2024 in United Kingdom politics and government

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List of years in the United Kingdom
In United Kingdom politics and government
2020
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2023
2024
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2026
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A list of events relating to politics and government in the United Kingdom during 2024.

Events[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

  • 1 February –
  • 2 February – Senior Labour MP Darren Jones confirms that the party has ditched its commitment to spend £28bn a year on green investment schemes if it wins the next general election.[81]
  • 3 February –
  • 4 February –
    • Dafydd Wigley, a former leader of Plaid Cymru, warns that reforms to Wales's political system pose "a very great danger" since it would destroy the relationship between voters and the people they elect.[87]
    • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak arrives in Northern Ireland to visit ministers following the restoration of the Executive.[88]
  • 5 February –
    • Sunak visits Stormont along with Taoiseach Leo Varadkar to mark the restoration of the Northern Ireland Executive.[89]
    • Sunak is criticised by opposition parties after appearing to agree to a £1,000 bet on the Rwanda asylum plan, that the first flight to Rwanda would take off before the election.[90] He subsequently says the challenge, put forward by TalkTV presenter Piers Morgan, took him by surprise, but that it was not a mistake to accept it.[91]
    • Sunak says the government has "not made enough progress" on cutting NHS waiting lists in England, but that industrial action "has had an impact".[92]
    • The UK government sets out its Disability Action Plan, which includes measures to protect people with assistance dogs from being illegally refused entry to businesses.[93]
    • The UK government launches a six-week consultation on plans for Martyn's Law, which would make provisions to better protect the public against potential acts of terrorism.[94]
  • 6 February –
  • 7 February –
    • Sunak faced a call from a Labour MP to apologise after he ridiculed Starmer over his U-turn on "defining a woman" at Prime Minister's Questions.[100]
    • Met Office data obtained by BBC Verify raises questions over UK government claims that poor weather conditions had no impact on a fall in English Channel migrant crossings during 2023. The number of crossings were fewer than during the previous year, which the government had said was nothing to do with the weather, but the figures suggest there were fewer days during 2023 when compared to 2022 when migrants could successfully cross the Channel.[101]
  • 8 February –
    • Labour scraps its plans for a £28bn annual green investment, with Sir Keir Starmer saying the policy is unaffordable because of the Conservatives' economic record. In response, Sunak says Starmer "U-turns on major things, he can't say what he would do differently". Momentum says the announcement "represents yet another capitulation to right-wing interests".[102]
    • Michael Matheson resigns as Scotland's Health Secretary ahead of the publication of a report into £11,000 of data roaming charges accrued by his Parliamentary iPad. He is replaced by Neil Gray.[103]
    • Northern Ireland Health Minister Robin Swann confirms he is the Ulster Unionist Party candidate for the Westminster constituency of South Antrim at the next general election.[104]
  • 9 February –
  • 11 February – Azhar Ali, Labour's candidate in the Rochdale by-election, apologises after a recording of him reportedly saying that Israel had "allowed" the deadly attack by Hamas gunmen on 7 October was obtained by The Mail on Sunday.[111] Labour condemns his remarks but continues to offer its support to his candidacy.[112]
  • 12 February –
