David Mumford (Labour), Penelope Jessel (Liberal)
1966 def. George Jonas (Labour), John Green (Liberal)
1970 def. T.L. Keene (Labour)
1974 def. David Jamieson (Labour)
1976 def. T.J. Stewart (Labour), Peter Davis (Liberal), J.L. Hutchinson (Communist Party of England (Marxist-Leninist))
1980 def. T.J. Stewart (Labour), P.M. Lockyer (Liberal), Derek Holland (National Front)
1983 def. Martin Willis (Labour), John Hemming (Liberal), Claire Fox (Revolutionary Communist), Andrew Brons (National Front)
1988 def. Frances Brook (Labour), John Hemming (Liberal), Others (incl. Martin Wingfield (National Front), Alan Clawley (Ecology), Eric Hobsbawm (Communist Party of Great Britain), S. Connelly (Red Front), various Independents)
1991 Steve McCabe (Labour) def. Andrew Hargreaves (Conservative), David McGrath (Liberal)

1991-95: Member of the House of Lords
1991 Appointed Baron Hacker of Islington

Positions held:
1970-74: Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
1974-80: Shadow Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
1980-84: Minister of Administrative Affairs
1984-88: Leader of the Conservative Party
1984 def. Eric Jeffries, Duncan Short, Henry Snodgrass, Geoffrey Pickles
1984-88: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Conservative)
1991-95: Life Peer (Conservative)
 
1970: Edward Heath (Conservative)
Election 1970: Harold Wilson (Labour); Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
Election 1974: Harold Wilson (Labour); Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)


1976: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative)

1979: Shirley Williams (Labour)
Election 1979: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative); David Steel (Liberal)
Election 1983: Keith Joseph (Conservative); David Steel & Ian Gilmour (Liberal - One Nation Party Alliance)
Election 1987: Douglas Hurd (Conservative); David Steel & Michael Heseltine (Liberal - One Nation Party Alliance)


1990: Neil Kinnock (Labour)
Election 1992: Douglas Hurd (Conservative); Paddy Ashdown (United Liberal)


1997: Michael Portillo (Conservative)
Election 1997: Neil Kinnock (Labour); Paddy Ashdown (United Liberal)
Election 2001: Alan Johnson (Labour); Charles Kennedy (United Liberal)
Election 2005: Jack Straw (Labour); Charles Kennedy (United Liberal)


2007: Francis Maude (Conservative)

2010: David Miliband (Labour) (Coalition 2010-15)
Election 2010: Francis Maude (Conservative); Nick Clegg (United Liberal)
Election 2015: George Osborne (Conservative); Suzanne Evans (UKIP); Nick Clegg (United Liberal)


2016: Yvette Cooper (Minority 2016-19)
Election 2017: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative); Suzanne Evans (UKIP); Tim Farron (United Liberal)


2019: TBC
Either Sir Keir Starmer, Douglas Alexander, Owen Smith, Chuka Umunna or Clive Lewis



Guess what I've done here...
You've answered 2007-2010 era me's rhetorical question "Who could possibly be a worse Prime Minister than what we have?"
 
Think I mentioned before when I did my Ken Livingstone list that I wanted to do more OTL electoral history lists for prominent OTL people to facilitate editing them to make ATL ones - the Livingstone one was basically just OTL with a twist at the end.

With that in mind:

