This article is about the people in Boris Johnson's first government. For the events of Boris Johnson's tenure as Prime Minister, see Premiership of Boris Johnson.
First Johnson ministry
Cabinet of the United Kingdom
July–December 2019
Johnson holding his first cabinet meeting
Date formed
24 July 2019
Date dissolved
16 December 2019
People and organisations
Monarch
Elizabeth II
Prime Minister
Boris Johnson
Prime Minister's history
2019–2022
First Secretary
Dominic Raab
Ministers removed
3 resigned
Member party
Conservative Party
Status in legislature
Minority with DUP confidence & supply
317 / 650 (49%)
Opposition cabinet
Corbyn Shadow Cabinet
Opposition party
Labour Party
Opposition leader
Jeremy Corbyn
History
Outgoing election
2019 general election
Legislature terms
57th UK Parliament[note 1]
Predecessor
Second May ministry
Successor
Second Johnson ministry
This article is part of a series about
Boris Johnson
Political positions
Electoral history
Public image
MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip
MP for Henley
Electoral history
{{{2}}}
2008 mayoral election
2012 mayoral election
2016 EU referendum
causes
aftermath
2019 leadership election
polling
endorsements
reactions
2019 general election
2021 local elections
2022 local elections
Mayor of London
Mayoralty
2008 mayoral election
London Britannia Airport
Santander Cycles
New Routemaster
2011 riots
London Cable Car
2012 Summer Olympics
2012 Summer Paralympics
Garden Bridge
Brexit
Vote Leave
2016 explored candidacy
Foreign Secretary
Foreign Office under Boris Johnson
Yemen intervention
Zaghari-Ratcliffe case
2018 Salisbury attack
Chequers plan
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Premiership
International trips
Minister for the Union
First ministry and term
First ministry
Suspension of rebel MPs
Benn Act
2019 prorogation
Supreme Court case
Brexit deal renegotiation
revised deal
Get Brexit Done
Second ministry and term
Second ministry
departures
2020 reshuffle
2021 reshuffle
EU Withdrawal Agreement
Northern Ireland Protocol
EU trade negotiation
cooperation agreement
COVID-19 pandemic
government response
lockdown
vaccinations
contracts
contract controversies
Dominic Cummings scandal
Partygate
Evacuations from Afghanistan
Levelling up
COP26
Refurb controversy
Owen Paterson scandal
Rwanda asylum plan
Murder of David Amess
Proposed NI increase
United Kingdom and the Russian invasion of Ukraine
Cost of living crisis
Conservative Party confidence vote
Chris Pincher scandal
Government crisis
July 2022 reshuffle
leadership election
House of Commons confidence vote
Resignation Honours
Post-premiership
2022 explored candidacy
endorsements
Privileges Committee investigation
2023 Uxbridge and South Ruislip by-election
Bibliography
Friends, Voters, Countrymen
Seventy-Two Virgins
The Dream of Rome
The Churchill Factor
Unleashed
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The first Johnson ministry began on 24 July 2019 when Queen Elizabeth II invited Boris Johnson to form a government, following the resignation of the predecessor Prime Minister Theresa May.[2] May had resigned as Leader of the Conservative Party on 7 June 2019; Johnson was elected as her successor on 23 July 2019. The Johnson ministry was formed from the 57th Parliament of the United Kingdom, as a Conservative minority government. It lost its working majority on 3 September 2019 when Tory MP Phillip Lee crossed the floor to the Liberal Democrats. An election was called for 12 December 2019, which led to the formation of a Conservative majority government, the second Johnson ministry.
^"UK set for 12 December general election after MPs' vote". BBC News. 29 October 2019. Archived from the original on 3 November 2019. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
^"Boris Johnson becomes UK's new prime minister". BBC News. 24 July 2019. Archived from the original on 24 July 2019. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
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