  • 13 February – Labour withdraws its support for Graham Jones, the former MP for Hyndburn, who was going to contest the seat at the next general election, after it emerges he attended a meeting at which Azhar Ali made comments about Israel.[116]
  • 14 February –
  • 15 February –
  • 16 February –
    • The Labour Party releases a summery of the tax paid by Sir Keir Starmer during 2023, showing he paid just under £100,000 in tax.[122]
    • The ballot to elect the next leader of Welsh Labour opens.[123]
    • Craig Browne resigns as deputy leader of Cheshire East Council, saying he can no longer afford to do the role on the £30,000 annual salary.[124]
  • 17 February – Delegates at the Scottish Labour Party conference pass a resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.[125]
  • 18 February –
    • Henry Staunton, the former chairman of the Post Office, tells The Sunday Times that Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch told him "Someone's got to take the rap" when he was dismissed from the post. In response Badenoch describes his comments as a "disgraceful misrepresentation" of their conversation.[126]
    • Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer calls for a "ceasefire that lasts" in Gaza.[127]
  • 19 February –
    • GOV.UK updates the Royal Cypher Crown, replacing Queen Elizabeth IIs St Edward's Crown with the Tudor Crown used by King Charles III.[128]
    • Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch tells the House of Commons that claims by Henry Staunton, the former chair of the Post Office, that he was told to delay compensation payments for sub-postmasters are "completely false".[129]
    • The UK government announces plans for new measures on holiday homes in England to stop local people being priced out of being able to live in their community.[130]
    • Ofcom launches an impartiality investigation into GB News's Q&A session with prime minister Rishi Sunak.[131]
    • The UK government announces that a scheme allowing Ukrainian nationals to join relatives in the UK has closed to new applicants.[132]
    • Birmingham City Council announces plans to raise council tax by 21% over the next two years as part of £300m in budget cuts.[133]
  • 20 February –
  • 21 February –
    • An Opposition day House of Commons debate calling for a ceasefire in Gaza descends into chaos after Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle breaks with Parliamentary convention to allow a vote on a Labour amendment calling for an "immediate humanitarian ceasefire" over the scheduled SNP motion calling for an "immediate ceasefire". The decision leads to protests from both Conservative and SNP MPs, who walk out of the House, leaving Labour's motion to be nodded through when the other two parties do not take part in the vote. Amid calls for his resignation, Hoyle says that he allowed the House to vote on the Labour motion so MPs could express their view on "the widest range of propositions", and to protect MPs' safety.[140]
    • King Charles III is seen back at work and meeting Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, the first time he has been seen back at work since his cancer diagnosis.[141]
    • Senior civil servant Sarah Munby writes to the Business Secretary to reject allegations by former Post Office chairman Henry Staunton that he was told to delay compensation payments to victims of the Horizon scandal.[142]
  • 22 February –
    • More than 60 MPs have signed a House of Commons motion calling for the resignation of Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle.[143]
    • The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority launches an investigation into claims that Pensions Minister Paul Maynard used public funds to finance his campaign.[144]
    • The UK government announces that legislation will be introduced to clear hundreds of sub-postmasters in England and Wales who were wrongly convicted as a result of the Horizon IT scandal.[145]
    • Argyll and Bute Council votes to raise its council tax by 10%, and rejects the Scottish Government's council tax freeze by doing so.[146]
