2019 in the United Kingdom

2019 in the United Kingdom
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Events from the year 2019 in the United Kingdom. Lack of agreement on how to proceed with withdrawing from the EU led to substantial political turmoil during this year culminating in the 2019 General election in which the pro-Brexit Conservative party gained a significant majority of seats.

Incumbents[edit]

Events[edit]

January[edit]

  • 1 January – Regulator Ofgem introduces a new energy price cap for households in England, Scotland and Wales.[1]
  • 2 January – Rail fares in England and Wales rise by an average of 3.1%.[2] Meanwhile, ScotRail announces average rail fare increases of 2.8%.[3]
  • 3 January – The bakery chain Greggs launches a meat free version of its sausage rolls.[4][5]
  • 4 January – The engineering arm of collapsed Monarch Airlines falls into administration, with the loss of 450 jobs.[6]
  • 7 January – A 10-year plan for NHS England is unveiled. As a result of Barnett consequentials, a proportionate share of extra funding will be transferred to the Scottish Parliament, Welsh Assembly and Northern Ireland Executive.[7]
  • 8 January – MPs back an amendment to the Finance Bill, by 303 to 296 votes, to limit the Treasury's powers in a no-deal Brexit scenario.[8]
  • 9 January – MPs back Dominic Grieve's amendment to the EU withdrawal agreement, by 308 to 297 votes, compelling the government to return to Parliament within three days if the deal is voted down the following week.[9]
  • 14 January – Conservative Party whip Gareth Johnson resigns, saying he cannot support the government in the forthcoming vote on Theresa May's Brexit withdrawal agreement.[10]
  • 15 January – The House of Commons rejects Theresa May's deal on the UK's withdrawal from the European Union by 432 votes to 202.[11] The 230 vote margin is the largest defeat for a government motion in 100 years.[12]
  • 16 January – Theresa May's government survives a no confidence vote by 325 to 306.[13]
  • 17 January
  • 21 January
  • 22 January
    • The UK café chain Patisserie Valerie collapses into administration after rescue talks with banks fail.[19]
    • The EU confirms it will enforce a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic in the event of a no-deal Brexit, despite the risk it would pose to peace.[20]
  • 24 January – Former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond is arrested by police and charged with multiple counts of sexual assault and two of attempted rape.[21]
  • 25 January – The European Medicines Agency (EMA) closes its office at Canary Wharf, London, in preparation for its move to Amsterdam.[22]
  • 28 January – A letter from the British Retail Consortium, signed by major food retailers including Asda, McDonald's and Sainsbury's, warns of empty shelves and higher prices in the event of a no-deal Brexit.[23]
  • 29 January
    • Labour MP for Peterborough Fiona Onasanya is sentenced to three months imprisonment having earlier been found guilty of perverting the course of justice for lying about who was driving her car when caught speeding. Her imprisonment makes her the first sitting MP to be jailed in 28 years.[24]
    • MPs vote on a series of seven Brexit amendments.[25][26] This includes a proposal to renegotiate the Irish backstop, which is passed with a majority of 16.[27]
  • 30 January
    • A High Court judge approves a £166bn (€190bn) transfer of assets by Barclays bank to its Irish division as a result of Brexit disruption.[28]
    • The EU's chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, rejects calls to reopen the Brexit deal and says the Irish backstop will not be renegotiated, despite the UK's request.[29]
  • 31 January – A report by the Society of Motor Manufacturers (SMMT) states that investment in the British car industry fell by 46.5% in 2018 as a result of Brexit uncertainty.[30][31]

February[edit]

