Prime Minister's Question Time.
Stanley Baldwin
Gordon Brown was the British Prime Minister before David Cameron.
The British prime minister was the Tory Spencer Perceval. He governed between the years 1809-12 before becomming the first PM to be assassinated (in the House of Commons) shot dead by a merchant called John Bellingham. He was seceded by Tory Robert Jenkinson Earl of Liverpool (1812-1826)
soldier
Kaiser Wilhelm
Mackenzie King said it in a 1938 speech before the House of Commons.
The British Parliament is the governing body for the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland. It is democratically elected with an official opposition, and has two chambers- the House of Commons, which is the main law-making body and is headed by the Prime Minister, and the House of Lords, which is the Upper Chamber and needs to ratify any new Parliamentary Bills before they can become law. However, in extreme or unusual circumstances, the Commons can override the Lords to push new legislation through.
The Prime Minister at the start was Neville Chamberlain he was replaced shortly before Dunkirk by Winston Churchill.
Minister of War
No. A leader of a party can be removed by his party at certain times of the year, in the Conservatives I think it is November and Labour I believe the process starts before the conference in September, depending on the rules of that party. A Prime Minister can face a 'motion of no-confidence' in the House of Commons, and although there is no legal compulsion to leave office, it would create a constitutional crisis if a PM stayed-on after losing such a vote.
Tony Blair became British Prime Minister on May 2nd 1997, four days before his 44th birthday.
He served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1916 to 1922. He was an MP from 1890 to 1945, and in the last years of his life, was the longest-serving MP present in the House of Commons. Before being Prime Minister, he had been Chancellor of the Exchequer, and had been a driving force behind the Liberal Reforms, which he continued to enact as Prime Minister.