    • Former Prime Minister Liz Truss addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference in the United States, where she claims Western civilisation is at risk if Conservatives do not develop a louder voice, and attributes the downfall of her administration to "antagonism" from the establishment.[147] She subsequently appears on a podcast with former Trump strategist Steve Bannon, where she remains silent as Bannon describes the far-right political activist Tommy Robinson as a "hero".[148]
  • 23 February –
    • A UK government commissioned report prepared by Lord Walney recommends giving police extra powers to tackle protests outside Parliament in order to protect politicians against "intimidation" that could influence the way they vote.[149]
    • Sammy Wilson announces his resignation as DUP Chief Whip at Westminster.[150]
    • The UK agrees a deal with the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) to work more closely to prevent migrants crossing the English Channel in small boats.[151]
    • Bob Stewart, MP for Beckenham, has his conviction for a racially aggravated public order offence quashed following an appeal.[152]
  • 24 February – Lee Anderson is suspended from the Conservative Party after "refusing to apologise" for claiming "Islamists" had "got control" of London Mayor Sadiq Khan during an edition of his GB News show the previous day.[153]
  • 25 February –
    • Sunak warns of the dangers of polarisation and hatred in politics following a week of political friction at Westminster.[154]
    • Preet Gill, Labour MP for Birmingham Edgbaston, tells BBC Politics Midlands that receiving death threats appears to have become the "norm" and that her job worries her "in a way I've never been worried before".[155]
    • The SNP announces plans to apply for another parliamentary debate on Gaza in the coming week.[156]
    • The Scottish Government confirms that Economy Secretary Màiri McAllan, who is pregnant, will take maternity leave during the summer, becoming the second Scottish Government minister to do so.[157]
  • 26 February –
    • House of Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle rejects the SNP's request for an emergency debate on Gaza.[158]
    • Lee Anderson says that his words were clumsy, but refuses to apologise for his comments about Sadiq Khan.[159]
  • 27 February –
    • A statement from 10 Downing Street says that the prime minister believed Lee Anderson's comments were wrong because they conflated "all Muslims with Islamist extremism".[160]
    • Conservative MP and former minister Paul Scully apologises for suggesting there are "no-go" areas in parts of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.[161]
    • MSPs vote 68–55 in favour of the 2024 Scottish budget, which includes a council tax freeze and 45% and 48% income tax rates for higher earners.[162]
    • Fergus Ewing loses his appeal against a week-long suspension from the SNP group at Holyrood in September 2023 after he criticised the party leadership.[163]
    • MPs vote to suspend Scott Benton from Parliament for 35 days, triggering a recall petition.[164]
  • 28 February –
    • The UK government announces a £31m financial package to improve MPs security.[165]
    • Pro-Palestinian groups say they will continue to march after Home Secretary James Cleverly questioned whether holding regular marches "adds value" to calls for a ceasefire in Gaza during an interview with The Times.[166]
    • The High Court in Belfast rules that conditional immunity from prosecutions for Troubles-era crimes, contained in the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023, is in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights.[167]
    • Addressing a meeting of police leaders, Sunak warns of a "growing consensus that mob rule is replacing democratic rule" and says that "a pattern of increasingly violent and intimidatory [sic] behaviour" cannot be allowed to stop elected representatives doing their job..[168]
  • 29 February –