Electoral history of Tony Blair

1982: Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Beaconsfield by-election
1982: Tim Smith (Con) def. Paul Tyler (Lib), Tony Blair (Lab), Michael Byrne (New Britain), Bill Boaks (Democratic Monarchist), Thomas Keen (Benn in Ten Unless Proportional Representation)
1983: Selected as Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Sedgefield
1983 def: Les Huckfield
1983-2007: Labour Member of Parliament for Sedgefield
1983 def: Gavin Horton (Con), David Shand (SDP), Maurice Logan-Salton (Ind)
1987 def: Nigel Hawkins (Con), Ralph Andrew (SDP)
1992 def: Nicholas Jopling (Con), Gary Huntington (Lib Dem)
1997 def: Elizabeth Pitman (Con), Ronald Beadle (Lib Dem), Miriam Hall (Referendum), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour)
2001 def: Douglas Carswell (Con), Andrew Duffield (Lib Dem), Andrew Spence (UKIP), Brian Gibson (Socialist Labour), Christopher Driver (Rock 'n' Roll Loony), Helen John (Ind)
2005 def: Al Lockwood (Con), Robert Woodthorpe Browne (Lib Dem), Reg Keys (Ind), William Brown (UKIP), Mark Farrell (NF), Fiona Luckhurst-Matthews (Veritas), Berony Abraham (Ind), Melodie Staniforth (Monster Raving Loony), Jonathan Cockburn (Blair Must Go Party), Terrence Pattison (Senior Citizens Party), Cherri Gilham (UK Pensioners Party), Helen John (Ind), John Barker (Ind), Julian Brennan (Ind)

1994-2007: Leader of the Labour Party
1994 def: John Prescott, Margaret Beckett
1994-1997: Leader of the Opposition (Labour)
1997-2007: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Labour)
1997 def: John Major (Con), Paddy Ashdown (Lib Dem)
2001 def: William Hague (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)
2005 def: Michael Howard (Con), Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)


Can anyone think of anything else that should be in there or any thoughts on the format? The only other thing I couldn't find was if he was selected over anyone else in the Beaconsfield by-election of 1982 - @Ingsoc ? @iainbhx ?
Same idea but (remember, OTL list as a source):

Electoral history of Gordon Brown

1972-1975: Rector of Edinburgh University
1972 def: Sir Fred Catherwood
1975-1979: Private citizen (Labour)
1979: Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Edinburgh South
1979: Michael Ancram (Con) def. Gordon Brown (Lab), J. P. B. Lovell (Lib), R. Shirley (SNP), S. M. Biggar (Ecology)
1979-1983: Private citizen (Labour)
1983: Labour Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Dunfermline East
1983-2005: Labour Member of Parliament for Dunfermline East
1983 def: David Harcus (Lib), Clive Shenton (Con), George Hunter (SNP), Alex Maxwell (Communist)
1987 def: Clive Shenton (Con), Elizabeth Harris (Lib), Alice McGarry (SNP)
1992 def: Mark E. Tennant (Con), John V. Lloyd (SNP), Teresa Martin Little (Lib Dem)
1997 def: John James Ramage (SNP), Iain Grant Mitchell (Con), Jim Tolson (Lib Dem), Thomas Dunsmore (Referendum)
2001 def: Johnny Joseph James Mellon (SNP), Stuart Roy Randall (Con), John Maciver Mainland (Lib Dem), Andrew Jackson (SSP), Thomas Dunsmore (UKIP)

2005-2015: Labour Member of Parliament for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath
2005 def: Alan Bath (SNP), Alex Cole-Hamilton (Lib Dem), Stuart Randall (Con), Steve West (SSP), Peter Adams (UKIP), James Parker (Scottish Senior Citizens), Elizabeth Kwantes (Ind), Pat Sargent (Ind)
2010 def: Douglas Chapman (SNP), John Mainland (Lib Dem), Lindsay Paterson (Con), Peter Adams (UKIP), Susan Archibald (Ind), Donald MacLaren (Ind), Derek Jackson (Land Party)

1997-2007: Chancellor of the Exchequer (Labour)
2007-2010: Leader of the Labour Party
2007: unopposed
2007-2010: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Labour)
2010: David Cameron (Con) def. Gordon Brown (Lab), Nick Clegg (Lib Dem)

Do you think this makes sense or not? It does look a bit weird to put all the parliamentary results together when the seat changes, but I can't think of a better way to do it. I also can't find any details from a cursory web search of who (if anyone) Brown defeated for the selections in 1979 and 1983.
 
