2017 in the United Kingdom

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

2017 in the United Kingdom
Other years
2015 | 2016 | 2017 (2017) | 2018 | 2019
Countries of the United Kingdom
England | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales
Popular culture

Events from the year

Sapphire Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II
.

Incumbents

Events

January

  • 1 January – Kingston upon Hull begins its City of Culture programme.[1]
  • 2 January
    • Rail fares increase by an average of 2.3%, higher than inflation and continuing the trend in rising ticket prices.[2]
    • The government announces proposals to build seventeen new towns and villages across the English countryside.[3]
  • 3 January –
    ambassador to the European Union.[4]
  • 4 January – Sir Tim Barrow is appointed as the UK's new ambassador to the European Union.[5]
  • 5 January
    • UK car sales are at a record high in 2016 according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), which says that 2,690,000 new cars were registered last year, 2% higher than in 2015.[6]
    • Changing of the Guard ceremony will be held on fixed days of the week (Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays) instead of alternate days for a three-month trial period owing to tightened security.[7]
  • 7 January – The British Red Cross describes the current situation in England's NHS hospitals as a "humanitarian crisis".[8]
  • 8 January – The Trades Union Congress announces that the average UK household owes £12,887 in debt.[9]
  • 9 January
    • A strike by workers on London Underground causes travel chaos and crowding in London, with much of the Tube network shut down.[10]
    • Seven-year-old Katie Rough is fatally asphyxiated and stabbed in the neck near her home in York. A fifteen-year-old female hands herself in to the police immediately after the killing.[11]
    • Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness resigns.[12]
  • 11 January – The Royal College of Nursing describes conditions in the NHS as the worst they have ever experienced. In a separate move, fifty leading doctors write to the Prime Minister, warning that lives are being put at risk due to mounting pressures on the health service.[13]
  • 12 January
    • Plans for a 1.8-mile road tunnel on the A303 near Stonehenge in Wiltshire are finalised by the UK Government.[14]
    • A government-commissioned review gives backing to a tidal lagoon planned for Swansea Bay in Wales. The £1,300,000,000 project could have a lifetime of 120 years and supply 8% of UK energy.[15]
  • 16 January – The power-sharing government of Northern Ireland collapses following the resignation of Martin McGuinness.[16]
  • Crowds at the Women's march in Liverpool
    21 January – 2017 Women's March: thousands of people march in London, Belfast, Cardiff, Lancaster, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Shipley, Edinburgh and Bristol – as well as millions more in countries around the world – in protest at Donald Trump's inauguration as 45th President of the United States.[17]
  • 24 January – The
    Article 50.[18]
  • 30 January – A petition to stop US President Donald Trump's UK state visit gathers more than 1.8 million signatures.[19]

February

  • 1 February – MPs back the
    European Union Bill
    by 498 votes to 114, with 47 Labour rebels voting against.
  • 3 February – The government publishes a white paper setting out its Brexit plans.[20]
  • 6 February –
    Sapphire Jubilee
    .
  • 7 February – Plans for building more homes in England are revealed by the government, after ministers say that the housing market is "broken".[21]
  • 8 February – Labour MP
    Article 50.[22]
  • 15 February – The European Commission issues a "final warning" to the United Kingdom over the breaching of air pollution limits.[23]
  • 18 February – Lincoln City F.C. become the first non-league team to reach the FA Cup quarter-finals for 103 years with a 1–0 victory over Burnley.[24]
  • 21 February – A heterosexual couple, Rebecca Steinfeld and Charles Keidan, lose their
    Court of Appeal case in which they sought to be granted civil partnership instead of a traditional marriage.[25]
  • 22 February –
    Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, becoming the first woman to hold the position in the force's 188-year history.[26]
  • 23 February

March

April

May

  • 4 May
  • 5 May – Paper £5 notes featuring Elizabeth Fry cease to be legal tender in the UK.[53]
  • 12 May – Computers across the United Kingdom are hit by a large-scale ransomware cyber-attack, causing major disruption.[54]
  • Tributes to victims of the Manchester Arena Attack
    22 May – Manchester Arena is attacked by a suicide bomber following a music concert by American singer Ariana Grande, resulting in multiple casualties.[55] It is the most deadly attack in the UK since the 7 July 2005 London bombings and the first in the North of England since the IRA bombing of Manchester in June 1996.
  • 23 May – general election campaigning from all major political parties is temporarily suspended after the attack in Manchester.
  • 24 May
    • The UK's terror threat level is raised from "severe" to "critical", its highest possible level, for the first time in ten years; meaning not only is an attack being highly likely, it is "expected imminently".[56]
    • As police investigate a "network" relating to the Manchester Arena attack, up to 5,000 military personnel are deployed onto the streets of Britain. Seven people are arrested, including the bomber's 23-year-old brother. The suicide bomber is confirmed to have been 22-year-old Salman Abedi, who lived in the city and was the son of Libyan immigrants.[57]
  • 25 May – Police investigating the Manchester bombing reveal they have stopped sharing information with the US, following leaks to the media.[58]
  • 27 May
    • British Airways experiences a global IT system failure, causing severe disruption to flights worldwide.[59]
    • In football,
      2-1 to win the FA Cup for a record thirteenth time.[60]

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

  • 3 December – Alan Milburn and the entire Social Mobility Commission quit their roles, citing ‘lack of political leadership’, a repeated refusal to properly resource and staff the commission, an obsession with Brexit and an ‘absence’ of policy.[140][141]
  • 7 December – Coventry is named the UK City of Culture 2021.[142]
  • 8 December – The United Kingdom and European Union reach agreement on the first stage of Brexit.[143]
  • 11 December –
    Mount Hope in the British Antarctic Territory is found to be the highest mountain in British territory.[144]
  • 12 December – The UK's key inflation rate – the consumer prices index – rises to 3.1%, the highest level in nearly six years.[145]
  • 13 December – After a rebellion by Tory MPs, the government is defeated in a key vote on Brexit, with MPs voting in favour of giving Parliament a say on the final deal struck with the EU.[146]
  • 14 December – The Scottish government's budget proposes splitting the 20% income tax band into three with a new lower band of 19%, a 20% band, and a 21% band for those earning over £24,000.[147]
  • 20 December – The EU announces that the UK's Brexit transition period will end no later than 31 December 2020.[148]

Publications

Births

Deaths

January

Sir Tony Atkinson
John Berger
Rolf Noskwith
Graham Taylor
Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon
Mike Kellie
John Watkiss
Gorden Kaye
Sir John Hurt

February

Sir Peter Mansfield
Tara Palmer-Tomkinson
Sir Gerald Kaufman

March

John Surtees
Roy Fisher
Martin McGuinness

April

Christopher Morahan
Allan Holdsworth
Ugo Ehiogu

May

Moray Watson
Geoffrey Bayldon
Rhodri Morgan
Sir Roger Moore

June

Peter Sallis
Vin Garbutt
Errol Christie
Brian Cant

July

Joe Robinson
Bryan Avery
Deborah Watling
Gabriel Epstein

August

Commodore Laurie Brokenshire
11th Duke of Beaufort
Sir Bruce Forsyth
Don Shepherd
Brian Aldiss

September

10th Duke of Richmond
Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
David Shepherd
Sir Teddy Taylor

October

Rodney Bickerstaffe
Roy Dotrice
Phil Miller
Denise P. Barlow

November

Carl Sargeant
Henry Emeleus
John Gordon
Harry Blamires
Mary Lee Woods

December

Christine Keeler
Max Clifford
Keith Chegwin
Suzanna Leigh
Heinz Wolff

See also

References

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