  • 1 February
    • Hundreds of schools across Wales and southern parts of England are closed due to snow and icy conditions.[32]
    • Leave.EU and Eldon Insurance owned by its founder Arron Banks are fined £120,000 over data law breaches.[33]
    • A 37-year-old mother who mutilated her three-year-old daughter becomes the first person in the UK to be found guilty of female genital mutilation (FGM).[34]
  • 3 February
    • Apetito and Bidfood, two major suppliers to care homes and hospitals, report that they are stockpiling food in case of disruption caused by Brexit.[35]
    • Car manufacturer Nissan confirms that it will not be moving production of its X-Trail SUV from Japan to Sunderland, citing the falling sales of diesel cars in Europe as the reason, adding that: "While we have taken this decision for business reasons, the continued uncertainty around the UK’s future relationship with the EU is not helping companies like ours to plan for the future".[36]
  • 4 February – The wreckage of the PA-46 Malibu that was carrying footballer Emiliano Sala and pilot David Ibbotson is found underwater and a body is seen within it.[37]
  • 5 February – HMV is acquired out of administration by Canadian retailer Sunrise Records, safeguarding the future of nearly 1,500 staff.[38]
  • 7 February
  • 14 February – Theresa May suffers a fresh defeat in the Commons on her Brexit strategy, losing the vote by 303 to 258.[43]
  • 15 February – Thousands of school pupils around the UK go on strike as part of a global campaign for action on climate change.[44]
  • 16 February – Flybmi ceases operations and files for administration, blaming Brexit as the main cause of its collapse.[45]
  • 18 February
  • 19 February – MP Joan Ryan resigns from the Labour Party to join The Independent Group.[48][49]
  • 20 February
  • 22 February – Dudley North MP Ian Austin resigns from the Labour Party saying the party has failure to tackle antisemitism, but says he has no plans to join the Independent Group.[52]
  • 23 February – Roy Hodgson becomes the oldest man to manage in the Premier League, at the age of 71 years and 198 days.[53]
  • 25 February – A temperature of 20.3 °C (68.5 °F) is reported in Trawsgoed, Ceredigion, the UK's highest on record for the month of February.[54]
  • 26 February
    • The Shadow Brexit Secretary, Keir Starmer states that Labour will back a second EU referendum with remain on the ballot if Theresa May's deal gets through parliament.[55]
    • Theresa May states that MPs will be given the choice between no-deal Brexit or a Brexit delay, if they reject her plan the following month.[56]
    • The UK winter temperature record is broken for a second consecutive day, as the Met Office records 21.2 °C (70.2 °F) in Kew Gardens, London.[57] Various huge wildfires are reported, the largest being at Saddleworth Moor in West Yorkshire.[58]
    • The government publishes its assessment of the impact of a no-deal Brexit.[59]

March[edit]

  • 1 March – The UK Government announces it has paid out £33,000,000 to settle a dispute with Eurotunnel over the awarding of ferry contracts, which was led by Transport Secretary Chris Grayling, to cope with a no-deal Brexit.[60]
  • 7 March
  • 12 March
    • The House of Commons rejects Theresa May's deal on the UK's withdrawal from the European Union for a second time, by 391 votes to 242.[64]
    • Three climbers are killed and another injured in an avalanche on Ben Nevis.[65]
  • 13 March
    • MPs vote by 321 votes to 278 to accept an amended government motion to reject the UK leaving the European Union without a deal.[66]
    • Chancellor Philip Hammond says that gas heating for new houses will be banned by 2025, although gas hobs will still be allowed.[67]
  • 14 March – MPs vote by 412 to 202 in favour of requesting that the UK's withdrawal from the European Union be delayed beyond 29 March.[68]
  • 15 March
  • 18 March – The Speaker, John Bercow, quoting a parliamentary rule dating back to 1604, declares that a third "meaningful vote" on the Brexit deal cannot proceed unless it contains substantial changes. Ministers warn of a "constitutional crisis", with just eleven days until the UK is due to leave the EU.[70]
  • 20 March – Prime Minister Theresa May writes a letter to EU Council President Donald Tusk, requesting a three-month extension to Article 50.[71][72]
  • 21 March
    • The TUC and CBI wrote a letter to the Prime Minister saying the UK faces a "national emergency" due to Brexit and urging May to embrace an alternative plan.[73]
    • The EU agrees to delay Brexit until 22 May 2019, if MPs approve a withdrawal deal; or to 12 April if they do not.[74]
  • 23 March – Hundreds of thousands of protesters flock to London for the second People's Vote march, asking the UK Government for a second referendum on leaving the EU and to permanently revoke Article 50.[75]
  • 24 March – An online e-petition calling on the government to revoke Article 50 reaches 5,000,000 signatures.[76]
  • 25 March – MPs defeat the government by 329 to 302 as they vote in favour of an amendment by Oliver Letwin, giving Parliament the option to hold a series of "indicative votes" on Brexit.[clarification needed][77][78]
  • 26 March – The European Parliament votes by 348 to 278 in favour of the controversial Article 13 of the European Union Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market, which expands legal liability for websites.[79][80]
  • 27 March
    • The Department for Transport says that the United Kingdom will adopt speed limiting technology that will become mandatory for all new vehicles sold in Europe from 2022, after new rules were provisionally agreed by the European Union.[81]
    • MPs back the statutory instrument changing the Brexit date in the EU Withdrawal Act by 441 votes to 105, a majority of 336.[82]
    • None of MPs' eight proposed options (indicative votes) for Brexit gains a majority following a House of Commons vote.[83]
  • 29 March
    • The recently formed Independent Group applies to become a political party with the name "Change UK – The Independent Group" and names Heidi Allen as interim leader.[84]
    • MPs reject Theresa May's EU withdrawal agreement for a third time, by 344 votes to 286.[85]
    • A motion of no confidence against pro-EU Conservative MP Dominic Grieve is carried by his local party, 182 votes to 131.[86]
  • 31 March – The e-petition calling on the UK Government to revoke Article 50 reaches 6,000,000 signatures, doing so a day before it is due to be debated by parliament.[87]

