Leo
Blair had ambitions to stand for Parliament in Durham but was thwarted
when he had a stroke when Blair was 11, an event which affected
Blair deeply. He spent most of his childhood years in Durham, where
between the age of 13 and 15 he worked during the school holidays
as a bicycle repairer in the local hardware store, "Jonathon
Willikstop's". After attending the Durham Choristers School,
Blair was educated at Fettes College in Edinburgh (sometimes called
the "Eton of Scotland"), where he met Charlie Falconer
whom he would later make Lord Chancellor. He read law at St. John's
College, Oxford. During his college years he also played guitar
and sang for a rock band called Ugly Rumours. He obtained a degree
and went on to enroll as a pupil barrister in the Chambers of Derry
Irvine where he met his future wife, Cherie Booth.
Begins political career
Shortly after graduation in 1975, Blair joined the Labour Party.
During the early 1980s, he was involved in the Hackney South Labour
Party, where he aligned himself with the "soft left" who
appeared to be taking control of the party. However, his attempt
to secure selection as a candidate for Hackney Borough Council was
unsuccessful. Through his father-in-law he contacted Tom Pendry,
a Labour MP, to ask for help in how to start his Parliamentary career;
Pendry gave him a tour of the House of Commons and advised him to
run for selection in a by-election due to be held in the safe Conservative
seat of Beaconsfield in 1982, where Pendry knew a senior member
of the local party. Blair was chosen as the candidate; he won only
10% of the vote and lost his deposit, but impressed the then Labour
Party leader Michael Foot and got his name noticed within the party.
In 1983, Blair found that the newly-created seat of Sedgefield,
near where he had grown up in Durham, had no Labour candidate. Several
sitting MPs displaced by boundary changes were interested, but Blair
managed to win the nomination. The seat was safely Labour despite
the party's collapse in the 1983 UK general election; Blair was
helped on the campaign trail by soap actress Patricia Phoenix, the
girlfriend of his father-in-law Anthony Booth.
In
opposition
Once in Parliament, Blair's ascent was rapid. He was given his first
shadow post in 1984, aligning himself firmly with the reforming
tendencies in the party, headed by leader Neil Kinnock. He entered
the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for Energy in 1989,
and worked to produce a more moderate and electable party. When
Kinnock resigned after defeat by John Major in the 1992 UK general
election, Blair became Shadow Home Secretary under John Smith.
Smith died suddenly in 1994 of a heart attack. Blair and close friend
Gordon Brown had both been considered as possible leadership contenders
and had always agreed that they would not fight each other. Brown
had previously been thought the most senior and understood this
to mean that Blair would give way to him; however, it soon became
apparent that Blair now had greater support. A MORI opinion poll
published in the Sunday Times on 15 May found that among the general
public, Blair had the support of 32%, John Prescott, 19%, Margaret
Beckett 14%, Gordon Brown 9%, and Robin Cook 5%. At the Granita
restaurant in Islington on 31 May, Brown agreed to give way. There
is no conclusive evidence of the terms of any wider "Granita
Pact" but supporters of Brown maintain that Blair undertook
to resign from the Prime Ministership after a set period in favour
of Brown. The Labour Party Electoral College elected Tony Blair
as Party Leader on 21 July 1994. The other candidates were John
Prescott and Margaret Beckett.
Leader of the Labour Party
Shortly after his election as Leader, Blair announced at the conclusion
of his 1994 conference speech that he intended to propose a new
statement of aims and values for the Labour Party to replace the
charter originally drawn up in 1918. This involved the deletion
of Clause IV which had committed the party to 'the common ownership
of the means of production' (widely interpreted as wholesale nationalisation).
A special conference of the party approved the change in March 1995.
While in opposition, Blair also revised party policy in a manner
which enhanced the image of Labour as competent and modern. He used
the term "New Labour" to distinguish the party under his
leadership from what had gone before. Although the transformation
aroused much criticism (its alleged superficiality drawing fire
both from political opponents and traditionalists within the "rank
and file" of his own party), it was nevertheless successful
in changing public perception. At the 1996 Labour party conference,
Blair stated that his three top priorities on coming to office were
"education, education, education".
