List of G7 leaders

This is a list of the heads of state and heads of government of the Group of Seven nations at each G6, G7, or G8 summit since the organisation's inception in 1975. The Group currently consists of the seven largest industrialized democracies, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, and also formerly Russia. The European Union is also a member since 1977, represented by the President of the European Commission and the President of the European Council, who before 2009 was the leader of the state holding the rotating Presidency of the Council of the European Union, also sometimes coinciding with a G7/8 nation, and is since 2009 a permanent position. The G7 holds an annual summit, which each nation's head of government attends. Each year the heads of government take turns assuming the presidency, whose job it is to set the agenda for and host the annual summit.

While the current G7 consists of seven nations, it has not always done so. The group was formed as the Group of Six, G6, including all of today's members except Canada. Under the leadership of Prime MinisterPierre Trudeau, Canada joined in the second year of the group's existence, 1976, forming the Group of Seven, G7. Russia joined the Group of Eight, G8, in 1997, under the leadership of PresidentBoris Yeltsin. Russia was suspended in March 2014 after the Russian annexation of Crimea, the group being thereafter again referred to as the Group of Seven.[1]

Summit(Host) State
CanadaCanadaFranceFranceGermanyGermanyItalyItalyJapanJapanRussiaRussiaUnited KingdomUnited KingdomUnited StatesUnited StatesEuropean UnionEuropean Union
CommissionCouncil
1st — 1975 FranceHad not joined Valéry Giscard d'EstaingHelmut SchmidtAldo MoroTakeo MikiHad not joined Harold WilsonGerald FordHad not joined
2nd — 1976 United StatesPierre TrudeauJames Callaghan
3rd — 1977 United KingdomGiulio AndreottiTakeo FukudaJimmy CarterRoy JenkinsJames Callaghan
4th — 1978 West GermanyHelmut Schmidt
5th — 1979 JapanJoe ClarkMasayoshi ŌhiraMargaret ThatcherValéry Giscard d'Estaing
6th — 1980 ItalyPierre TrudeauFrancesco CossigaSaburo Okita[a]Francesco Cossiga
7th — 1981 CanadaFrançois MitterrandGiovanni SpadoliniZenkō SuzukiRonald ReaganGaston ThornMargaret Thatcher
8th — 1982 FranceBelgiumWilfried Martens
9th — 1983 United StatesHelmut KohlAmintore FanfaniYasuhiro NakasoneHelmut Kohl
10th — 1984 United KingdomBettino CraxiFrançois Mitterrand
11th — 1985 West GermanyBrian MulroneyJacques DelorsBettino Craxi
12th — 1986 JapanNetherlandsRuud Lubbers
13th — 1987 ItalyAmintore FanfaniBelgiumWilfried Martens
14th — 1988 CanadaCiriaco De MitaNoboru TakeshitaHelmut Kohl
15th — 1989 FranceSōsuke UnoGeorge H. W. BushFrançois Mitterrand
16th — 1990 United StatesGiulio AndreottiToshiki KaifuGiulio Andreotti
17th — 1991 United KingdomJohn MajorNetherlandsRuud Lubbers
18th — 1992 GermanyGiuliano AmatoKiichi MiyazawaJohn Major
19th — 1993 JapanKim CampbellCarlo Azeglio CiampiBill ClintonHenning Christophersen[b]BelgiumJean-Luc Dehaene
20th — 1994 ItalyJean ChrétienSilvio BerlusconiTomiichi MurayamaJacques DelorsHelmut Kohl
21st — 1995 CanadaJacques ChiracLamberto DiniJacques SanterJacques Chirac
22nd — 1996 FranceRomano ProdiRyutaro HashimotoRomano Prodi
23rd — 1997 United StatesBoris YeltsinTony BlairNetherlandsWim Kok
24th — 1998 United KingdomTony Blair
25th — 1999 GermanyGerhard SchröderMassimo D'AlemaKeizō ObuchiManuel Marín[c]Gerhard Schröder
26th — 2000 JapanGiuliano AmatoYoshirō MoriVladimir PutinRomano ProdiJacques Chirac
27th — 2001 ItalySilvio BerlusconiJunichirō KoizumiGeorge W. BushBelgiumGuy Verhofstadt
28th — 2002 CanadaSpainJosé María Aznar
29th — 2003 FranceGreeceCostas Simitis
30th — 2004 United StatesPaul MartinRepublic of IrelandBertie Ahern
31st — 2005 United KingdomJosé Manuel BarrosoTony Blair
32nd — 2006 RussiaStephen HarperAngela MerkelRomano ProdiFinlandMatti Vanhanen
33rd — 2007 GermanyNicolas SarkozyShinzō AbeAngela Merkel
34th — 2008 JapanSilvio BerlusconiYasuo FukudaDmitry Medvedev[d]Gordon BrownNicolas Sarkozy
35th — 2009 ItalyTarō AsōBarack ObamaSwedenFredrik Reinfeldt
36th — 2010 CanadaNaoto KanDavid CameronHerman Van Rompuy
37th — 2011 France
38th — 2012 United StatesFrançois HollandeMario MontiYoshihiko Noda
39th — 2013 United KingdomEnrico LettaShinzō AbeVladimir Putin
40th — 2014 European UnionMatteo RenziSuspended
41st — 2015 GermanyJean-Claude JunckerDonald Tusk
42nd — 2016 JapanJustin Trudeau
43rd — 2017 ItalyEmmanuel MacronPaolo GentiloniTheresa MayDonald Trump
44th — 2018 CanadaGiuseppe Conte
45th — 2019 FranceBoris Johnson
46th — 2020 United States[e]Ursula von der LeyenCharles Michel
47th — 2021United KingdomMario DraghiYoshihide SugaJoe Biden
48th — 2022GermanyOlaf ScholzFumio Kishida
49th — 2023JapanGiorgia MeloniRishi Sunak
50th — 2024Italy
51st — 2025CanadaMark CarneyFriedrich MerzShigeru IshibaKeir StarmerDonald TrumpAntónio Costa
52nd — 2026FranceTBD

