List of nicknames of prime ministers of the United Kingdom
This is a list of nicknames of prime ministers of the United Kingdom. Since Sir Robert Walpole, most prime ministers have had a nickname which was in common usage at the time they were in office. Many nicknames can be perceived as disparaging although others are complimentary or affectionate.
18th century
Robert Walpole
Sir Bluestring
Screen-Master General
Earl of Wilmington
George II's Favourite Nonentity
Henry Pelham
King Henry the Ninth
Duke of Newcastle
Hubble-Bubble
Earl of Bute
Jack Boot
George Grenville
Gentle Shepherd
William Pitt the Elder
The Great Commoner, in reference to his continued refusal of a peerage whilst in office, though he later accepted the title Earl of Chatham
Duke of Grafton
Royal Oak
The Turf Macaroni
Lord North
Boreas (the north wind)
Lord-deputy North
Earl of Shelburne
Malagrida, after the Jesuit missionary Gabriel Malagrida
The Jesuit in Berkerly Square
William Pitt the Younger
Pitt the Younger, to distinguish him from his father, Pitt the Elder.
Three-bottle man, in reference to his heavy consumption of port wine.
19th century
Henry Addington
The Doctor
Lord Grenville
Bogey
Spencer Perceval
Little P
George Canning
The Cicero of the British Senate
The Zany of Debate
Viscount Goderich
Prosperity Robinson
Goody Goderich
The Blubberer
Duke of Wellington
The Iron Duke
Robert Peel
Orange Peel, a reference to his views on Ireland.
Earl Russell
Finality Jack
The Widow's Mite
Earl of Derby
Scorpion Stanley
The Rupert of Debate
Earl of Aberdeen
Lord Haddo, the courtesy title by which he was known before he succeeded to his grandfather's title of Earl of Aberdeen.
Lord Palmerston
Lord Cupid
Lord Pumicestone
Benjamin Disraeli
Dizzy
William Gladstone
Grand Old Man or its acronym GOM
The People's William
God's Only Mistake, used by Disraeli as a mocking alternative to Gladstone's preferred nickname (Grand Old Man).
Murderer of Gordon, a scathing inversion of Gladstone's preferred nickname (Grand Old Man) following the death of General Gordon at Khartoum. Gladstone had delayed sending Gordon military reinforcements, so was blamed for Gordon's subsequent defeat and execution by the Mahdists of the Sudan.
Earl of Rosebery
Puddin
20th century
Arthur Balfour
Pretty Fanny, a reference to his delicacy of appearance and manners.
Bloody Balfour
Tiger Lily
Miss Balfour
Henry Campbell-Bannerman
CB
H. H. Asquith
The Last of the Romans
The Sledgehammer
Squiffy
David Lloyd George
The Welsh Wizard
The Man Who Won The War
The Welsh Goat
Bonar Law
The Unknown Prime Minister
Stanley Baldwin
Honest Stan
Uncle Stanley, from his frequent use of the radio as Prime Minister.
Ramsay MacDonald
Ramsay Mac
Ramshackle Mac
Neville Chamberlain
The Coroner
Monsieur J'aime Berlin, French nickname meaning "Mr. I Love Berlin". Pun and referring to Chamberlain's policy of appeasement towards Germany.
Winston Churchill
Winnie
(British) Bulldog; first given to him by the Russians, it was a reference to his ferocity and focus.
Colonel Warden was his favourite code name or nom-de-guerre.
Former Naval Person and Naval Person; this was how Churchill signed many of his telegrams to US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, first choosing the code name "Naval Person" and later changing it to "Former Naval Person" after he became Prime Minister.
Pig, an affectionate name used by his wife, Clementine.
Clement Attlee
Clem
A sheep in sheep's clothing, an adaptation of wolf in sheep's clothing.
Anthony Eden
The Glamour Boy, in reference to his neat appearance.
Harold Macmillan
Supermac, originally coined by Victor Weisz as the title of an editorial cartoon published in the Evening Standard.
Mac the Knife, in reference to the Night of the Long Knives.
Alec Douglas-Home
Home Sweet Home, Churchill's nickname for him.
Baillie Vass, from a miscaptioned photo of Douglas-Home referring to a bailie named Vass; popularised by Private Eye magazine.
Harold Wilson
Wislon, a deliberate misspelling popularised by the fortnightly satirical magazine Private Eye.
