Labour Party (UK)

Labour Party
Governing bodyNational Executive Committee
LeaderKeir Starmer
Deputy LeaderLucy Powell
Lords LeaderThe Baroness Smith of Basildon
ChairAnna Turley
Founded27 February 1900 (1900-02-27)
(as the Labour Representation Committee)
HeadquartersLabour Party Headquarters
Student wingLabour Students
Youth wingYoung Labour
Women's wingLabour Women's Network
LGBT wingLGBT+ Labour
Membership (December 2025)< 250,000
IdeologySocial democracy
Political positionCentre-left
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Socialist International (observer)
Affiliate partyCo-operative Party
(Labour and Co-operative Party)
Former affiliates:
Northern Irish affiliationSocial Democratic and Labour Party
Colours  Red
SloganRenew Britain (2025)
Anthem"The Red Flag"
Devolved or semi-autonomous branches
Parliamentary partyParliamentary Labour Party (PLP)
Affiliated trade unions
List of affiliated trade unions:
House of Commons
404 / 650
House of Lords
227 / 842
Scottish Parliament
20 / 129
Senedd
29 / 60
London Assembly
11 / 25
Directly elected strategic authority mayors in England
9 / 14
Directly elected single authority mayors in England
9 / 13
Councillors
5,868 / 18,645
Councils led
154 / 369
PCCs and PFCCs
17 / 37
Election symbol
Website
labour.org.uk

The Labour Party, commonly Labour, is one of the two main political parties in the United Kingdom, along with the Conservative Party. It sits on the centre-left of the left–right political spectrum, and has been described as an alliance of social democrats, democratic socialists and trade unionists. It has been the governing party since the 2024 general election. Keir Starmer has been Leader of the Labour Party since 2020 and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom since 2024. There have been twelve Labour governments and seven Labour prime ministers. The party meets annually during Autumn for the Labour Party Conference, during which delegates from local parties and trade unions vote on party policy, and senior figures address the audience from the Conference platform.

The Labour Party was founded in 1900, having emerged from the trade union movement and socialist parties of the 19th century. It was electorally weak before the First World War, but in the early 1920s overtook the Liberal Party to become the main opposition to the Conservative Party, and briefly formed a minority government under Ramsay MacDonald in 1924. In 1929 Labour for the first time became the largest party in the House of Commons, with 287 seats, but fell short of a majority, forming another minority government. In 1931, in response to the Great Depression, MacDonald formed a new government with Conservative and Liberal support, which led to his expulsion from the party. Labour was soundly defeated by his coalition in 1931, winning only 52 seats, but began to recover in 1935 with 154 seats.

During the Second World War, Labour served in the wartime coalition, after which it won a majority in 1945. The government of Clement Attlee enacted extensive nationalisation and established the modern welfare state and National Health Service before losing power in 1951. Under Harold Wilson and James Callaghan, Labour again governed from 1964 to 1970 and from 1974 to 1979. The party then entered a period of intense internal division which ended in the defeat of its left wing by the mid-1980s. After electoral defeats to the Conservatives in 1987 and in 1992, Tony Blair took the party to the political centre as part of the New Labour rebranding of the party, and it governed under Blair from 1997 to 2007 and Gordon Brown from 2007 to 2010. After further electoral defeats in the 2010s, Starmer moved Labour closer to the political centre after becoming its leader in 2020, winning a landslide victory in the 2024 general election.

The party includes semi-autonomous London, Manx, Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish branches. Labour is the largest party in the Senedd (Welsh Parliament), and the only party in the current Welsh government.