List of senior G7 leaders

The following is a chronology of senior G7 leaders from the founding of the G6 (a precursor organization to the G8) to the present.[f]

Entered office as head ofstate or governmentBegan time assenior G8 leaderEnded time assenior G8 leaderTerm lengthLeaderOffice
16 October 1964[g]15 November 19755 April 1976142 daysHarold WilsonUnited KingdomPrime Minister of the United Kingdom
16 May 19745 April 197627 June 197683 daysHelmut SchmidtGermanyChancellor of West Germany
20 April 196827 June 1976[h]4 June 19792 years, 342 daysPierre TrudeauCanadaPrime Minister of Canada
16 May 19744 June 19793 March 1980273 daysHelmut SchmidtGermanyChancellor of West Germany
20 April 1968[i]3 March 198030 June 19844 years, 119 daysPierre TrudeauCanadaPrime Minister of Canada
4 May 197930 June 198428 November 19906 years, 151 daysMargaret ThatcherUnited KingdomPrime Minister of the United Kingdom
10 May 198128 November 199017 May 19954 years, 170 daysFrançois MitterrandFrancePresident of France
1 October 198217 May 199527 October 19983 years, 163 daysHelmut KohlGermanyChancellor of Germany
10 July 199127 October 199831 December 19991 year, 65 daysBoris YeltsinRussiaPresident of Russia
20 January 199331 December 199920 January 20011 year, 20 daysBill ClintonUnited StatesPresident of the United States
4 November 199320 January 200112 December 20032 years, 326 daysJean ChrétienCanadaPrime Minister of Canada
17 May 199512 December 200316 May 20073 years, 155 daysJacques ChiracFrancePresident of France
2 May 199716 May 200727 June 200742 daysTony BlairUnited KingdomPrime Minister of the United Kingdom
7 May 200027 June 20077 May 2008315 daysVladimir PutinRussiaPresident of Russia
20 January 20017 May 200820 January 2009258 daysGeorge W. BushUnited StatesPresident of the United States
10 May 1994[j]20 January 200916 November 20112 years, 300 daysSilvio BerlusconiItalyPrime Minister of Italy
22 November 200516 November 20117 May 2012173 daysAngela MerkelGermanyChancellor of Germany
7 May 2000[k]7 May 201224 March 20141 year, 321 daysVladimir PutinRussiaPresident of Russia
22 November 200524 March 20148 December 20217 years, 259 daysAngela MerkelGermanyChancellor of Germany
4 November 20158 December 202114 March 20253 years, 96 daysJustin TrudeauCanadaPrime Minister of Canada
14 May 201714 March 2025Incumbent328 daysEmmanuel MacronFrancePresident of France