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And here's one for @Skinny87

Electoral history of John Major

1968-1971: One of three Conservative councillors representing Ferndale ward, London Borough of Lambeth
1968 def: L. G. M. Davis (Lab) (showing lead candidates only)
1971: One of three Conservative candidates contesting Thornton ward, London Borough of Lambeth
1971: D. W. Wendon (Lab) def. A. E. S. Mayer (Con), J. R. Major (Con), J. P. Taylor (Lib), Mrs J. E. Styles (Communist) (showing lead candidates and Mr Major only)
1971-1974: Private citizen (Conservative)
1974: Selected as Conservative Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for St Pancras North
1974 (Feb): Albert Stallard (Lab) def. John Major (Con), Paul J. Medlicott (Lib), Gordon McLennan (Communist)
1974 (Oct): Albert Stallard (Lab) def. John Major (Con), Paul J. Medlicott (Lib)

1979: Selected Conservative Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Huntingdonshire
1979-1983: Conservative Member of Parliament for Huntingdonshire
1979 def: Julian G. H. Fulbrook (Lab), Dennis Graham Rowe (Lib), K. T. Robinson (NF)
1983-2001: Conservative Member of Parliament for Huntingdon
1983 def: Sheila Gatiss (Lib), Mark Slater (Lab), Timothy Eiloart (Ecology)
1987 def: Anthony Nicholson (SDP), David Brown (Lab), William Lavin (Green)
1992 def: Hugh Seckleman (Lab), Andrew Duff (Lib Dem), Paul Wiggin (Lib), Deborah Birkhead (Green), Screaming Lord Sutch (Monster Raving Loony), Michael Flanagan (Conservative Thatcherite), Lord Buckethead (Gremloids), Charles S. Cockell (Forward to Mars Party), David Shepherd (Natural Law)
1997 def: Jason Reece (Lab), Matthew Owen (Lib Dem), David Bellamy (Referendum), Charles Coyne (UKIP), Veronica Hufford (Christian Democrat), Duncan Robertson (Ind)

1987-1989: Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Conservative)
1989-1989: Foreign Secretary (Conservative)
1989-1990: Chancellor of the Exchequer (Conservative)
1990-1997: Leader of the Conservative and Unionist Party
1990 def: Michael Heseltine, Douglas Hurd
1995 def: John Redwood

1990-1997: Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (Conservative)
1992 def: Neil Kinnock (Lab), Paddy Ashdown (Lib Dem)
1997: Tony Blair (Lab) def. John Major (Con), Paddy Ashdown (Lib Dem)

1997-1997: Leader of the Opposition (Conservative)

Just realised I forgot to put in party leadership stuff for Brown so will add that as well.
 
broke: conservative democrats, liberal republicans
woke: left wing tories, right wing labour

1945-1954: Clement Attlee (Labour)
1945 (Majority): Winston Churchill (Conservative) , Archibald Sinclair (Liberal)
1950 (Majority): Winston Churchill (Conservative) , Clement Davies (Liberal)
1952 (Majority): Winston Churchill (Conservative) , Clement Davies (Liberal)

1954-1957: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour)
1957-1960: Anthony Eden (Conservative)

1957 (Majority): Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) , Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1960-1967: Rab Butler (Conservative)
1962 (Majority): Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) , Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1967-1974: Alfred Robens (Labour)
1967 (Majority): Rab Butler (Conservative) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1970 (Majority): Iain Macleod (Conservative) , Enoch Powell (National Front) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1972 (National Government with New Democratic): Iain Macleod (New Democratic) , Enoch Powell (National Front) , Tony Benn (Independent Labour) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)

1974-1975: Alfred Robens (Labour minority)
1975-1980: Ian Gilmour (New Democratic)

1975 (Coalition with Liberal): Alfred Robens (Labour) , Enoch Powell (National Front) , Tony Benn (Independent Labour) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1980-1987: David Owen (Labour)
1980 (Majority): Ian Gilmour (New Democratic) , Peter Shore (Socialist Workers) , Enoch Powell (National Front) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1982 (Majority): Jim Prior (New Democratic) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal) , Eric Heffer (Socialist Workers) , John Tyndall (National Front)

1987-1995: Anthony Meyer (New Democratic)
1987 (Majority): Tam Dalyell (National Alternative) , David Owen (Labour) , Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal) , David Icke (Green) , John Tyndall (National Front)
1992 (Majority): Tam Dalyell ('Workers' Labour) , Vince Cable (Green Liberals) , David Owen ('Continuity' Labour)