Edward Heath
Grocer Heath
James Callaghan
Big Jim
Sunny Jim, a homonym of "Sonny Jim", used to patronise an inexperienced person, and to refer to his optimism. Particularly used in the media during the Winter of Discontent of 1978–79, when Callaghan appeared out of touch with the issues facing the nation at the time, such as when the most widespread industrial action since the 1926 general strike was taking place, and he arrived back from a summit in the Caribbean and boasted about his swimming activities.
Uncle Jim
Margaret Thatcher
Attila the Hen, a pun on Attila the Hun
That Bloody Woman or TBW
Tina (There Is No Alternative), a reference to Thatcher's constant refrain that the market economy is the only system that works.
That Great Charmer, an anagram of Margaret Thatcher.
The Great She-Elephant, an allusion to Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories.
The Grocer's Daughter, a double meaning in that she was literally the daughter of a grocer, but also the successor to Edward Heath, "The Grocer".
The Iron Lady(See Margaret Thatcher § "The 'Iron Lady' Sounds the Alarm".)
Madame Frit, derived from her use of the dialect word frit in the House.
Maggie
Maggie the Great
Milk Snatcher, from mischief-making by a Labour Party conference speaker based on her failure as Secretary of State for Education to completely protect the school milk budget from a treasury raid. The compromise she managed to secure was that free milk at school was only abolished for older primary school children - free milk for secondary school children had already been abolished in 1968 by the Harold Wilson Labour government.
Mrs Finchley - a slip made by David Dimbleby during the BBC's coverage of the 1983 general election overnight results programme. Finchley was the parliamentary constituency Thatcher represented for over 30 years.
Thatch, In the 1980s Ben Elton started a trend for referring to Mrs Thatcher as Thatch, a colloquialism for pubic hair.
John Major
Grey Man; Major "had been considered a decent but uninspiring person who was known as the 'grey man' of politics", with his caricature Spitting Image puppet portraying him as such.
21st century
Tony Blair
Tony Blur, used during his time in opposition to describe his "clear image" but not what he stood for.
Bambi, after the Disney character of a young deer; Blair had been the youngest prime minister for nearly 200 years.
Bliar, associated with the Iraq War. Blair was accused of misleading parliament and the country over weapons of mass destruction.
America's Poodle, a reference to his Special Relationship with the President of the United States, George W. Bush.
Teflon Tony
Tonibler/Tonibljer, a Kosovan given name derived from Tony Blair due to his role in ending the Kosovo War, but also occasionally used as a nickname for Blair himself mostly in Serbian media.
Gordon Brown
Flash Gordon, in reference to the comic strip hero Flash Gordon.
Big Clunking Fist, first used by Tony Blair during his final Queen's Speech debate, it was later used by columnists throughout the British media.
Great Clunking Fist, a common misquote.
Bottler Brown, used in relation to Brown not calling an election in 2007 after previously suggesting he would.
Golden Brown, as Chancellor, Brown sold 60% of the UK's gold reserves. Used by Terry Wogan and the TOGs, normally followed by Wogan saying "Never a frown with Golden Brown", a reference to the song "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers.
Gordo. The word means 'fat' in Spanish.
Great Leader and Stalin, often sarcastically used by Andrew Neil on This Week in relation to Lord Turnbull's description of Brown as a man who operates with "Stalinist ruthlessness". The fortnightly satirical magazine Private Eye also had a mock Stalinist decree each issue, Prime Ministerial Decree.
Squatter in No. 10, used as Brown was not elected and after Brown attempted to form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats following the 2010 general election.
David Cameron
Dave, Cameron is reported to be known to friends and family as "Dave" rather than David, although he invariably uses the latter name in public.
DVD Dave, Cameron was reportedly known as DVD Dave because of his love of DVD box sets which he enjoyed with his wife Samantha.
Flashman, a reference to fictional upper-class bully Harry Flashman, used by Ed Miliband during a PMQs debate on reform to the NHS.
Call Me Dave, used since the publishing of his 2015 biography Call Me Dave.
Hameron, in reference to the "Piggate" allegations.
Dodgy Dave, a nickname trending on social media with the #DodgyDave hashtag after Labour MP Dennis Skinner was sent out of the House of Commons in April 2016 for referring to Cameron as "Dodgy Dave" and repeating it after being instructed to withdraw it by Speaker John Bercow. This came about during the Panama Papers scandal.
