Her Majesty's Government has its four great offices. The obvious one is Her First Minister, currently, in August 2020 Boris Johnson. The others deal with finances, foreigners and home affairs.
It is a matter of fact that on this day, at least three out of the four are aliens. Patel and Sunak are are Third World infiltrators. Raab is a Hebrew. Is Johnson "British"? He would say yes but he is some kind of mongrel; he chose the other three. Does this prove that he is a Traitor? It is, at the very least suggestive.
Will he be given a fair trial and shot? Given that he has just appointed another Third World alien as Attorney General, one Suella Braverman it seems unlikely. NB Sunak and Patel are both sworn of the Privy Council, meaning that they have formally accepted an obligation of loyalty to Queen and Country. The other two have not.
Great Offices of State ex Wiki
Current
The Great Offices of State in the United Kingdom are the four most senior and prestigious posts in the British government.[1][2] They are the Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary. According to convention, when the Prime Minister names their Cabinet, either after a general election or a mid-term reshuffle, the first Cabinet ministers to be announced are the Chancellor, the Foreign Secretary and the Home Secretary.[1][3][4]
Great Offices of State of Her Majesty's Government
Johnson ministryOffice Officeholder Took office Other offices Prime Minister Boris Johnson 24 July 2019 Foreign Secretary
(2016–2018)Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak PC 13 February 2020 Chief Secretary to the Treasury
(2019–2020)Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab 24 July 2019 First Secretary of State
(2019–present)Home Secretary Priti Patel PC 24 July 2019 International Development Secretary
(2016–2017)History
The Great Offices of State are derived from the most senior positions in the Royal Household – the Great Officers of State. These eventually became hereditary and honorary titles, while the substantive duties of the Officers passed to individuals who were appointed on behalf of the Crown.[5] The medieval origins of the Chancellorship of the Exchequer make it the oldest surviving Great Office of State, while the position of Secretary of State came into being in the late 16th century and the office of Prime Minister evolved gradually in the 18th and 19th centuries.James Callaghan is the only person to date to have served in all four positions.[1][6] In the past hundred years, several other people have come close to achieving this distinction: H. H. Asquith and Winston Churchill both served as Chancellor, Prime Minister and Home Secretary while Harold Macmillan and John Major served as Prime Minister, Chancellor and Foreign Secretary. Rab Butler and Sir John Simon served as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary. Two of the Great Offices of State have often been held simultaneously by one person, most recently by Ramsay MacDonald, Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary in 1924; the Duke of Wellington is the only person to have held three of the Great Offices simultaneously, serving as Prime Minister, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary in the Wellington caretaker ministry.
Commons-only nature in modern timesOwing to the political constitution of the United Kingdom, in which the House of Commons retains most of the power, it is accepted that it is no longer practical for holders of the Great Offices of State to be members of the House of Lords. The House of Lords has traditionally been restrained in the passage of financial bills, meaning that the office of Chancellor is effectively limited to the House of Commons. The last holders of the other positions to have been peers were:
- Prime Minister: Conservative The Earl of Home (20–23 October 1963): The Earl of Home renounced his peerage and was elected as an MP after his appointment as Prime Minister. The last holder to remain a peer throughout his term as Prime Minister was the Conservative The Marquess of Salisbury (25 June 1895 – 11 July 1902).
- Chancellor of the Exchequer: Whig Lord Denman (14 November – 15 December 1834): Denman only held the post on an acting basis as an ex officio duty of his role as Lord Chief Justice, as did the peer before him, Tory Lord Tenterden (8 August–3 September 1827); the last member of the House of Lords to hold the office substantively was Whig Viscount Stanhope (15 April 1717 – 20 March 1718).
- Foreign Secretary: Conservative Lord Carrington (5 May 1979 – 5 April 1982): The Lord Carrington is the most recent peer to hold one of the Great Offices of State.
- Home Secretary: Conservative Viscount Cave (14 November 1918 – 14 January 1919): Sir George Cave was ennobled as The Viscount Cave while serving as Home Secretary in 1918. The last holder to remain a peer throughout his term as Home Secretary was the Whig Viscount Palmerston (28 December 1852 – 6 February 1855). However, he was an Irish peer, meaning that he was not entitled to a seat in the Lords; the last holder to remain a member of the Lords was the Whig The Marquess of Normanby (30 August 1839 – 30 August 1841).
It is most exceptional that a holder of a Great Office of State should not hold a seat in Parliament at all, neither in the Commons nor in the Lords. It occurred briefly in 1963, when Alec Douglas-Home was appointed Prime Minister: he disclaimed his peerage on 23 October, and was not returned to the Commons until a by-election on 7 November. More substantially, Patrick Gordon Walker was appointed Foreign Secretary in 1964 despite not holding a Parliamentary seat, having been defeated in his Smethwick constituency seat in the 1964 general election; he held the post for three months until his resignation in January 1965.