Aided by disaffection with the Conservative government (who were
dogged by allegations of corruption, and long running divisions
over Europe), "New Labour" achieved a landslide victory
over John Major in the 1997 UK general election.
First term 1997–2001
Immediately after taking office, Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon
Brown gave the Bank of England the power to set the base rate of
interest autonomously. The traditional tendency of governments to
manipulate interest rates around the time of General Elections for
political gain is thought to have been deleterious to the UK economy
and helped reinforce a cyclical pattern of boom and bust, for which
Blair frequently criticises previous governments. Brown's decision
was popular with the City, which the Labour Party had been courting
since the early 1990s. Together with the government's avowed determination
to remain within projected Conservative spending limits, it helped
to reassure sceptics of the Labour Party's new-found fiscal "prudence".
Brown, who had his own following within the Labour Party, was a
powerful and independent Chancellor who was given exceptional freedom
to act by Blair, although later reports by Downing Street insiders
have said that Blair grew to regret this as he was cut out of important
fiscal decisions.
A significant achievement of Blair's first term was the negotiation
of the Belfast Agreement, commonly called the Good Friday Agreement,
in which the British and Irish Governments and most Northern Irish
political parties established an "exclusively peaceful and
democratic" framework for power-sharing in Northern Ireland.
Negotiations for this accord had begun under the previous Prime
Minister, John Major. The agreement was finally signed on 10 April
1998, and on 26 November 1998 Blair became the first Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom to address the Republic of Ireland's parliament.
Though the agreement has yet to be implemented in full, the ceasefires
and political structures it brought into being have increased the
chances of a sustained peace.
Blair's first term saw an extensive programme of constitutional
reform. A Human Rights Act was introduced in 1998, a Welsh Assembly
and a Scottish Parliament were both set up, and most hereditary
peers were removed from the House of Lords, in 1999, the Greater
London Authority was established in 2000, and the Freedom of Information
Act was passed later that year, with its provisions coming into
effect over the next decade. This latter proposal disappointed campaigners
whose hopes had been raised by a White Paper of 1998 which promised
a more robust Act.
In 1999, Blair presided over British involvement in the Kosovo War.
The Labour Party in opposition had criticised the Conservative government
for weakness over Bosnia, and Blair was one of those urging a strong
line by NATO against Slobodan Milosevic. He persuaded the US Clinton
administration to support the use of ground troops should aerial
bombardment fail to win the war, although in the event they were
not needed. His speech setting out the Blair Doctrine of the International
Community was made one month into the war, in Chicago on April 22,
1999.
In the 2001 UK general election, Blair defined the election as being
about improvements to public service. This specifically included
the National Health Service. The Conservatives largely ignored the
issue of public services in favour of opposing British membership
of European Monetary Union, which proved to do little to win over
floating voters: the Labour Party preserved its majority, and Blair
became the first Labour Prime Minister to win a full second term.
However the election was notable for a sudden and large fall in
voter turnout. The leader of the Conservative Party, William Hague,
resigned, becoming the first Conservative Party leader never to
have served as Prime Minister; his successor Iain Duncan Smith became
the second, and currently last, holder of this distinction (though
Austen Chamberlain never became Prime Minister, he only led the
Conservative MPs, and thus technically was never the leader of the
Conservative Party).
Second
term 2001–present
Following the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, Blair
was very quick to align the UK with the US, engaging in a round
of shuttle diplomacy to help form and maintain the allied coalition
prior to their attack on Afghanistan (in which British troops participated).
He maintains this role to this day, showing a willingness to visit
countries on diplomatic missions that other world leaders might
consider too dangerous to visit.
