Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom was an individual appointed by the monarch, based on which political party or group of parties won a democratic vote. The Prime Minister was the political head of the United Kingdom.

10 Downing Street was the seat of the Prime Minister's power. (LFTR: A House of Cards, DW: The Silurian Awakening) In the 17th century, the Houses of Parliament were the meeting place of the Prime Minister and his Cabinet. There, they would discuss policy and law. By 1796, the Cabinet met in session in the Cabinet Room inside 10 Downing Street. (LFTR: A House of Cards)

The Doctor and Prime Ministers
To be added.

21st Century
Tony Blair won the 1997 election, with a huge landslide, for the Labour Party. However, after the Iraq War scandal, hard-left, peace-campaigner and anti-war activist, Alfred Lawson launched a leadership challenge against Blair, and eventually winning it, taking over the office of Prime Minister in 2003. Two years later, after suddenly becoming extremely war-mongering, Lawson lost the election to the Conservative Party, as led by Angela Jensen. Jensen went onto win the 2010 election, before retiring in 2012 and handing power over to her Home Secretary, Barbara Deaconsfield. Deaconsfield lost the 2015 election to the Labour Party. It was under the Labour Government established in 2015, which climate-change denier, Oliver Griffiths, served as Home Secretary and later Education Secretary.