List of seniority of current G7 leaders

LeaderOfficeIn office sinceTerm lengthto date
Emmanuel MacronFrancePresident of France14 May 20178 years, 267 days
Donald TrumpUnited StatesPresident of the United States20 January 2025[l]5 years, 16 days
Giorgia MeloniItalyPrime Minister of Italy22 October 20223 years, 106 days
Keir StarmerUnited KingdomPrime Minister of the United Kingdom5 July 20241 year, 215 days
Mark CarneyCanadaPrime Minister of Canada14 March 2025328 days
Friedrich MerzGermanyChancellor of Germany6 May 2025275 days
Sanae TakaichiJapanPrime Minister of Japan21 October 2025107 days

G7 tenure

  • The longest period anyone has been the senior G7 leader is the 7 years, 259 days of Chancellor of GermanyAngela Merkel, who was Chancellor for sixteen years.
  • The shortest period any past G7 leader has been the senior G7 leader is the 42 days of Prime Minister of the United KingdomTony Blair in 2007.
  • Although Japan was a founding member of the G6 (which later became the G7, and then the G8), no Japanese Prime Minister has ever become the Senior G7 Leader.
  • Silvio Berlusconi currently holds the record of G8 Summit hosting, having hosted summits in Italy three times.

Notes

  1. ^Okita was actually Foreign Minister of Japan at the time, filling in for Prime Minister Ōhira, who died 10 days before the conference began.
  2. ^Vice-President of the European Commission
  3. ^Acting Commission President following the March 1999 resignation of the Santer Commission
  4. ^Medvedev attended the 2012 summit in place of President Putin who cited domestic obligations as his reason for not attending
  5. ^Due to the global coronavirus pandemic, the 2020 summit was cancelled.
  6. ^Canada did not join the organization until 1976, while Russia did not join until 1997. Therefore, Canadian leaders prior to 1976 and Russian leaders before 1997 are not included in this list.
  7. ^Wilson first served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 16 October 1964 to 19 June 1970, and then again from 4 March 1974 to 5 April 1976.
  8. ^Canada joined the organization on this date. Trudeau had been in office longer than any of the other leaders and so took the title of senior G8 leader from Schmidt.
  9. ^Trudeau first served as Prime Minister of Canada from 20 April 1968 to 4 June 1979, and then again from 3 March 1980 to 30 June 1984.
  10. ^Berlusconi first served as Prime Minister of Italy from 10 May 1994 to 17 January 1995, then again from 11 June 2001 to 17 May 2006, and then again from 8 May 2008 to 16 November 2011.
  11. ^Putin first served as President of Russia from 2000 to 2008.
  12. ^Trump previously served as President of the United States from 2017 to 2021

References

  1. ^Myers, Steven Lee; Barry, Ellen (2014-03-18). "Putin Reclaims Crimea for Russia and Bitterly Denounces the West". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-20.