April[edit]

  • 1 April
    • The UK's National Living Wage rises from £7.83 to £8.21, an increase of 4.9%.[88]
    • London Liverpool Street, London King's Cross and Edinburgh Waverley become the last of Network Rail's stations to abolish charges to their public toilets.[89]
    • For the second time, none of four proposed options (indicative votes) for Brexit gain a majority following a House of Commons vote. A customs union with the EU, a "Common Market 2.0", a second referendum and a vote on whether to revoke Article 50 all fail to win clear backing from MPs.[90]
    • Immediately following the indicative votes on Brexit, MP Nick Boles quits the Conservative party, with a speech criticising his former colleagues for refusing to compromise on the options.[90]
  • 2 April – In a statement following a Cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Theresa May announces her intention to extend Article 50 again and work with Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn on a plan, but keep the withdrawal agreement as part of her deal.[91][92]
  • 3 April
    • Prosecutors seek a retrial in the case of the match commander at the Hillsborough disaster David Duckenfield, after a jury fails to reach a verdict.[93]
    • A bill by Labour MP Yvette Cooper to force the Prime Minister to ask the EU for an extension to Article 50, in order to avoid a no-deal Brexit, passes the House of Commons by 313 votes to 312.[94]
  • 5 April – Theresa May writes to the EU requesting a Brexit extension until 30 June 2019.[95] EU ministers respond by saying the letter is too vague to justify an extension being offered.[96]
  • 6 April – Tiger Roll wins the 2019 Grand National, the second consecutive year the horse has won the race.[97]
  • 8 April
  • 9 April – Department store Debenhams goes into administration, after a last-ditch rescue offer from Mike Ashley's Sports Direct was rejected.[101]
  • 10 April – The UK and the EU agree an Article 50 extension to 31 October 2019. No reopening of the withdrawal agreement negotiations is allowed and the UK "must hold the elections to the European Parliament" on 23 May, or it will be forced to leave on 1 June 2019.[102][103]
  • 11 April – WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange is arrested after seven years of living in the Ecuadorian embassy in London.[104]
  • 12 April – Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage launches the Brexit Party.[105]
  • 15–22 April – Demonstrations by the climate change activist group Extinction Rebellion cause disruption in central London, blocking roads and resulting in over 1,000 arrests, with 53 people charged for various offences.[106][107][108] A "pause" in the protest is announced on 21 April,[109] although the group continues to base itself in Marble Arch.[110]
  • 17 April – The UK Government announces it will introduce an age verification system designed to stop internet users under the age of eighteen from viewing pornographic websites, which will come into force on 15 July.[111]
  • 18 April – 29-year-old journalist and author Lyra McKee is shot dead amid rioting in Derry, Northern Ireland, with police treating it as a "terrorist incident" and suspecting the New IRA.[112][113]
  • 22 April
    • Leaders from 70 local Conservative Associations sign a petition calling for a vote of no confidence in Theresa May. The non-binding vote, to be determined by 800 of the party's senior officials, would be the first time such an instance has occurred.[114]
    • The hottest Easter Monday on record in all four nations of the UK is confirmed by the Met Office, with 25 °C (77 °F) reported at Heathrow, Northolt and Wisley.[115]
  • 24 April – The Conservative Party's 1922 Committee votes against changing the party's rules regarding leadership challenges, but asks for clarity on when Prime Minister Theresa May will step down from office.[116]
  • 25 April –
  • 26 April –
    • Prime Minister Theresa May and Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar issue a joint statement setting out a new process of talks designed to restore devolution to Northern Ireland, to begin on 7 May.[119]
    • Department store Debenhams announces plans to close 22 branches in 2019.[120]

