Shadow Cabinet of John Major

Major Shadow Cabinet

Shadow cabinet of the United Kingdom
MayJune 1997
Date formed2 May 1997
Date dissolved19 June 1997
People and organisations
MonarchElizabeth II
Leader of the OppositionJohn Major
Deputy Leader of the OppositionMichael Heseltine
Member party
  •   Conservative Party
Status in legislatureOfficial Opposition
165 / 659 (25%)
History
Election(s)1997 general election
Outgoing election1997 Conservative Party leadership election
Legislature term(s)52nd UK Parliament
PredecessorShadow Cabinet of Tony Blair
SuccessorShadow Cabinet of William Hague

John Major was Leader of the Conservative Party and Leader of the Opposition from 2 May 1997, following his defeat at the 1997 general election, until 19 June 1997, when William Hague was elected to succeed him. Following the defeat, Major announced his resignation as leader. But, for logistical reasons, a new leader could not be elected for several weeks. In the intervening period, Major appointed an interim Shadow Cabinet.

The Shadow Cabinet was based on Major's final Cabinet. However, as seven Cabinet Ministers had lost their seats in the general election and another had not contested his seat, there were several vacancies. These were largely filled by either Major himself or by a relevant minister in the outgoing Cabinet. The position of Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland was not filled as the Conservatives had lost all their Scottish MPs in the election. Michael Howard and William Hague were given joint responsibility for constitutional matters, including the brief to handle the Scottish and Welsh devolution[1] legislation.

  1. ^ "Government Unveils Plans for Welsh Assembly". BBC Politics 97. BBC News. Retrieved 15 March 2024.

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