Iraq
war
Blair was a strong supporter of U.S. President George W. Bush's
controversial plan to invade Iraq and overthrow dictator Saddam
Hussein. Blair soon became the face of international support for
the war, often clashing with French President Jacques Chirac, who
became the face of international opposition. Regarded by many as
a more persuasive orator than Bush, Blair gave many speeches arguing
for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in the days leading up to war.
Blair made a case for war against Saddam based on Iraqi possession
of weapons of mass destruction and breach of UN resolutions, but
was wary of making a direct appeal for regime change. 46,000 British
troops, one third of the total strength of the UK armed forces,
were deployed to assist with the 2003 invasion of Iraq. When after
the war it was established that Iraq possessed no weapons of mass
destruction, Blair's pre-war statements became a major domestic
controversy. Many members of the Labour Party, not only those who
were opposed to the Iraq war, were among those critical; among opponents
of the war, accusations that Blair had deliberately exaggerated
the threat were made. However, successive inquiries (including those
by the Foreign Affairs Select Committee of the House of Commons,
Lord Hutton and Lord Butler) have found that Blair honestly stated
what he believed to be true at the time.
Blair and Bush were unsuccessfully nominated in 2004 for the Nobel
Peace Prize by Jan Simonsen, a maverick Norwegian politician. Several
anti-war pressure groups want to try Blair for war crimes in Iraq
at the International Criminal Court (Bush cannot be tried because
the USA is not a signatory to the treaty). The Secretary General
of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, stated that the invasion was
"illegal" in September 2004.
The United Kingdom armed forces remain in southern Iraq to stabilise
the country in preparation for impending elections. In October 2004
the UK government agreed to a request from US forces to send a battalion
of the Black Watch regiment to the American sector to free up US
troops for an assault on Fallujah. After the US election, Blair
has tried to use his personal closeness to President Bush to bring
pressure on the US administration on Israel and Palestine. He has
supported the Israeli government's plan to withdraw from the Gaza
Strip.
Domestic politics
After
fighting the 2001 election on the theme of improving public services,
Blair's government raised taxes to increase spending on education
and health in 2002. Blair insisted that the increased funding must
be matched by internal reforms. The government introduced a scheme
to allow local NHS hospitals financial freedom, although the eventual
shape of the proposals allowed somewhat less freedom than Blair
would have liked after an internal struggle. Despite a manifesto
pledge in 2001 not to introduce additional "top-up" tuition
fees in universities, Blair announced that such a scheme would eventually
be brought in.
On 1 August 2003 Blair became the longest continuously serving Labour
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, surpassing Harold Wilson's
1964–1970 term. However, because of the crisis over the suicide
of Dr David Kelly, a government scientist who had spoken to a BBC
journalist precipitating a major fight between the BBC and the government,
there were no celebrations. Blair set up an inquiry under the senior
Law Lord Lord Hutton.
The second reading vote on the Higher Education Bill bringing in
top-up fees was held on January 27, 2004 and saw the government
scrape a majority of 5 due to a Labour rebellion. A first House
of Commons defeat had been possible but averted when a small number
of Gordon Brown's backbench allies switched sides at the last minute.
The next day the Hutton Inquiry reported on the circumstances surrounding
the death of David Kelly. The Inquiry was widely expected to criticise
Blair and his government. In the event, Hutton absolved Blair and
his government of deliberately inserting false intelligence into
its dossier, but criticised the BBC editorial process which had
allowed unfounded allegations to be broadcast. The report did not
satisfy opponents of Blair and of the Iraq war.
Although the Hutton Inquiry had vindicated Blair, evidence to the
inquiry raised questions over the use of intelligence in the run
up to the war in Iraq. Hutton was the subject of criticism for strictly
interpreting his remit; after a similar decision by President Bush,
Blair initiated another inquiry (the Butler Review) into the accuracy
and presentation of pre-war intelligence. Opponents of the war,
especially the Liberal Democrats, refused to participate as it did
not meet their demands for a public inquiry into whether the war
was justified.