DC, a shorthand form he signs off his messages with.
Theresa May
Mummy or Mummy May, affectionately used by Conservative activists to make reference to her matriarchal powers, although she had no children.
Bloody Difficult Woman, originally used by Kenneth Clarke to describe May while preparing for an interview with Sky News, not realising that he was being recorded.
Submarine May, originally used by Downing Street aides to describe May hiding away "like a submarine" during the EU referendum campaign.
Theresa Maybe, used to describe her apparent indecisiveness and vagueness, such as her use of the phrase 'Brexit means Brexit'.
Theresa the Appeaser, originally used to describe her relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump, particularly after Trump's signing of Executive Order 13769 known as the 'travel ban'. It has also been used since to describe her relationships with other world leaders.
Maybot, used to describe her 'robotic' nature, particularly during the 2017 general election campaign, from which she gained notoriety for frequently repeating campaign slogans such as "strong and stable leadership".
Teflon Theresa, used to describe her ability to avoid scandals whilst in the politically sensitive position of Home Secretary.
Lino, short for "Leader in name only", used during the Brexit process in reference to May's difficulty in passing her negotiated withdrawal agreement through the House of Commons and her perceived lack of authority as Prime Minister and Leader of the Conservative Party.
Boris Johnson
Al, used by his friends and family as a shortening of his legal first name Alexander.
Boris, Johnson has been described as one of the few politicians to be more commonly referred to by his given name than his last name.
BoJo, a portmanteau of his forename and surname. Often used by the press internationally.
BoJo the Clown, a pun on Bozo the Clown, a more pejorative form of the nickname "BoJo".
BoZo, a pejorative variation of BoJo (see bozo).
Bozza, an affectionate name used by his friends.
Beano Boris or Boris the Menace, coined by the satirical magazine Private Eye which depicted Johnson as a blond-haired version of Dennis the Menace from The Beano.
British Trump or Britain Trump, used to refer to his perceived similarities with former U.S. President Donald Trump.
Buffoon Boris, a pejorative reference to Johnson's supposed ability to provide amusement through inappropriate appearance or behaviour.
The Blonde Bombshell, a reference to Johnson's hair colour.
Greased piglet, a term used to describe him by David Cameron and subsequently by print media.
Liz Truss
Liz, a shortening of Truss's middle name Elizabeth, this is a nickname Truss uses in an official capacity. Truss has been known by her middle name from an early age, rather than her forename Mary.
Disruptor-in-Chief, a nickname coined by Truss herself in 2018, describing how she would work as Chief Secretary to the Treasury in tackling bureaucracy in the civil service.
Haggis Basher, a term used by her schoolmates, making fun of her Paisley Glaswegian accent after she moved from Scotland to England.
Human hand grenade, supposedly coined by Dominic Cummings as "she does tend to blow things up".
Queen of Instagram, a nickname used to describe her frequent use of social media, and particularly Instagram, in creating her public image. While international trade secretary, the department was nicknamed by her aides as the 'Department for Instagramming Truss'.
RadonLiz, a nickname used by opponents, with the explanation that "she’s a gas [i.e. humorous, or insubstantial], but she’s inert".
The Iron Weathercock, a nickname likely coined by French newspaper Les Echos, comparing her changing views on Brexit to a weathercock turning with the wind. Truss supported the Remain side before the Brexit referendum but became a staunch advocate of Brexit afterwards.
The Truss, a nickname Truss is reported to have used for herself.
Lettuce Liz, Lettuce a reference to a Daily Star joke asking whether her premiership and leadership would outlast a lettuce, which she did not.
Rishi Sunak
Dishy Rishi, a term used referencing the Eat Out To Help Out scheme implemented in his tenure as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Chatty Rat, a nickname originally used to refer to someone within Downing Street who had been leaking information to the tabloids during the premiership of Boris Johnson.
Yorkshire Maharajah/Maharaja of the Yorkshire Dales, a nickname referring to Sunak's Indian heritage, his wealth, and his being an MP for Richmond, a parliamentary constituency in the Yorkshire Dales.
Will from The Inbetweeners, a nickname that became popular online based on his similar voice as well as appearance to the character of Will McKenzie from the The Inbetweeners played by Simon Bird.
See also
Lists portal
United Kingdom portal
List of nicknames of presidents of the United States