Financial Secretary to the Treasury

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Financial Secretary to the Treasury is a junior Ministerial post in the UK Treasury. It is the 4th most significant Ministerial role within the Treasury after the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, and the Paymaster General. It is not a Cabinet office, with the exception of Sir William Joynson-Hicks who was briefly in the Cabinet as Financial Secretary in 1923, the reason for this being that the Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, was also Chancellor of the Exchequer.

The current incumbent is John Healey, who took up this office in 2005.

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[edit] History

The role of Financial Secretary to the Treasury was created in 1711 and was known as the Junior Secretary to the Treasury to the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury who held the senior position. The first Junior Secretary to the Treasury is recorded as a T. Harley who was appointed on 11 June 1711. The position has continued un-interrupted to the present day.

Notable former Financial Secretaries to the Treasury include Lord Frederick Cavendish, Austen Chamberlain, Stanley Baldwin, Enoch Powell, Nigel Lawson, and Norman Lamont.

[edit] Current role

The current responsibilities of the Financial Secretary to the Treasury include Departmental responsibility for the Office for National Statistics, and the Royal Mint. The Financial Secretary to the Treasury had Departmental responsibility for HM Customs & Excise until the merger with the Inland Revenue to form HM Revenue and Customs.

The incumbent Financial Secretary to the Treasury is John Healey who has been in the role since 2005, having formerly been the Economic Secretary to the Treasury.

[edit] Financial Secretaries to the Treasury since 1852

see Secretary to the Treasury for earlier incumbents

[edit] See also

[edit] External links