In April 2004, Blair announced that a referendum would be held on
the ratification of the EU Constitution. This represents a significant
change in British politics, where only one nationwide referendum
has been held (this was the 1975 referendum on whether Britain should
remain in the EEC). It was a dramatic U-turn for Blair, who had
previously dismissed calls for a referendum unless the constitution
fundamentally altered Britain's relationship with the EU; Michael
Howard eagerly seized on the "EU-turn", reminding Blair
of his 2003 conference oration that "I can only go one way.
I haven't got a reverse gear". The referendum is expected to
be held in early 2006.
During his second term Blair has increasingly become the target
for protests. On 19 May 2004, he was hit by two condoms filled with
purple flour in the House of Commons, thrown by Fathers 4 Justice.
His speech to the 2004 Labour Party conference was interrupted both
by a protester against the Iraq war and then by a group who opposed
the government's decision to allow the House of Commons to ban fox
hunting.
On 15 September 2004, Tony Blair delivered a speech on the environment
and the 'urgent issue' of climate change. In unusually direct language
he concluded that If what the science tells us about climate change
is correct, then unabated it will result in catastrophic consequences
for our world... The science, almost certainly, is correct. The
action he proposed to take appeared to be based on business and
investment rather than any tax or legislative attempts to reduce
CO2 emissions: ...it is possible to combine reducing emissions with
economic growth... investment in science and technology and in the
businesses associated with it... The G8 next year, and the EU presidency
provide a great opportunity to push this debate to a new and better
level that, after the discord over Kyoto, offers the prospect of
agreement and action. [2] (http://politics.guardian.co.uk/green/story/0,9061,1305030,00.html).
If he does press the issue at the G8, this would be expected to
lead to conflict with the United States, which has opposed the Kyoto
Protocol.
Attempted impeachment
On 25 August 2004, Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price announced that he would
attempt to impeach Blair. Price argued that Blair has "caused
injury to the state" and "breached his constitutional
duties" by lying to Parliament. Price had the support of all
Plaid Cymru and Scottish nationalist MPs, and claimed that a number
of Labour backbenchers have expressed support, though only one (Peter
Kilfoyle) has revealed his support to the public. The campaign is
supported by the right-wing Spectator magazine and its editor, Conservative
MP Boris Johnson, and has its own web site, ImpeachBlair.org. The
impeachment charge is summarised into four specific charges laid
against Blair, all relating to the Iraq war:
misleading Parliament and the country;
incompetence and negligence;
undermining the constitution; and
entering into a secret agreement with the President of the United
States.
Impeachment is an archaic method of bringing to trial those who
cannot or should not be tried by a lesser court than Parliament.
An impeachment process could be initiated by a single MP, but must
be approved by a vote of the House of Commons, in which the Government
has a large majority. If this resolution passes, Blair would be
brought to trial before the House of Lords; if found guilty, he
would be removed from office. However, the procedure cannot begin
until the Speaker of the House of Commons allows debate on the impeachment
motion. The impeachment campaign has drafted a motion for a Select
Committee to investigate the charges and bring in an impeachment
resolution, and this motion is currently open for MPs to sign. The
Speaker will decide whether to order a debate after assessing the
number of signatures. No impeachment has been attempted for one
hundred and fifty years, and no impeachment resolution has been
passed since 1806; the last two impeachment trials resulted in acquittals.
Private
life
Blair married fellow barrister and QC Cherie Booth on 29 March 1980.
They had met in 1976 whilst both were pupil barristers in the same
Chambers. They have three sons (Euan, Nicky, and Leo) and one daughter
(Kathryn). Leo holds the distinction of being the first child officially
born to a sitting Prime Minister in 150 years, since Francis Albert
Rollo Russell was born to Lord John Russell on 11 July 1849. While
the Blairs have been keen to shield their children from the media
spotlight, this has not always been possible. Leo became a focal
point for a debate over the MMR vaccine when Tony Blair refused
to confirm whether his son had received the controversial treatment.