Women
Six women have held one or more Great Offices of State, with four of the six being members of the Conservative Party. Out of the four Offices, three have been held by women; Chancellor of the Exchequer is the only position that has not. Due to her ascension to the office of Prime Minister in July 2016, Theresa May became the first woman to hold two different Great Offices of State, with the appointment of Amber Rudd as Home Secretary resulting in the first period in which more than one of the Offices were held by women simultaneously.Prime Minister:
- Margaret Thatcher (1979–1990) (Conservative)
- Theresa May (2016–2019) (Conservative)
Chancellor of the Exchequer:
No woman has yet served as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
Foreign Secretary:
- Margaret Beckett (2006–2007) (Labour)
Home Secretary:
Ethnic minorities
- Jacqui Smith (2007–2009) (Labour)
- Theresa May (2010–2016) (Conservative)
- Amber Rudd (2016–2018) (Conservative)
- Priti Patel (2019–present) (Conservative)
This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)Benjamin Disraeli became the first person of an ethnic minority to attain one of the Great Offices of State when he was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1852. Following the resignation of The Earl of Derby in 1868, he also became the first and to date the only person of Jewish heritage to become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Malcolm Rifkind and David Miliband later held the position of Foreign Secretary, with Michael Howard and Leon Brittan serving as Home Secretary and Nigel Lawson as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
After Amber Rudd's resignation following the Windrush scandal, Sajid Javid became the first person of Pakistani descent to hold a Great Office of State as Home Secretary and later Chancellor of the Exchequer.[7][8] Priti Patel was appointed as Home Secretary by Boris Johnson, becoming the first woman of ethnic minority to take the position. After her appointment, three ethnic minority ministers held positions of the Great Offices of State simultaneously for the first time.
Prime Minister:
- Lord Liverpool (1812–1827, Portuguese Indian heritage) (Tory)[neutrality is disputed]
- Benjamin Disraeli (1868, 1874–1880, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
Chancellor of the Exchequer:
- Benjamin Disraeli (1852, 1858–1859, 1866–1868, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- Nigel Lawson (1983–1989, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- George Osborne (2010–2016, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- Sajid Javid (2019–2020, Pakistani heritage) (Conservative)
- Rishi Sunak (2020–present, Indian heritage) (Conservative)
Foreign Secretary:
- Lord Liverpool (1801–1804, Portuguese Indian heritage) (Tory)[neutrality is disputed]
- Malcolm Rifkind (1995–1997, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- David Miliband (2007–2010, Jewish heritage) (Labour)
- Dominic Raab (2019–present, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
Home Secretary:
- Lord Liverpool (1804–1806, 1807–1809, Portuguese Indian heritage) (Tory)[neutrality is disputed]
- Leon Brittan (1983–1985, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- Michael Howard (1993–1997, Jewish heritage) (Conservative)
- Sajid Javid (2018–2019, Pakistani heritage) (Conservative)
See also
- Priti Patel (2019–present, Indian heritage) (Conservative)
- Cabinet of the United Kingdom
- List of shadow holders of the Great Offices of State
- Secretary of State (United Kingdom)
- HM Treasury
- Great Officer of State
The West Is Ruled By Traitors [ 22 August 2020 ]
QUOTE
An unnamed migrant living in Germany, originally accused of sexually molesting a young girl, struck again days after his arrest when he was released in less than two weeks after legal officials declared he would not be a flight risk. The Afghan migrant, who currently holds a temporary residence permit, was picked up after it was believed he had sexually abused an 11-year-old girl. The migrant was then released only to allegedly rape a 13-year-old girl after luring her to a hallway in an apartment block in Dortmund.
After the second brutal sexual assault his teenage victim was able to help identify the man with an accurate depiction of the suspect. Legal officials released the man shortly after his first alleged offence because he was not considered to be a “flight risk”.“He had previously appeared for a narcotics offense, but not in connection with sexual offenses. He has a permanent place of residence and therefore there was no reason to hold the refugee,” said the prosecutor. Another public prosecutor, Börge Klepping, signaled that the second sexual assault was a “similar incident” to the first.
May The Day Of The Rope not be delayed too long.
UNQUOTE
The Irish Savant's headline is verbatim and true. Angela Merkel imported over a million Third World savages like this one. Boris Johnson is doing the same to England. They are guilty of Ethnic Fouling leading seamlessly to Genocide. Johnson and Her Majesty's Home Secretary are using Border Force to help Illegal Immigrants cross the Channel in collaboration with the French Navy. They are smugglers and Traitors who have been put in place as part of the Long March Through The Institutions.The marchers methods were worked out by Antonio Gramsci, the leading intellectual of the communists in Italy. It is being used by the Puppet Masters, the Zionist crazies who run Israel. It is a triumph of Cultural Marxism, a repudiation of Western Civilization. They have produced a new and evil Legitimising Ideology. Comment comes from Roger Scruton on hostile cultural elites ex Social Technologies.
PS Johnson has filled three of the four Great Offices Of State with aliens, two are Third World infiltrators, one is a Jew. Johnson is a mongrel of some sort; part Turk, part Jew.
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Updated on Wednesday, 12 October 2022 15:16:49 +0100