Political Parties in the UK
The major parties, their ideological positions, and how the party system shapes British politics.
The Major Parties
UK politics has historically been dominated by two parties. The Conservative Party (Tories) sits on the centre-right, traditionally favouring free markets, lower taxes, a strong defence, and social conservatism — though the party contains a wide ideological spectrum. The Labour Party sits on the centre-left, founded by trade unions in 1900 to represent working-class interests, and today broadly supports public services, workers' rights, and a more active state.
The Liberal Democrats occupy the centre ground, advocating civil liberties, electoral reform, and pro-European policies. Other significant parties include the Scottish National Party (SNP), which seeks Scottish independence; Plaid Cymru, the Welsh nationalist party; the Green Party; and Reform UK, a right-wing populist party. Northern Ireland has its own party system, dominated by the DUP (unionist) and Sinn Fein (nationalist).