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

  • 1 August
    • Parts of the Derbyshire towns of Whaley Bridge, Furness Vale and New Mills are evacuated, with 1,500 residents being moved as a precaution, after concrete slabs on the dam spillway of the Toddbrook Reservoir partially collapse.[195][196][197]
    • The government announces an extra £2.1bn of funding to prepare for a no-deal Brexit, doubling the amount of money it has set aside for 2019, taking the total since June 2016 to £6.3bn.[198]
    • Liberal Democrat MP Jane Dodds wins the 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, beating the incumbent Conservative Chris Davies and leaving the Tories with a Commons working majority of just one.[199]
  • 5 August – The historic shipyard Harland and Wolff, which built the RMS Titanic and other well-known ships, ceases trading.[200]
  • 9 August
    • Data from the Office for National Statistics shows that the UK economy shrank by 0.2% in the second quarter of 2019, its first contraction since 2012.[201][202]
    • A major power blackout hits parts of England and Wales, affecting nearly a million people and causing widespread travel disruption.[203]
  • 10 August – Richard Braine is elected as leader of the UK Independence Party, succeeding Gerard Batten.[204]
  • 15 August – Former Conservative and Change UK MP Sarah Wollaston joins the Liberal Democrats, saying it is the best way for her to fight to keep Britain in the European Union.[205]
  • 16 August – The Turkish Armed Forces Assistance Fund (known as Oyak) announces that it plans to take over British Steel by the end of the year.[206]
  • 18 August
    • Reports emerge that the British–Canadian Muslim convert Jack Letts, alleged to be a member of ISIL and nicknamed "Jihadi Jack" by the media, has had his British citizenship revoked by the Home Office.[207]
    • More than 100 MPs write to Prime Minister Boris Johnson calling for a recall of Parliament to debate concerns that the UK faces "a national emergency" over Brexit.[208]
    • The three remaining cooling towers at Didcot power station, a focal point of the Oxfordshire skyline for 50 years, are demolished. An electricity pole is damaged in the collapse, leaving at least 40,000 homes without power.[209][210]
  • 22 August – Boris Johnson meets French president Emmanuel Macron in Paris, insisting that the Brexit impasse can be broken "with energy and creativity". Macron reiterates that the Republic of Ireland–Northern Ireland backstop plan is "indispensable" to preserving political stability and the single market.[211]
  • 23 August – Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn express concern over major fires in the Amazon rainforest, ahead of the latest G7 summit. A spokesperson for the Department for International Trade states: "The UK remains committed to protecting the world’s rainforests and will continue to do so in Brazil through our international climate finance programmes."[212]
  • 24 August – After video footage emerges of himself at Jeffrey Epstein's mansion in 2010,[213] Prince Andrew defends his former friendship with the convicted sex offender, saying "at no stage" did he "see or suspect" any criminal behaviour.[214]
  • 25 August – The UK experiences its hottest late August bank holiday weekend on record, with temperatures reaching 33.3 °C (91.9 °F) in west London.[215] The record for August bank holiday Monday is also broken the following day.[216]
  • 26 August – The UK's biggest ever fracking-related tremor is recorded, with a magnitude of 2.9 reported at a Cuadrilla site near Blackpool.[217]
  • 27 August
    • Opposition MPs gather in Church House, Westminster, where they agree to form "an alternative parliament" if Boris Johnson attempts to force a no-deal Brexit by prorogation. They sign a declaration, calling this threat "an undemocratic outrage at such a crucial moment for our country, and a historic constitutional crisis". Downing Street accuses the MPs of trying to sabotage negotiations with the EU.[218][219]
    • Bury F.C. are expelled from the English Football League after a takeover bid collapses.
  • Anti-prorogation protest in Parliament square
    28 August – Boris Johnson asks the Queen to suspend Parliament from early September until 14 October. Following precedent, she approves the request. While many Brexit supporters welcome the move, the action receives widespread condemnation from those in favour of the UK remaining in the EU, triggering protests both in London and around the country.[220][221]
  • 29 August – Ruth Davidson resigns as leader of the Scottish Conservatives.[222]
  • 31 August – Demonstrations are held across the UK in protest at Boris Johnson's decision to suspend parliament.[223]

September[edit]