March[edit]

  • 1 March –
    • 2024 Rochdale by-election:
      • Sir Keir Starmer apologises to the voters of Rochdale for disowning the Labour Party's candidate, but says it was "the right decision".[173]
      • In a statement outside 10 Downing Street, Sunak warns that Islamists and far-right extremists, which he describes as "two sides of the same extremist coin", are trying to "deliberately" undermine the UK's "multi-faith democracy", and says the UK must face them down.[174]
    • Figures from the National Audit Office show the UK government will pay Rwanda a total of £350m for the agreement to take asylum seekers, with £150,000 also being paid to Rwanda for each person sent there.[175]
    • Conservative peer Lord Bamford, chairman of JCB, retires from the House of Lords.[176]
  • 2 – 3 March – The London Labour conference is held at the Leonardo Royal Hotel in Tower Bridge.[177]
  • 4 March –
    • Sunak says the UK economy is "getting on the right track" ahead of what is expected to be the last budget before the next election.[178]
    • George Galloway is sworn in as an MP at Westminster.[179]
    • Paul Scully, MP for Sutton and Cheam, announces he is standing down from Parliament at the next general election.[180]
    • Lee Waters announces he is stepping down as Wales's Transport Minister when the new First Minister of Wales is elected.[181]
  • 5 March – A bid by the Welsh Conservatives and Welsh Liberal Democrats to change planned reforms to the way Senedd members are elected from the 2026 election is rejected by the parliament.[182]
  • 6 March –
  • 7 March – Blur drummer Dave Rowntree is selected as the Labour Party candidate for Mid Sussex.[187]
  • 8 March –
  • 9 March –
    • In an article posted on LinkedIn, senior UK government ministers Anne-Marie Trevelyan and Tom Tugendhat urge Sunak to increase defence spending to above 2.5% of GDP, arguing that the UK needs to "lead the way" on defence spending and invest at a "much greater pace".[191]
    • A Daily Telegraph report alleging a conflict-of-interest involving First Minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf after the Scottish Government donated £250,000 to the UN agency UNRWA, which supports Palestinian refugees, is rejected by Yousaf as an "outrageous smear" and a "far right conspiracy".[192]
  • 10 March – BBC News reports that former Prime Minister Boris Johnson flew to Venezuela during February for an unofficial private meeting with President Nicolás Maduro.[193]
  • 11 March –
    • Ashfield MP Lee Anderson defects from the Conservatives to Reform UK, becoming the party's first sitting Member of Parliament.[194]
    • Addressing the Institute for Government, former prime minister Sir John Major criticises his recent Conservative successors for the attitude towards the civil service, and describes the quick succession of prime ministers in recent years as "not conducive to good government".[195]
    • As the UK government prepares to redraw the definition of extremism, former Home Secretaries Priti Patel, Sajid Javid and Amber Rudd warn against attempting to politicise extremism at the next election.[196]
    • After the Welsh Government publishes plans to require parties in the Senedd to draw up lists of candidates composing of 50% of women, presiding officer Elin Jones says that the Senedd does not have the power to enforce gender quotas.[197]
    • Conservative Party donor Frank Hester apologises after The Guardian reported comments he is alleged to have made in 2019 about Labour MP Diane Abbott, when he is said to have suggested she made him "want to hate all black women" and that she "should be shot".[198]
    • David Neal, the former Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, has described the Home Office is dysfunctional and in urgent need of reform, citing problems with immigration as an example.[199]
  • 12 March –
    • A spokesman for the prime minister describes the remarks allegedly made by Frank Hester about Diane Abbott as "racist and wrong".[200]
    • A recall petition opens in the Blackpool South constituency following Scott Benton's 35 day suspension from Parliament.[201]
  • 13 March –
    • Sunak tells Prime Minister's Questions he will not return £10m donated to the Conservative Party by Frank Hester, because he has apologised and "his remorse should be accepted".[202]
    • The UK government announces a scheme to offer failed asylum seekers £3,000 if they agree to move to Rwanda voluntarily.[203]
    • The UK government announces a ban on foreign state ownership of British newspapers and news magazines following controversy over a potential purchase of The Telegraph by a consortium backed by the United Arab Emirates.[204]
    • Middlesbrough MP Andy McDonald regains the Labour whip.[205]
  • 14 March –
  • 15 March –
    • Armed Forces Minister James Heappey, MP for Wells, announces he will not stand at the next general election.[215]