Euan Blair hit the headlines after police found him "drunk
and incapable" in Leicester Square, London while out celebrating
the end of his GCSE exams in July 2000, just days after his father
had proposed on-the-spot fines for drunken and yobbish behaviour.
Blair has twice lodged complaints about press stories concerning
his children. However, the fact that the family have occasionally
held photocalls together has led some to accuse him of exploitation,
and such photographs have been used on Private Eye covers.
Blair is an Anglican of the High Church or Anglo-Catholic tendency,
while his wife is Roman Catholic and his children are (according
to Catholic doctrine) brought up in that faith. Blair has not sought
to make a political issue of his faith, though biographers agree
that his political beliefs have been profoundly influenced by it.
One name often mentioned as a theological influence is the Scottish
Christian philosopher John Macmurray. Some have suggested Tony Blair
is the most devout Prime Minister since William Ewart Gladstone.
Health problems
On 19 October 2003 it emerged that Blair had received treatment
for an irregular heartbeat. Having felt ill the previous day, he
went to hospital and was diagnosed with supraventricular tachycardia.
He was given a small electric shock to correct the heartbeat and
returned home that night. He took the following day (20 October)
a little more gently than usual and returned to a full schedule
on 21 October. Downing Street aides later suggested that the palpitations
had been brought on by Blair drinking lots of strong coffee at an
EU summit and then working out vigorously in the gym. However, former
Armed Forces minister Lewis Moonie, a doctor, said that the treatment
was more serious than Number 10 had admitted: "Anaesthetising
somebody and giving their heart electric shocks is not something
you just do in the routine run of medical practice", he claimed.
Family problems in the spring of 2004 fueled speculation that Blair
was on the brink of stepping down. Lord Bragg, a close friend of
the Blair family, admitted that Blair was "under colossal strain",
that "considerations of his family became very pressing"
and that Blair had thought "things over very carefully."
This led to a surge in speculation that Blair would resign. Several
cabinet ministers urged Blair to continue.
Blair underwent a catheter ablation to correct his irregular heartbeat
on 1 October 2004, having announced the procedure the day before
in a series of interviews in which he also declared that he would
seek a third term but not a fourth. The planned procedure was carried
out at London's Hammersmith hospital. At the same time it was disclosed
that the Blairs had purchased a house at No.29 Connaught Square,
London, for a reported £3.5 million. Some have speculated
that part of No.29 is to be converted into offices for a future
Blair Foundation. The purchase also fuelled speculation that Blair
was preparing for life after government.
Satirical caricature
As is usually the fate with British Prime Ministers, he has become
the central focal point of satire in the magazine Private Eye. A
regular feature is the St Albion Parish News, in which recent political
events and Blair's penchant for spin and his zealous enthusiasms
are pilloried. In this series the parish incumbent (Rev. A.R.P.
Blair MA (Oxon)) combines a relentless trendiness with a tendency
to moralise and to exclude all those who criticise him.
Blair has avoided traditional pigeon holes of British political
leaders. He has been labelled as insincere ("King of Spin",
"Phoney Tony") and accused of "cronyism" due
to his perceived penchant for promoting his friends to top jobs;
the fact that "Tony" rhymes with "crony" has
helped make this into easy slogans. Since 2001, he has been called
"Bush's poodle" or the governor of the 51st state due
to his co-operation with the USA — an alliance somewhat upsetting
to many supporters of his party, which traditionally allies with
the Democrats.
His name is commonly deliberately mis-spelled as Tony Bliar (or
simply "B. Liar") by people who don't like what he has
done, what they think he has done, his policies (particularly his
stance on Iraq, something opposed by many people who otherwise would
support him), or who simply dislike him personally. This originates
from the belief that he deliberately lied to parliament over the
threat Iraq posed. He has also been parodied in the comic 2000 AD
in the series B.L.A.I.R 1 where he acts as a sort of futuristic
crime fighter controlled by an artificial intelligence known as
"Doctor Spin".