  • 2 September – In a speech outside 10 Downing Street, Boris Johnson states his opposition to calling a general election and urges MPs not to vote for "another pointless delay" to Brexit.[224]
  • 3 September
  • 4 September
    • A bill intended to block the possibility of the UK leaving the EU without a deal passes its first Commons vote by 329 to 300.[229]
    • A Scottish judge rejects a call by 75 parliamentarians to have the government's postponement of parliament declared illegal. The judge rules that it is for politicians and voters to judge, and not the courts.[230]
    • MPs reject Boris Johnson's motion to call a snap general election for October, failing to achieve the two-thirds Commons majority needed under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act, in a vote of 298 to 56. Labour MPs abstain from the vote.[231]
  • 5 September
    • Former Labour and Change UK MP Luciana Berger joins the Liberal Democrats.[232]
    • Jo Johnson, brother of Boris Johnson, resigns as an MP and minister, stating he is "torn between family and national interest".[233]
  • 6 September
    • The bill designed to prevent a no deal Brexit is passed by the House of Lords.[234]
    • Opposition parties agree not to back any further government calls for a general election in mid-October.[234]
    • The High Court rejects a case brought by anti-Brexit campaigner Gina Miller over the suspension of parliament, ruling that it is lawful.[235]
  • 7 September
    • Work and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd resigns from the Cabinet and surrenders the Conservative Party whip, saying she cannot "stand by" while "loyal moderate Conservatives are expelled".[236]
    • Former Labour and Change UK MP Angela Smith joins the Liberal Democrats.[237]
  • 9 September
    • John Bercow announces that he will stand down as Speaker of the House of Commons on 31 October, or at the next general election, depending on which comes first.[238]
    • The Benn bill, intended to stop Britain leaving the EU without a deal, is granted royal assent.[239]
    • By a vote of 311 to 302, MPs back a motion calling for the publication of all government communications relating to no-deal Brexit planning and the suspension of Parliament.[240]
    • A second government motion calling for an early general election fails to achieve the required super-majority, with 293 MPs voting in favour of it.[241]
  • 10 September – Parliament is prorogued amid unprecedented protests in the House of Commons from opposition MPs, with some holding up signs saying "silenced".[242]
  • 11 September
    • Three judges at Scotland's highest civil court rule that the government's prorogation of the UK Parliament is unlawful "and is thus null and of no effect." The UK's Supreme Court in London is to hear the government's appeal against the ruling next week.[243]
    • Around 40 MPs return to work in Parliament, in protest at its suspension and to show their support for the Scottish ruling that the government's decision to prorogue is illegal.[244]
    • In response to a motion passed by MPs on 9 September to force its release, the government publish a five-page document covering the no-deal contingency plan, Operation Yellowhammer. Ministers block the publication of personal communications about Parliament's prorogation, which were also covered by the motion.[245]
    • Downing Street rules out the possibility of an electoral pact between the Conservatives and the Brexit Party.[246]
  • 12 September – The High Court in Belfast rejects a legal challenge against a no-deal Brexit that was brought on the argument it breaches the Good Friday Agreement.[247]
  • 13 September – Former English Defence League leader Tommy Robinson is released from prison after nine weeks.[248][249]
  • 14 September
    • Ex-Conservative MP Sam Gyimah, one of the 21 rebels who had the whip removed on 3 September, joins the Liberal Democrats.[250]
    • Facebook removes a Conservative Party advertisement saying it "misused" their advertising platform in the way it presented figures from a BBC News story about the amount of money being invested in schools.[251]
  • 15 September – At their annual party conference in Bournemouth, members of the Liberal Democrats vote to scrap Brexit without a second referendum if they win the next general election.[252]
  • 17 September – The hearing of the prorogation of Parliament appeal begins at the Supreme Court in London, to decide whether the act of suspending Parliament is justiciable and lawful.[253][254]
  • 19 September – The Supreme Court hearing of the prorogation appeal concludes after three days and a decision is expected to be given early in the next week.[255]
  • 20 September
    • Some of the largest climate change protests ever seen are held in towns and cities across the UK as part of a worldwide day of strikes and protests, led by young people and adults, to demand action on carbon emissions.[256][257]
    • An American woman says she had sex with Prince Andrew as a 17-year-old and was "trafficked" to the prince. The Duke of York denies having "any form of sexual contact or relationship" with her.[258]
  • 22 September – An article in the Sunday Times accuses Prime Minister Boris Johnson of misconduct in office while Mayor of London, alleging that US businesswoman Jennifer Arcuri received favourable treatment with the awarding of grants to her company because of her friendship with Johnson.[259]
  • Floral bouquet left with a note expressing sadness at the closure of Thomas Cook
    23 September – Travel company Thomas Cook collapses after 178 years in business, triggering the largest ever peacetime repatriation as 150,000 holidaymakers are left stranded.[260]
  • 24 September – The 11 justices of the Supreme Court rule unanimously that the prorogation brought forward by Boris Johnson is both justiciable and unlawful, and therefore null and of no effect.[261][262][263]
  • 25 September – MPs return to Parliament after the ending of prorogation. Amid furious scenes in the Commons, opposition politicians accuse the Prime Minister Boris Johnson of using inflammatory language. Johnson, who described the law seeking to block a no-deal Brexit as "the surrender bill", defends his actions, later saying that "tempers need to come down" in Parliament.[264][265]
  • 26 September
  • 27 September – Prime Minister Boris Johnson is referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) accused of misconduct in office while Mayor of London, an office with responsibility for overseeing policing in London.[270]
  • 28 September – Downing Street dismisses Johnson's IOPC referral as 'politically motivated'.[271]
  • 29 September
    • The Sunday Times carries fresh allegations about the relationship between Boris Johnson and Jennifer Arcuri, alleging the two were engaged in an affair; Johnson denies any conflict of interest.[272]
    • Downing Street denies an allegation from a female journalist that Johnson squeezed her thigh, and that of another woman, at a lunch in 1999.[273]
  • 30 September – Following a meeting of opposition party leaders chaired by Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour leader says he will back a motion of no confidence in Boris Johnson "at a point we can win it and take no-deal off the table".[274]

