- Henry McLeish
Infobox First Minister
name=The Rt Hon Henry McLeish
small
order=2nd
office=First Minister of Scotland
term_start =October 27 ,2000
term_end =November 8 ,2001
monarch=Elizabeth II
deputy=Jim Wallace
predecessor =Donald Dewar
successor =Jack McConnell
constituency_MP2 =Central Fife
parliament2 =Scottish
term_start2 =6 May 1999
term_end2 =1 May 2003
predecessor2 =n/a (new constituency)
successor2 =Christine May
birth_date =Birth date and age|1948|6|15|mf=y
birth_place =Methil ,Fife
party=LabourThe Right Honourable Henry McLeish (b.
June 15 1948 ,Methil ,Fife ,Scotland ) is a Scottish politician, author, and academic. He served as the secondFirst Minister of Scotland from 2000 toNovember 8 2001 , followingDonald Dewar . McLeish was theMember of Parliament for Central Fife from 1987 to 2001 and MSP for Central Fife from 1999 to 2003.Footballer and early political career
He was a professional footballer playing for
East Fife F.C. , which he signed for after a spell atLeeds United F.C. and also represented Scotland as a youth international. After this he was a lecturer atHeriot-Watt University before entering politics. McLeish was leader of Fife Regional Council, before his election as a Labour MP for Central Fife at the 1987 General Election. In the late 1980s and into the 1990s, McLeish was a Labour shadow spokesman for several portfolios, including the Scottish Office, transport, employment, and health and social security. When Labour came to power in 1997, McLeish was appointed as a Minister of the Scottish Office.As Donald Dewar's right hand in Westminster, McLeish helped secure devolution for Scotland and manoeuvre the
Scotland Act through theWestminster Parliament . After the creation of theScottish Parliament in 1999, McLeish was elected as MSP for Fife Central and became Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning.First Minister
After Dewar's death in 2000, McLeish defeated his rival
Jack McConnell in the race to become the second First Minister.While First Minister, he was widely commended as being a business-like manager of the Scots executive, with good political instincts and good relations in Westminster and Holyrood. He travelled widely, particularly in the United States, where he quite shamelessly capitalised on sentimentalism for Scotland among American politicians to advance the cause of Scottish industry and export. He managed several tasks forces designed to improve the competitiveness of Scots industry, especially the PILOT project for Scottish oil and gas supply chains. Even so, he was embarrassed when an open microphone recorded him with
Helen Liddell in a TV studio, describing John Reid as "a patronising bastard" and said of his colleague Brian Wilson "Brian is supposed to be in charge of Africa but he spends most of his time in bloody Dublin. He is a liability." [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/vote2001/hi/english/scotland/newsid_1378000/1378867.stm] Labours chiefs in 'comments row', BBC News]He resigned as First Minister in 2001 amid a scandal involving allegations he sub-let part of his tax-subsidised Westminster constituency office without it having been registered in the 'register of interests' kept in the Parliamentary office. The press called the affair "
Officegate ". Even though McLeish could not have personally benefited financially from the oversight, he undertook to repay the £36,000 rental income, and resigned to allow theScottish Labour Party a clean break to prepare for the 2003 Parliamentary elections. McLeish did not seek re-election.After politics
Since leaving mainstream politics McLeish has lectured widely in the United States, particularly at the
United States Air Force Academy and theUniversity of Arkansas , where he holds a visiting professorship shared between the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences and theUniversity of Arkansas School of Law . He is considered an expert on European/American relations and on the European Union. He is a consultant with political and public relations consultancyHalogen Communications Ltd , as well as J. Chandler & Co., distributor ofBuckfast Tonic Wine and has written a number of books including"Scotland First: Truth and Consequences" (2004),"Global Scots: Voices from Afar" (with Kenny MacAskill) (2006)(published in the UK as "Global Scots: Making It in the Modern World"),"Wherever the Saltire Flies" (with Kenny MacAskill) (2006) and"Scotland: The Road Divides" (with Tom Brown) (2007).McLeish is also:
* Member of Her Majesty's Privy Council
* Hartman Hotz Visiting Professor in Law and the Liberal Arts, jointly in the Fulbright College and Law School,University of Arkansas
* Visiting Professor at theGraduate School of International Studies at theUniversity of Denver
* Visiting lecturer at theUnited States Air Force Academy ,Colorado Springs, Colorado
* Honorary Fellow at the College of Humanities and Social Science atEdinburgh University
* Honorary Fellow at the Cambridge Land Institute,Fitzwilliam College ,Cambridge University
* Adviser, Consultant and Facilitator to the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions and the European Monitoring Centre for Change,Dublin, Republic of Ireland
* Adviser and Consultant to the LEED Programme of the OECD in Paris, France, including visits to Austria, Italy, and Mexico
* Consultant, in partnership with Jeremy Harrison, Cambridge (Public Value Partnership, working on new project development and evaluation of existing projects in the community and voluntary sectorIn August 2007 he was appointed to the
Scottish Broadcasting Commission (established by theScottish Government ).References
* [http://www.institute-of-governance.org/pn/issues/pn12.html]
* [http://www.halogencom.com]
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