2025 in United Kingdom politics and government


A list of events relating to politics and government in the United Kingdom during 2025.

Events

January

February

  • 3 February –
  • 4 February –
  • 5 February –
  • 6 February – Chris McEleny is suspended as general secretary of the Alba Party following allegations of gross misconduct.[65]
  • 7 February – Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf tells the BBC's Political Thinking podcast that history will judge Boris Johnson as one of the most damaging prime ministers in British history.[66]
  • 8 February – Health Minister Andrew Gwynne is sacked by the prime minister after the Mail on Sunday reported he sent a string of abusive and insulting WhatsApp about constituents and colleagues. Gwynne apologises for what he describes as the "badly misjudged" messages.[67]
  • 9 February –
  • 10 February –
    • Peter Mandelson begins his tenure as United Kingdom ambassador to the United States, and tells the BBC the UK must respect President Donald Trump's "strong and clear mandate for change".[70]
    • Oliver Ryan is suspended from the Parliamentary Labour Party over his membership of a WhatsApp group in which offensive messages were exchanged.[71]
    • King Charles III gives the prime minister and deputy prime minister a tour of his environmentally friendly, sustainable housing project at Nansledan in Cornwall.[72]
    • MPs' basic salary is set to rise by 2.8% to £93,904 from April.[73]
    • Darren Millar tells the Senedd he was in the "right place at the right time" as he defends his decision to attend the National Prayer Breakfast in the United States and miss a vote on the Welsh Government's budget. Millar also says he was promoting Welsh interests while in the US.[74]
    • Simon Case, the former Cabinet Secretary, is appointed as the chair of the Team Barrow Delivery Board, a board that will oversee a £200m project to redevelop Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria.[75]
  • 11 February –
    • Labour suspends 11 councillors in Greater Manchester as part of its investigation into a WhatsApp group in which offensive messages were exchanged.[76]
    • James Garnor resigns as a member of Whittlebury Parish Council after a video was share that appeared to show an explosive device being triggered by a cat.[77]
  • 12 February – A review into the events leading up to the murder of David Amess finds that his killer, Ali Harbi Ali, was exited from the government's Prevent anti-terror programme "too quickly" and that its handling of him was "sub-optimal".[78]
  • 13 February –
  • 14 February – The UK government scraps the role of independent adviser on political violence, created before the last general election.[84]
  • 16 February – Former prime minister Sir John Major warns that the US's isolationist policy could be a threat to world democracy as it could leave a power vacuum and embolden states such as Russia and China.[85]
  • 17 February – Social Democratic and Labour Party leader Claire Hanna announces that the party will decline any invitations to the White House for St Patrick's Day celebrations due to Donald Trump's stance on the Gaza conflict.[86]
  • 19 February – Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds faces calls for his resignation after he was accused of falsely saying he was a solicitor in his online CV.[87]
  • 20 February –
    • Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy says she will raise concerns with BBC bosses over the documentary Gaza: How To Survive A War Zone, narrated by a 13-year-old boy who is the son of Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Hamas is a prescribed terrorist group in the UK, Israel and many other countries.[88] The film is subsequently removed from BBC iPlayer.[89]
    • Nigel Farage gives up ownership of Reform UK, the party he founded as a private limited company in 2018, and relinquishes his shares in the organisation.[90]
    • Nathan Gill, the former leader of Reform UK in Wales, is charged with offences relating to bribery and is scheduled to appear in court on Monday 24 February.[91]
  • 21 February –
  • 24 February –
    • Suspended Labour MP Mike Amesbury is sentenced to ten weeks in prison after admitting to punching a man to the ground in his Cheshire constituency.[96]
    • Westminster's Strangers' Bar is scheduled to reopen following a safety review. The establishment will have CCTV and extra security guards, while bar staff will be trained to look out for any potential safety issues.[97]
    • The UK government rejects a call from Plaid Cymru to devolve responsibility for the Crown Estate in Wales to the Welsh Government, saying it would make no sense to do so.[98]
    • Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister, Emma Little-Pengelly confirms she will travel to Washington for St Patrick's Day celebrations at the White House.[99]
  • 25 February
  • 27 February –
  • 28 February –

