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Ramsay MacDonald

James Ramsay MacDonald (1866 - 1937) was Britain's first Labour Prime Minister 1924 and 1929 - 1931. Born in 1866, at Lossiemouth in Scotland, he was from very humble beginnings and had no secondary education, but was a rousing speaker. A member of the Independent Labour Party from 1893, he became Member of Parliament for Aberavon in 1906, and leader of the party in 1911. On January 24, 1924, after the failure of the Conservative government under Stanley Baldwin, he unexpectedly became Prime Minister of a minority Labour government, but it lasted only until November of the same year. MacDonald continued as leader of the Labour Party until 1931, taking office as prime minister once again in 1929, but being forced by the international financial crisis to give way in 1931 to a "national" government which consisted mostly of Conservatives and was opposed by most of his party who denounced MacDonald as a "rat" and a traitor to the Labour Party. He died in 1937.

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Ramsay MacDonald's First Labour Government, January - November 1924

Ramsay MacDonald's Second Labour Government, June 1929 - August 1931

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Ramsay MacDonald's First Coalition Government, August - November 1931

Ramsay MacDonald's Second Coalition Government, November 1931 - May 1935

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