October[edit]

  • 1 October
    • The Office for National Statistics reports that 726 homeless people died in England and Wales in 2018, a 22% rise from 2017 and the highest increase since records began.[275]
    • Torrential rain brings flooding to many parts of Great Britain with dozens of warnings issued by the Environment Agency. Some areas in the Midlands, Wales and southern England are hit by a week's rain in just one hour.[276]
  • 2 October
    • Johnson publishes his Brexit plan, which includes proposals to replace the Irish backstop. It would create an "all-island regulatory zone", meaning that Northern Ireland essentially stays in the European Single Market for agricultural and industrial goods.[277]
    • The government announces fresh plans to prorogue parliament, from 8–14 October to allow them to bring the current parliamentary session to an end and introduce a new Queen's Speech.[278]
  • 4 October
    • The government assures the highest civil court in Scotland that Boris Johnson will send a letter to the EU seeking an extension to Article 50 as required by the Benn Act.[279]
    • Prince Harry begins legal action against the owners of The Sun and the Daily Mirror, in relation to alleged phone-hacking.[280]
  • 5 October
    • 2019 Totnes bus crash: More than fifty people are injured after a double-decker bus crashes and overturns on the A385 between Totnes and Paignton in Devon.[281]
    • Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab says he has called the US ambassador to the United Kingdom to express his "disappointment" that a US diplomat's wife who is the subject of a police investigation following a fatal road crash has left the UK.[282]
    • Lucia Lucas becomes the first transgender singer to perform with the English National Opera in London.[283]
  • 6 October
    • Essex Police confirm that a 32-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after three men were found dead at an address in Colchester the previous evening.[284]
    • Flights repatriating the final 4,800 Thomas Cook holidaymakers stranded abroad following the company's collapse take off, bringing to an end Operation Matterhorn, the largest peacetime repatriation operation that has seen more than 150,000 people brought back to the UK.[285]
  • 8 October
    • A Downing Street source says that a Brexit deal is now "essentially impossible" after a phone call between the Prime Minister and German chancellor Angela Merkel.[286] The Brexit spokesman for Angela Merkel's CDU parliamentary group says the unattributable remark "does not ring true".[287]
    • Parliament is prorogued until 14 October.[288]
  • 9 October
    • The Government announces plans for a special Saturday sitting of Parliament for 19 October to discuss Brexit options.[289]
    • Welsh Assembly AMs vote 43–13 to rename the legislature with a bilingual name, calling it both Senedd Cymru and the Welsh Parliament.[290]
  • 10 October – Boris Johnson and his Irish counterpart, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar hold talks at Thornton Manor in north west England aimed at reaching an agreement over Northern Ireland's status after Brexit.[291]
  • 11 October
    • The Arndale Centre in Manchester is evacuated after a number of stabbings, in which four people are injured. A man in his 40s is arrested on suspicion of planning an act of terrorism.[292][293]
    • The pound has its biggest rally against the dollar since the Brexit vote, amid hopes that a deal could be reached before the deadline on 31 October.[294]
  • 13 October
  • 14 October
    • The Queen's Speech during Parliament's State Opening sets out 26 bills, including the plans for Brexit.[297]
    • Extinction Rebellion protests are banned across London by the Metropolitan Police.[298]
  • 17 October – The UK and EU agree a new Brexit withdrawal agreement, but the DUP confirm they will not support its passage through Parliament.[299][300]
  • 18 October
  • 19 October
    • A special Saturday sitting of Parliament is held to debate the revised European Union withdrawal agreement.[303][304] MPs pass an amendment 322 to 306 that withholds Parliament's approval until legislation implementing the deal has been passed, and forces the Government to request a delay to Brexit until 31 January 2020.[305]
    • 10 Downing Street confirms that Boris Johnson will send a letter to the EU requesting an extension to Article 50, but will not sign it. EU Council President Donald Tusk subsequently confirms receipt of the letter; in addition, Johnson sends a second letter describing any further delay to Brexit as a mistake.[306]
    • Another People's Vote march is held through London, matching the size of the previous one on 23 March 2019, in which hundreds of thousands attended.[307]
  • 21 October
  • 22 October
    • Abortion is decriminalised in Northern Ireland.[310]
    • MPs allow the government's new withdrawal agreement bill to pass to the next stage of the parliamentary process, by 329 votes to 299; a majority of 30. However, the proposed timetable of three days is rejected by 322 votes to 308; a majority of 14.[311][312]
  • 23 October – The bodies of 38 adults and a teenager are found in a lorry container in Essex. A 25-year-old man from Northern Ireland is arrested on suspicion of murder.[313]
  • 28 October
    • Operation Brock, a plan to manage traffic congestion on the M20 in Kent, comes into force in preparation for a no-deal Brexit.[314]
    • EU leaders agree in principle to move the deadline for a Brexit with an agreement from 31 October 2019 to 31 January 2020.[315]
    • MPs reject a motion for a 12 December general election, with only 299 votes in favour, which is 135 votes short of the two-thirds majority needed. 70 MPs vote against the motion. Johnson says he will table a new bill after losing this motion.[316][317]
  • 29 October
  • 30 October

