Treasurer of the Labour Party

The treasurer of the Labour Party is a position on the National Executive Committee of the British Labour Party.[1]

Treasurer of the Labour Party
Incumbent
Mike Payne
Labour Party
Member ofNational Executive Committee
AppointerLabour Party Conference
Inaugural holderArthur Henderson

Although a post with little power, in the past, it was often hotly contested by people who later became big names in British politics: Arthur Greenwood beat Herbert Morrison in 1943, Hugh Gaitskell beat Aneurin Bevan in 1954, who in turn beat George Brown in 1956, while James Callaghan beat Michael Foot in 1967. Since the 1990s, the post has typically been held by a senior member of one of the larger Trade Unions.

Since the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 (PPERA) came into force, the Labour Party has had to register a treasurer to the Electoral Commission, who becomes legally responsible for various returns to the Electoral Commission. It has been the practice of the NEC to register the full-time General Secretary as treasurer under PPERA, rather than the elected volunteer treasurer. This has created two treasurer roles within the party, so to disambiguate these roles the elected treasurer is often called Party Treasurer, and the PPERA treasurer is often called Registered Treasurer. The party accounts are signed by both treasurers using these titles,[2] though under PPERA only the General Secretary need sign them.

In 2008 the post was contested by the incumbent Jack Dromey and by human rights lawyer Mark McDonald, with Dromey being re-elected. In 2010, former deputy prime minister John Prescott was defeated by Diana Holland.[3]

List of treasurers (1903–present)

Note: the right-hand column does not allocate height proportional to time in office.

A list of Treasurers since 1903.

Profile Term began Term ended Leader(s)
1 Arthur Henderson

(1863–1935)

(1st time)

1903 1912 None
Hardie
Himself
Barnes
MacDonald

(himself)

2 Ramsay MacDonald

(1866–1937)

1912 1929
Henderson
Adamson
Clynes
MacDonald

(himself)

(1) Arthur Henderson

(1863–1935)

(2nd time)

1929 1936
Himself
Lansbury
Attlee
3 George Lathan 1936 1943

(died in office)

4 Arthur Greenwood 1943 1954
5 Hugh Gaitskell 1954 1956
Morrison

(acting)

Gaitskell
6 Aneurin Bevan 1956 1960
7 Harry Nicholas 1960 1965
Brown

(acting)

Wilson
8 Dai Davies 1965[4] 1967
9 James Callaghan 1967 1976
10 Norman Atkinson 1976 1981 Callaghan
Foot
11 Eric Varley 1981 1983
12 Albert Booth 1983 1984 Kinnock
13 Sam McCluskie 1984 1992
14 Tom Burlison 1992 1996 Smith
Beckett

(acting)

Blair
15 Margaret Prosser 1996 2001
16 Jimmy Elsby 2001 2004
17 Jack Dromey[5] 2004 2010
18 Diana Holland 2010 2022 Brown
Harman

(acting: 1st time)

Miliband
Harman

(acting: 2nd time)

Corbyn
Starmer
19 Mike Payne 2022 Incumbent

References

  1. ^ "Labour Party Rule Book" (PDF). 2026. p. 6. Retrieved 2026-01-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "The Electoral Commission : Document summary". Archived from the original on 2008-04-05. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
  3. ^ "Lord Prescott fails in Treasurer bid". BBC News. 2010-09-26. Retrieved 2026-01-26.
  4. ^ "Trades Union Congress - Chapter 16: obituary". www.tuc.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2002-08-30. Retrieved 2026-01-27.
  5. ^ "Profile: Labour treasurer Jack Dromey". 2006-03-16. Archived from the original on 2006-05-31. Retrieved 2026-01-26.