Richard Kidston Law, 1st Baron Coleraine (born February 27, 1901, Helensburgh, Dumbartonshire, Scotland—died November 15, 1980, London, England) was a British politician who served as minister of state at the Foreign Office (1943–45) during World War II and later as minister of education (1945).
The son of Bonar Law, U.K. prime minister from October 1922 to May 1923, Richard Law opposed appeasement of Adolf Hitler in the years leading up to the war and joined the wartime coalition government, first at the War Office and then at the Foreign Office. He had previously worked as a journalist in Britain and in the United States, where he was on the staff of the New York Herald-Tribune and the Philadelphia Public Ledger. He was elected a Conservative member of Parliament for South-West Hull in 1931, a position he held until 1945. An able minister, primarily concerned with measures for the postwar relief of Europe, he was appointed to the Ministry of Education in 1945. But he lost his seat in South-West Hull in the general election that year. Soon thereafter he returned to Parliament (for South Kensington, 1945–50, and Haltemprice, 1950–54), but he devoted himself increasingly to his business interests, which included chairmanship of several companies. He was raised to the peerage in 1954 and became an active member of the House of Lords.