November[edit]

  • 1 November – Following a report from the Oil and Gas Authority, the government calls a halt to all fracking in the UK "with immediate effect"[324] and warns shale gas companies that it will not support future projects.[325]
  • 3 November – Conservative MP Ross Thomson announces he will not stand at the next election following an accusation that he sexually assaulted Labour MP Paul Sweeney.[326]
  • 4 November
    • The UK terrorism threat level is reduced from "severe" to "substantial" for the first time since 2014.[327]
    • Sir Lindsay Hoyle, Member of Parliament for Chorley, is elected Speaker of the House, replacing John Bercow who stepped down after 10 years in the role.[328]
    • 18 female members of Parliament of the United Kingdom say they will not seek reelection due to threats and abuse.[329]
  • 5 November – Mothercare collapses into administration, putting 2,500 UK jobs at risk.[330]
  • 6 November
    • At 00:01, the 57th parliament is dissolved in preparation for the general election on 12 December 2019.[331]
    • Extinction Rebellion wins a High Court challenge against the Metropolitan Police over a London-wide ban on protests that came into force on 14 October.[332]
    • Alun Cairns resigns as Secretary of State for Wales over allegations that he was aware of the role of a former aide in the "sabotage" of a rape trial.[333]
    • Labour's Tom Watson announces he will step down as an MP at the 2019 election, and vacate his post as deputy leader of Labour for personal reasons.[334]
  • 7 November – The Times reports that Downing Street is suspected by unnamed sources of suppressing a parliamentary report into Russian interference because it contains "embarrassing" disclosures about the Kremlin links of wealthy Russian donors to the Conservative Party.[335]
  • 8 November – More than 100 flood warnings are issued across the Midlands and northern England, with some areas receiving a month's worth of rainfall in 24 hours.[336] The torrential downpours, described as "almost biblical", led to the death of a former Derbyshire High Sheriff, Annie Hall.[337][338]
  • 16 November – Prince Andrew, Duke of York, in a TV interview with Emily Maitlis, denies having sex with Virginia Roberts (now Virginia Giuffre) when she was a teenager, and expresses regret at having met convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in 2010.[339][340] He is widely criticised for the interview.[341]
  • 19 November – Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn appear on ITV in a head-to-head election debate.[342] The Conservatives attract controversy as CCHQ's press office alters the brand and imagery of their Twitter profile (@CCHQPress) during the live broadcast so it appears as "factcheckUK", and posts pro-Conservative responses attacking Corbyn.[343][344][342] Conservative Party chairman James Cleverly defends it as "calling out when the Labour Party put what they know to be complete fabrications in the public domain".[342] The Electional Commission calls on all campaigners to act "responsibly",[345] fact-checking body Full Fact criticises this behaviour as "inappropriate and misleading" and a spokesperson from Twitter says that they would take "decisive corrective action" if there were "further attempts to mislead people".[342][346][347]
  • 20 November – Prince Andrew says he is stepping down from public duties for the foreseeable future after being engulfed in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, which has become a "major disruption" to the Royal Family.[348]
  • 23 November – Five teenagers, including a 13-year-old girl, are arrested following a brawl at Vue Cinema in the Star City complex in Birmingham, before the screening of the film Blue Story. It is reported that the arrested were armed with machetes and the police had to draw tasers. Vue subsequently ban screenings of the film – amid much controversy – at all their 91 chains across UK and Ireland. Showcase Cinemas (UK) initially ban the film as well but later reverse this decision.[349][350]
  • 28 November – Former South Yorkshire police chief, David Duckenfield, is found not guilty of manslaughter in the Hillsborough disaster trial.[351]
  • 29 November