    • A report by the Public Accounts Committee finds that only 10% of money promised to reduce inequality under the Levelling Up scheme actually been spent.[216]
    • The Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill, introduced as a private member's bill, passes its first reading in the House of Commons after securing the backing of the UK government. The bill aims to ban the import of puppies, kittens and ferrets under the age of six months into the UK.[217]
    • Apple agrees to pay a £385m settlement on a lawsuit led by Norfolk County Council, which was started over allegations Apple CEO Tim Cook defrauded shareholders in a pension company administered by the Council by covering up lower demand for iPhones in China.[218]
  • 16 March –
  • 17 March –
    • Transport Secretary Mark Harper tells the BBC that the Conservative Party welcomes members "whatever their race".[223]
    • Pete Wishart, the SNP's longest-serving MP at Westminster, distances himself from the party's election message of making Scotland "Tory-free", describing it as unhelpful.[224]
  • 18 March –
    • Amendments to the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill tabled in the House of Lords are overturned again in the House of Commons. The changes included allowing courts to question Rwanda's safety as a country.[225]
    • Former US President Barack Obama arrives at 10 Downing Street for talks with Sunak.[226]
    • Ofcom finds that five episodes of GB News shows presented by Jacob Rees Mogg, Esther McVey and Phillip Davies broke their rules, and warns the channel about its use of Conservative MPs to host news content.[227]
    • Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch dismisses rumours of a plot to unseat Sunak as Conservative leader as the party continues to fair badly in the polls.[228]
  • 19 March –
    • While speaking to a House of Lords Committee, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt hints that the next general election may take place in October.[229]
    • Labour's Clive Lewis, MP for Norwich South, apologises for swearing in Parliament after he was overheard to use the word "shit" while voting on the government's Rwanda legislation the previous evening.[230]
    • The Football Governance Bill, which aims to establish an independent football regulator for England, is introduced into Parliament.[231]
    • Mark Drakeford attends his final First Minister's Questions as First Minister of Wales.[232]
  • 20 March –
    • The Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which would make it illegal for anyone born after 2009 to purchase cigarettes by raising the minimum age by a year starting in 2027, begins its process through Parliament.[233]
    • The Senedd approves Vaughan Gething as the next First Minister of Wales.[234]
  • 21 March –
  • 22 March –
    • West Yorkshire Police launches an investigation into the alleged comments made about Diane Abbott by Conservative Party donor Frank Hester.[241]
    • A private member's bill introduced to Parliament by Conservative MP Gareth Johnson that aimed to prevent the expansion of London's Ultra Low Emission Zone runs out of Parliamentary time.[242]
    • Penny Mordaunt dismisses rumours of a potential leadership challenge against Rishi Sunak as "nonsense".[243]
    • MPs in the House of Commons give their backing to a private member's bill that will ban the import of hunting trophies into the UK if it becomes law.[244]
  • 24 March – Chancellor Jeremy Hunt says the Conservatives will keep the triple lock mechanism for deciding the rise in the state pension if they win the next election.[245]
  • 25 March –
  • 26 March –
  • 27 March – A report clears Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin of breaching COVID-19 laws over his attendance at a "wine and nibbles" event on the Parliamentary estate in December 2020, which the report describes as socially-distanced with "business and social elements".[251]
  • 28 March –
  • 29 March – Sir Jeffrey Donaldson resigns as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party after being charged with rape and other historical sexual offences.[255] Gavin Robinson is appointed interim leader until a new leader can be elected.[256]
  • 30 March – First Minister of Northern Ireland Michelle O'Neill says she is determined the Stormont Assembly and Executive will continue to function following the resignation of Jeffrey Donaldson as DUP leader.[257]
  • 31 March –
    • The UK government says it will work alongside the Northern Ireland Executive to maintain stability at Stormont.[258]
    • A Survation poll of 15,000 people suggests the Conservatives could win fewer than 100 seats at the next election, forecasting Labour with 468 seats, the Conservatives with 98 seats, the Scottish National Party with 41 seats and the Liberal Democrats with 22 seats.[259]