1995-2000: Michael Heseltine (New Democratic)
1997 (Coalition with Green Liberals): George Galloway (Workers) , Vince Cable (Green Liberals)
2000-2005: George Galloway (Workers)
2000 (Majority): Michael Heseltine (New Democratic) , Vince Cable (Green Liberals)
2005-2015: Shaun Woodward (New Democratic)
2005 (Majority): George Galloway (Workers) , Charles Kennedy (Green Liberals)
2007 (Majority): Kate Hoey (Workers) , Charles Kennedy (Green Liberals)
2012 (Coalition with Green Liberals): Roger Godsiff (Workers) , Charles Kennedy (Green Liberals)

2015-2017: Gordon Brown (New Democratic minority)
2017-0000: Paul Nutall (Workers)

2017 (Workers): Gordon Brown (New Democratic) , Chris Huhne (Green Liberals)
 
Electoral History of Robert Muldoon
1954: National candidate for Mount Albert
1954: Warren Freer (Labour) def. Robert Muldoon (National), Walter Crispin (Social Credit)
1957: National candidate for Waitemata
1957: Norman King (Labour) def. Robert Muldoon (National), Byrt Jordan (Social Credit)
1960-1991: Member of Parliament for Tamaki (National)
1960 def: Bob Tizard (Labour), Eric Ernest McGowan (Social Credit), Rita Smith (Communist)
1963 def: Norman Finch (Labour), Joseph F. Richards (Social Credit), Robert Arthur Allen (Liberal), Donald McEwan (Communist)
1966 def: Kevin Ryan (Labour), Keith Branch (Social Credit)
1969 def: Alfred Bolton (Labour), Keith Branch (Social Credit), Gladys May Thorpy (Independent)
1972 def: A. H. Hedger (Labour), G. R. Jessup (Values), James Robinson (Social Credit), Bill Andersen (Socialist Unity), E. W. Higdon (Socialist Action), George Mullenger (Independent National), I. H. Upton (New Democratic)
1975 def: C. T. Kaye (Labour), Brent Impey (Values), David Stevens (Social Credit), Bill Andersen (Socialist Unity), E. W. Higdon (Socialist Action)
1978 def: Audie Cooke-Pennefather (Labour), Les Tasker (Social Credit), J. Woolnough (Values), D. Harden (Progressive National), Bill Andersen (Socialist Unity), P. T. P. Grace (Independent), A. H. Greig (United)
1981 def: Richard Northey (Labour), John Stevens (Social Credit), Bill Andersen (Socialist Unity)
1984 def: Robin Tulloch (Labour), John Hodgson (NZ Party), Eddie Hagen (Social Credit), Brett Cunningham (Values), S. Hall (Independent), D. B. Butler (Independent)
1987 def: Carl Harding (Labour), Richard John Pittams (Democrats), D. T. Roberts (NZ Party), Bruce Symondson (Values)
1990 def: Malcolm Johnston (Labour), Richard Green (Green), Bill Logue (NewLabour), Craig T. Young (McGillicuddy Serious), Craig D. Thomas (Democrats), Charles Willoughby (Social Credit), Matthew Ford Elliot (Independent), Victor Bryers (Independent)

1963-1966: Under-Secretary of Finance (National)
1966-1967: Minister of Tourism (National)
1967-1972: Minister of Finance (National)
1972: Deputy Prime Minister (National)
1972 def: Unopposed
1972-1974: Deputy Leader of the Opposition (National)
1974-1984: Leader of the National Party
1974 def: Unopposed
1984: Jim McLay def. Jim Bolger, Robert Muldoon

1975-1984: Prime Minister of New Zealand (National)
1975 def: Bill Rowling (Labour)
1978 def: Bill Rowling (Labour), Bruce Beetham (Social Credit)
1981 def: Bill Rowling (Labour), Bruce Beetham (Social Credit)
1984 David Lange (Labour) def. Robert Muldoon (National), Bob Jones (NZ Party), Bruce Beetham (Social Credit)
 
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