December[edit]

  • 7 December – Virgin Trains cease operations on the West Coast Main Line after running trains on the line since 9 March 1997. They are replaced the following day by Avanti West Coast.[354]
  • Boris Johnson following his victory at the general election
    12 December
  • 13 December
    • Jeremy Corbyn says he will not lead Labour into a future general election.[359]
    • Jo Swinson resigns as Leader of the Liberal Democrats after losing her constituency seat to the Scottish National Party.[360]
  • 17 December – Boris Johnson announces that he plans to rule out (legally) any extension to the transition period after the UK leaves the EU.
  • 19 December
    • The High Court rules that the Home Office's £1,012 child citizenship fee is unlawful.[361]
    • Independent Group for Change is dissolved.[362]
  • 20 December
    • MPs vote in favour of the Brexit withdrawal agreement by 358 to 234, paving the way for the UK's exit from the EU on 31 January 2020.[363]
    • Andrew Bailey is appointed as Governor of the Bank of England, effective from February 2020.[364]
  • 22 December – Tesco halts production of Christmas cards made in China after a girl in south London finds a card with a hand-written note asking for help. The writer claims to be a foreign prisoner being forced to work.[365]
  • 26 December – The RSPCA begins an investigation after a prominent lawyer, Jolyon Maugham, says that he killed an urban fox with a baseball bat.[366]
  • 28 December – The Cabinet Office apologises after the addresses of more than 1,000 2020 New Year Honours recipients, including senior police and political figures, are accidentally published online.[367]
  • 31 December – The first opposite-sex couples are granted civil partnerships in England and Wales by amended legislation under the Civil Partnerships, Marriages and Deaths (Registration etc.) Act of 26 March.[368]

Publications[edit]

Births[edit]

Deaths[edit]

January[edit]

William Morgan Sheppard in 2015
Dianne Oxberry in 2010
Sir Michael Atiyah in 2007
Steffan Lewis in 2016
Sue Povey in 2001
Ted McKenna in 2009

February[edit]

Jeremy Hardy in 2006
Albert Finney in 1966
Gordon Banks in 2007

March[edit]

Kumar Bhattacharyya
Keith Flint in 2009
John Habgood in 1981
Charlie Whiting in 2010
Scott Walker in 1968
Ranking Roger in 2015
Tania Mallet in 1964

April[edit]

David J. Thouless in 1995
Tommy Smith in 1966
Paul Raymond in 2007
Lyra McKee in 2017
Billy McNeill in 1982
Peter Mayhew in 2015

May[edit]

Freddie Starr in 1976
John Moore, Baron Moore of Lower Marsh in 1985
Judith Kerr in 2016
Claus von Bülow in 1997
Stephen Thorne in 2011
Walter Wolfgang in 2007

June[edit]

Ken Matthews in 1964
Noel Lloyd in 2017
Norman Dewis in 2012
Justin Edinburgh in 2010

July[edit]

John McCririck in 2006
Freddie Jones (right) in 2009
Cyril Edwards in 1983
Johnny Clegg in 2009
Michael English in 2008
Margaret Fulton in 2012
Jimmy Patton (right) in 2013

August[edit]

Gordon Brand Jnr
Ian Gibbons in 2018
Richard Williams in 2015
Richard Booth in 1984
Guy Innes-Ker, 10th Duke of Roxburghe

September[edit]

Chris Dobson in 2014
Cynthia Cockburn in 2015
Tony Mills in 2012
Al Alvarez in 2006
Elaine Feinstein in 2010

October[edit]

Tony Hoar in 1955
Ginger Baker in 1968
Sir John Boyd
Horace Romano Harré in 2011
Vladimir Bukovsky in 1987

November[edit]

Frank Dobson in 2014
Edwin Bramall, Lord Bramall in 2006
John Campbell Brown in 2012
Terry O'Neill in 2007
Gary Rhodes in 2008
Jonathan Miller in 1988

December[edit]

Bob Willis in 2007
David Bellamy in 1981
Kenny Lynch in 2010
Martin Peters in 2007
Tony Britton in 1972
Neil Innes in 2009

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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