- Maureen Watt
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Maureen Watt MSP Convener of the Scottish Parliament Infrastructure and Capital Investment Committee Incumbent Assumed office
15 June 2011Preceded by Patrick Harvie (as Convenor of the Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change Committee) Minister for Schools and Skills In office
17 May 2007 – 10 February 2009First Minister Alex Salmond Preceded by Hugh Henry Succeeded by Keith Brown Member of the Scottish Parliament
for Aberdeen South and North KincardineIncumbent Assumed office
6 May 2011Preceded by Nicol Stephen Majority 6,323 Member of the Scottish Parliament
for North East ScotlandIn office
19 April 2006 – 23 March 2011Personal details Nationality Scottish Political party Scottish National Party Maureen Watt is a Scottish National Party (SNP) Member of the Scottish Parliament for North East Scotland since 2006.
Born in Aberdeen to a farming family, she was a secondary school teacher in Social Studies in England and moved back to Scotland to work in the oil sector.
She was sworn in as MSP on 19 April 2006 to replace Richard Lochhead who had resigned his seat to contest the Moray by-election. The next person on the SNP list from the 2003 election had been Alasdair Allan but he refused his place in Parliament as he had secured the SNP nomination for the Western Isles for the 2007 election. The next person on the list was Maureen Watt, who took up the place. She became the first MSP to swear their oath of allegiance in Doric.
Watt made her maiden speech [1] on 20 April 2006 on the subject of Drug Treatment and Rehabilitation. With a gap of only 17 hours 25 minutes since taking the Parliamentary oath she took over the record for the shortest wait from John Scott.
She had previously been a Councillor on Grampian Regional Council and had served on the Visiting Committee of Aberdeen Prison.
After the SNP's victory at the 2007 Scottish Parliament Election, Watt was appointed as the Minister for Schools and Skills. She left office on 10 February 2009.
In May 2011, Watt was elected as SNP MSP for Aberdeen South and North Kincardine on a 15.77% swing from the Liberal Democrats.
Family
Watt is the daughter of former SNP MP (1974–1979) Hamish Watt. She is married with two children.
References
- ^ Official Report; c 24778, Scottish Parliament, 20 April 2006
Elected in the 2011 election Constituency MSPs Kevin Stewart (SNP, Aberdeen Central) · Brian Adam (SNP, Aberdeen Donside) · Maureen Watt (SNP, Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) · Alex Salmond (SNP, Aberdeenshire East) · Dennis Robertson (SNP, Aberdeenshire West) · Nigel Don (SNP, Angus North and Mearns) · Graeme Dey (SNP, Angus South) · Stewart Stevenson (SNP, Banffshire and Buchan Coast) · Shona Robison (SNP, Dundee East) · Joe FitzPatrick (SNP, Dundee West)Additional members Richard Baker (Lab) · Marlyn Glen (Lab) · Alex Johnstone (Con) · Alison McInnes (Lib Dem) · Lewis MacDonald (Lab) · Jenny Marra (Lab) · Mark McDonald (SNP) · Nanette Milne (Con)SNP (11 seats), Labour (3 seats), Con (2 seats), Lib Dems (1 seat) Shona Robison (Minister for Commonwealth Games and Sport) · Michael Matheson (Minister for Public Health) · Fergus Ewing (Minister for Energy, Enterprise and Tourism) ·
Aileen Campbell (Minister for Local Government and Planning) · Roseanna Cunningham (Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs) · Stewart Stevenson (Minister for Environment and Climate Change)
Alasdair Allan (Minister for Learning and Skills) · Angela Constance (Minister for Children and Young People) · Keith Brown (Minister for Housing and Transport) · Brian Adam (Minister for Parliamentary Business and Chief Whip) ·External links
- http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/msp/membersPages/maureen_watt/index.htm
- http://gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk/aspect/aspect2003/snp/a03snpabs.htm
- http://www.aboutaberdeen.com/doric.php
- http://heritage.scotsman.com/scotslanguage/Someone-to-spik-up-for.2769634.jp
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4920268.stm
Categories:- Ministers of the Scottish Government
- People from Aberdeenshire
- Scottish National Party MSPs
- Living people
- Members of the Scottish Parliament 2003–2007
- Members of the Scottish Parliament 2007–2011
- Members of the Scottish Parliament 2011–
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