Quotations
"But what has come home to me more than anything else is the
utter futility of Opposition. I did not join the Labour Party to
protest. I joined it as a party of government and I will make sure
that it is a party of government." - From Tony Blair's speech
to the TUC, September 1995
"Ask me my three main priorities for government, and I will
tell you: Education, education, and education" - From Tony
Blair's speech to the Labour Party Conference, October 1, 1996
"She was the people's princess and that is how she will stay,
how she will remain in our hearts and minds forever." - Remarks
in Sedgefield on the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, August 31,
1997
"As Britain knows, all predominant power seems for a time invincible,
but, in fact, it is transient. The question is: What do you leave
behind? And what you can bequeath to this anxious world is the light
of liberty" — From Tony Blair's speech to the U.S. Congress,
18 July 2003
"I can only go one way. I've not got a reverse gear."
— From Tony Blair's speech to the Labour Party Conference, 30 September
2003
"My prediction that he would be a disaster has turned out to
be wrong and I think when that happens in politics you should just
be open about it..." — On London Mayor Ken Livingstone's readmission
to the Labour Party
"A day like today isn't time for soundbites — we can leave
them at home, but I feel that the hand of history is on our shoulder,
I really do." — On negotiating the Good Friday Agreement
"This is the time for this house, not just this government
or indeed this prime minister, but for this house to give a lead,
to show that we will stand up for what we know to be right, to show
that we will confront the tyrannies and dictatorships and terrorists
who put our way of life at risk, to show at the moment of decision
that we have the courage to do the right thing." — The closing
of Tony Blair's speech to the House of Commons opening the debate
on the 2003 Iraq War
Tony
Blair's First Cabinet, May 1997–June 2001
Tony Blair — Prime Minister, First Lord of the Treasury, and Minister
for the Civil Service
John Prescott — Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for
the Environment, Transport and the Regions
Gordon Brown — Chancellor of the Exchequer and Second Lord of the
Treasury
Lord Irvine of Lairg — Lord Chancellor
Ann Taylor — Leader of the House of Commons
Lord Richard — Leader of the House of Lords
Alistair Darling — Chief Secretary to the Treasury
David Clark — Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Cabinet Office
Minister
Robin Cook — Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
Jack Straw — Secretary of State for the Home Department
Jack Cunningham — Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
Frank Dobson — Secretary of State for Health
George Robertson — Secretary of State for Defence
Harriet Harman — Secretary of State for Social Security and Minister
for Women and Equality
David Blunkett — Secretary of State for Education and Employment
Margaret Beckett — Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and
President of the Board of Trade
Chris Smith — Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
Clare Short — Secretary of State for International Development
Mo Mowlam — Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
Donald Dewar — Secretary of State for Scotland
Ron Davies — Secretary of State for Wales
Gavin Strang — Minister for Transport
Peter Mandelson — Minister without Portfolio (non-cabinet)
Changes
July 1998 — Margaret Beckett becomes Leader of the House of Commons.
Baroness Jay of Paddington becomes Leader of the House of Lords
and Minister for Women. Stephen Byers becomes Chief Secretary to
the Treasury. Ann Taylor becomes Chief Whip, which is now a cabinet
position. Jack Cunningham becomes Cabinet Office Minister and Chancellor
of the Duchy of Lancaster. Nick Brown becomes Agriculture Minister.
Alistair Darling becomes Social Security Secretary. Peter Mandelson
enters the cabinet as Trade & Industry Secretary. Alun Michael
becomes Welsh Secretary. John Reid becomes Transport Minister, which
is no longer a cabinet position (although Dr Reid will continue
attending cabinet meetings). Lord Richard, Harriet Harman, Ron Davies,
David Clark, and Gavin Strang leave the cabinet. The President of
the Board of Trade is no longer a title used by the Trade Secretary.
There is no longer a Minister without Portfolio.