April[edit]

  • 1 April –
  • 2 April – Education Secretary Gillian Keegan says that proposed homelessness legislation will not be used against "excessive smells".[263] The Criminal Justice Bill, which is currently making its way through Parliament, will replace the 1824 Vagrancy Act.[264]
  • 3 April –
    • Labour commits to the Conservatives' childcare expansion plans if it wins the next general election.[265]
    • MP Johnny Mercer announces his intention to challenge a court order to reveal names of those who had told him about alleged war crimes by British special forces in Afghanistan.[266]
  • 4 April – Conservative MP William Wragg tells The Times he shared the phone numbers of fellow MPs with someone he met on a dating app after sending the person intimate pictures of himself.[267]
  • 5 April –
    • Veterans' Minister Johnny Mercer is given until 8 May to present his argument as to why he should not reveal the identity of those who told him about alleged war crimes committed in Afghanistan by British Special Forces.[268]
    • The Conservative Party launches an investigation into former Foreign Office minister Alan Duncan after an appearance on LBC during which he claimed the Conservative Friends of Israel was "doing the bidding" of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.[269]
    • Conservative MP Luke Evans identifies himself to police as "a victim of cyber-flashing and malicious communication".[270]
  • 8 April –
    • Ofcom launches an investigation into the 29 March edition of David Lammy's show on LBC to determine whether it broke the rules regarding politicians acting as newsreaders.[271]
    • William Wragg steps down as vice chair of the Conservative Party's 1922 Committee following revelations about the Westminster WhatsApp scam.[272]
    • Richard Tice, leader of Reform UK, defends his party's vetting procedure after 12 general election candidates were deselected for offensive social media posts.[273]
  • 9 April –
    • William Wragg voluntarily resigns the Conservative whip and will sit in Parliament as an independent MP. He also gives up his role on the Public Administration Committee.[274]
    • The brother-in-law of First Minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf appeared at Dundee Sheriff Court charged with abduction and extortion following an incident where a man fell from a block of flats and later died.[275]
    • Three people are arrested after staging a protest outside the London home of Keir Starmer.[276]
  • 10 April –
    • Figures published by the Foreign Office indicate that £4.3bn of its budget for 2023 – roughly a quarter of the overall foreign aid budget for the year – was spent on refugees and asylum seekers in the UK.[277]
    • Scottish Labour suspends Wilma Brown, its parliamentary candidate for Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy, following reports she liked racist and Islamophobic posts on social media.[278]
  • 11 April –
  • 12 April –
  • 13 April –
  • 14 April – Some Conservative MPs and businesspeople are proposing to boycott Downing Street's Eid celebration, scheduled for the following day, because of the UK government's support for Israel.[298]
  • 15 April –
    • Peers living outside London become eligible to claim £100 for accommodation expenses when they attend sittings at the House of Lords.[299]
    • Sunak is absent from the Downing Street Eid celebration.[300]
    • Former Prime Minister Liz Truss endorses Donald Trump to win the 2024 United States presidential election.[301]
  • 16 April –
    • The Tobacco and Vapes Bill passes by 383 votes to 67, banning anyone born after 2009 from legally buying cigarettes in the UK.[302]
    • The House of Lords reinstates proposed changes to the UK government's Rwanda legislation.[303]
    • An amendment to the Criminal Justice Bill will make the creation of sexually explicit deepfake images a specific criminal offence in England and Wales if the images are created without the permission of the person.[304]
  • 17 April –
  • 18 April –
  • 19 April –
  • 20 April – BBC News reports that the SNP will form a minority government if the Scottish Greens vote to end their power-sharing agreement.[322]
  • 21 April –
  • 22 April –
    • Parliament passes the Safety of Rwanda Bill, with plans to deport the first asylum seekers to Kigali in July.[325]
    • Two men, including a parliamentary researcher, are charged with spying for China after providing information that could be "useful to an enemy".[326]
    • Conservative councillor Richard Solesbury-Timms, who represents Middleton Cheney on West Northamptonshire Council, leaves the party to sit as an independent citing the party's dealing with allegations against the council leader.[327]
  • 23 April –
  • 24 April –
    • Rishi Sunak vows to increase UK defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2030.[330]
    • Labour unveils its plans for improvements to train services, which include automatic refunds for delays, a "best price" guarantee and improved internet coverage.[331]
    • Jeffrey Donaldson appears at Newry Magistrates’ Court to face charges of historic child abuse.[332]
    • Johnny Timpson, the UK's inaugural disability ambassador, resigns over the UK government's policy of clawing back benefit overpayment.[333]
  • 25 April –
  • 26 April –
    • Humza Yousaf says he will not resign as first minister of Scotland despite facing a motion of no confidence in his government.[339]
    • Sadiq Khan apologises to the Chief Rabbi over comments he made during a discussion about Islamophobia.[340]
  • 27 April –
  • 28 April –
    • BBC News reports that Yousaf had ruled out an electoral pact between the SNP and Alba Party after Alex Salmond suggested the party would support him in a vote of no confidence in the Scottish Parliament.[343]
    • Sunak refuses to rule out a general election in July following speculation of a summer election.[344]
  • 29 April –

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

September[edit]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

Publications[edit]

Deaths[edit]

References[edit]

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