March

April

May

June

  • 2 June – Reform UK announces plans to cut "wasteful spending" in councils it controls with the establishment of what it describes as a Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), with Kent County Council the first area to have a Doge department.[263]
  • 4 June – In her first question to the prime minister during Prime Minister's Questions, Sarah Pochin, the newly-elected Reform UK MP for Runcorn and Helsby, calls on Sir Keir Starmer to introduce a ban of the wearing of burqas "in the interests of public safety". Her request is rejected by the prime minister, and described as "dumb" by Reform's chairman, Zia Yusuf.[264]
  • 5 June –
  • 6 June –
    • BBC News reports that opposition to the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill is growing among MPs, with a number who voted for it or abstained now saying they will vote against it.[269]
    • Following criticism of her performance at Prime Minister's Questions, Kemi Badenoch says she is "going to get better" as her party's leader, and is not "shy about self-criticism".[270]
    • Nathaniel Fried tells Politics South East that he resigned as head of Reform UK's Doge effort because the departure of Zia Yusuf left him with "a bit of doubt" about the project's future.[271]
    • Alexander Walker, the youngest member of Rhyl Town Council, is elected as the town's mayor at the age of 25.[272]
  • 7 June – Zia Yusuf announces he will return to Reform UK two days after resigning, and will run its Doge team.[273]
  • 8 June –
    • The UK government says it intends to spend £86bn on the science and technology sector by the end of the current parliament.[274]
    • Reform's deputy leader, Richard Tice, insists the party knows "exactly what it is doing" following Zia Yusuf's departure and return.[275]
    • Speaking on BBC Scotland's Sunday Show, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar accuses the Scottish National Party of running a "dishonest and disgraceful" campaign ahead of the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election by attempting to push voters towards Reform UK, whose candidate came third in the election.[276]
  • 9 June – In a major political U-turn, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves confirms that three quarters of old age pensioners – roughly nine million – will receive winter fuel payments during the coming winter, with pensioners on an annual income of £35,000 or less eligible to receive the benefit.[277]
  • 10 June – Television presenter David Bull is named as Chairman of Reform UK, replacing Zia Yusuf.[278]
  • 12 June – The Data (Use and Access) Bill passes its final reading in the House of Lords and will now become law once it received Royal assent.[279]
  • 13 June –
  • 17 June – Orkney Islands Council ends its two-year investigation into achieving greater autonomy after a report concluded it would be too difficult and expensive, and instead agrees to look at a single authority model.[282]
  • 19 June – Vicky Foxcroft resigns as a government whip over the UK government's plans to cut disability benefits.[283]
  • 20 June –
    • The UK government announces an overhaul of local spending that will see the most deprived areas receiving the most money.[284]
    • The Scottish Government announces that WhatsApp and other non-corporate messaging services will be removed from its official phones.[285]
    • Kay Mason Billig, the leader of Norfolk County Council, apologises "unreservedly" for posting a picture of a steak dinner on Facebook with the words: "Wonder what all the poor people are doing?"[286]
  • 21 June – An Ipsos poll gives Reform UK its highest poll rating so far, with 34%, nine points ahead of Labour on 25%, and 19 points ahead of the Conservatives on 15%.[287]
  • 22 June – Former Pembrokeshire councillor Andrew Edwards is disqualified from holding public office for four years over a racist voice note he posted on WhatsApp.[288]
  • 23 June – Reform UK announces that it would give people with non-domicile tax status the chance to avoid some UK taxes by paying a £250,000 fee, with the proceeds going to people on the lowest incomes.[289]
  • 25 June –
    • Buckingham Palace confirms that US President Donald Trump will make a full state visit to the UK later in the year.[290]
    • Starmer says the government will press ahead with a parliamentary vote on welfare reform on 1 July, despite a growing rebellion among backbench Labour MPs that could see the proposed legislation defeated.[291]
    • Reform councillor Rob Howard resigns as leader of Warwickshire County Council citing his health, and leaving his 18-year-old deputy, George Finch, as interim leader.[292]
  • 29 June – Conservative MP George Freeman refers himself to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards after allegations a company he works for asked him to ask a question in Parliament.[293]
  • 30 June – Two Reform UK breakaway parties are formed by past Reform members. Advance UK is established by Ben Habib, and Restore Britain is started by Rupert Lowe.[294][295]

July

  • 1 July – Reform UK accuses the chief executive of Warwickshire County Council of staging a "coup d'état" after she refused to remove a Progress Pride flag from the county's Shire Hall before the end of Pride Month.[296]
  • 2 July – A report by the Senedd Standards Commission finds that First Minister of Wales Eluned Morgan failed to declare a donation from the Unite union.[297]
  • 3 July – Zarah Sultana, suspended from the Parliamentary Labour Party in 2024, announces she is leaving Labour to establish a political party with former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.[298]
  • 4 July – Linden Kemkaran, Reform UK's leader of Kent County Council, attracts criticism over a social media post in which he said transgender-related books would be removed from the county's libraries with immediate effect, and described the decision as a "victory for common sense in Kent".[299]
  • 5 July –
  • 6 July – BBC News reports that Reform UK would be highly unlikely to introduce an insurance based healthcare system in Wales should it win the 2026 Senedd election, largely because of the timescale and potential legal implications of doing so.[302]
  • 7 July –
    • David Jones, a former Conservative Secretary of State for Wales who stepped down from Parliament at the 2024 election, announces he is defecting to Reform UK.[303]
    • Amazon removes a number of AI-generated unofficial biographies of Scotland's first ministers from sale after BBC News alerts them to a significant number of inaccuracies contained within the books.[304]
  • 8 July –
    • French President Emmanuel Macron begins a three-day state visit to the UK, becoming the first French President to visit the UK since 2008, and the first European leader to do so since Brexit.[305]
    • Former prime minister Rishi Sunak joins Goldman Sachs as a senior advisor.[306]
    • James McMurdock says he will not return to Reform UK after asking to have the party whip withdrawn.[307]
    • Sir Robert Chote resigns as chairman of the UK Statistics Authority, the body that oversees the Office for National Statistics.[308]
    • MPs vote 415–98 to approve the Football Governance Bill that will establish a regulatory body for the top five tiers of English football.[309]
    • Resident doctors in England vote in favour of strike action.[310]
  • 9 July –

August

September

October

November

December

Unknown date

Deaths

References

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