December 1998 — Stephen Byers becomes Trade & Industry Seretary.
Alan Milburn becomes Chief Secretary to the Treasury. Peter Mandelson
leaves the cabinet.
October 1999 — Andrew Smith becomes Chief Secretary to the Treasury.
Geoff Hoon becomes Defence Secretary. Alan Milburn becomes Health
Secretary. Peter Mandelson returns to the cabinet as Northern Ireland
Secretary. Mo Mowlam becomes Cabinet Office Minister and Chancellor
of the Duchy of Lancaster. John Reid becomes Scottish Secretary.
Paul Murphy becomes Welsh Secretary. George Robertson, Frank Dobson,
Donald Dewar, and Alun Michael leave the cabinet.
January 2001 — Peter Mandelson resigns as Secretary of State for
Northern Ireland and is succeeded by John Reid. Helen Liddell enters
the cabinet and succeeds John Reid as Secretary of State for Scotland.
Tony
Blair's Second Cabinet, June 2001–present
Tony Blair — Prime Minister, First Lord of the Treasury, and Minister
for the Civil Service:
John Prescott — Deputy Prime Minister
Gordon Brown — Chancellor of the Exchequer and Second Lord of the
Treasury
Lord Irvine of Lairg — Lord Chancellor
Robin Cook — Leader of the House of Commons
Lord Williams of Mostyn — Leader of the House of Lords
Andrew Smith — Chief Secretary to the Treasury
Jack Straw — Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
David Blunkett — Secretary of State for the Home Department
Margaret Beckett — Secretary of State for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs
Stephen Byers — Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government
and the Regions
Alan Milburn — Secretary of State for Health
Geoff Hoon — Secretary of State for Defence
Alistair Darling — Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
Estelle Morris — Secretary of State for Education and Skills
Patricia Hewitt — Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and
Minister for Women and Equality
Tessa Jowell — Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
Clare Short — Secretary of State for International Development
John Reid — Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
Helen Liddell — Secretary of State for Scotland
Paul Murphy — Secretary of State for Wales
Charles Clarke — Minister without Portfolio
Changes
May 2002 — Stephen Byers resigns and the Department of Transport,
Local Government & the Regions is broken up. Alistair Darling
becomes Secretary of State for Transport. John Prescott's Office
of the Deputy Prime Minisiter assumes the Local Government &
the Regions portfolio. Andrew Smith becomes Work & Pensions
Secretary. Paul Boateng becomes Chief Secretary to the Treasury.
Complete list of changes October 2002 — Estelle Morris resigns.
Charles Clarke becomes Education Secretary; John Reid becomes Minister
without Portfolio. Paul Murphy becomes Northern Ireland Secretary.
Peter Hain becomes Welsh Secretary.
March 2003 — Robin Cook resigns. John Reid becomes Leader of the
House of Commons. Ian McCartney becomes Minister without Portfolio.
May 2003 — Clare Short resigns and is succeed by Baroness Amos as
International Development Secretary.
June 2003 — In a reshuffle John Reid becomes Health Secretary. Lord
Falconer of Thoroton assumes the new position of Secretary of State
for Constitutional Affairs, also becoming Lord Chancellor. Alistair
Darling becomes Scottish Secretary remaining also Transport Secretary.
Peter Hain becomes Leader of the House of Commons, remaining also
Welsh Secretary. Alan Milburn, Lord Irvine of Lairg, and Helen Liddell
leave the Cabinet. Complete list of changes
October 2003 — Baroness Amos becomes Leader of the House of Lords,
following the death of Lord Williams of Mostyn. Hilary Benn becomes
International Development Secretary.
September 2004 — Andrew Smith resigns as Secretary of State for
Work and Pensions and is succeeded by Alan Johnson. Alan Milburn
returns to government with a seat in the Cabinet as Chancellor of
the Duchy of Lancaster mainly at the head of policy co-ordination;
he replaces Douglas Alexander, who was not in the Cabinet.
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