Nicol Stephen

Nicol Stephen

Infobox Deputy First Minister
honorific-prefix =
name = Nicol Stephen
honorific-suffix =



imagesize = 150px
office =Leader of Scottish Liberal Democrats
term_start =27 June 2005
term_end =2 July 2008
predecessor =Jim Wallace
successor =Tavish Scott
order2 =2nd
office2 =Deputy First Minister of Scotland
term_start2 =27 June, 2005
term_end2 =16 May, 2007
firstminister2 =Jack McConnell
predecessor2 =Jim Wallace
successor2 =Nicola Sturgeon
office3 =Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning
term_start3 =27 June, 2005
term_end3 =16 May, 2007
firstminister3 =Jack McConnell
predecessor3 =Jim Wallace
successor3 ="office abolished"
office4 =Minister for Transport and Telecommunications
term_start4 =21 May 2003
term_end4 =27 June, 2005
firstminister4 =Jack McConnell
predecessor4 ="office created"
successor4 =Tavish Scott
constituency_MP5 =Aberdeen South
parliament5 =Scottish
majority5 =2,731 (9.1%)
term_start5 =6 May 1999
term_end5 =
predecessor5 =constituency created
successor5 =
constituency_MP6 = Kincardine and Deeside
parliament6 = Parliament of the United Kingdom!UK
majority6 = 7,824 (5.9%)
term_start6 =7 November 1991
term_end6 =9 April 1992
predecessor6 =Alick Buchanan-Smith
successor6 =George Kynoch
birth_date = Birth date and age|1960|03|23|df=yes
birth_place = Aberdeen
death_date =
death_place =
birthname =
nationality =
party = Scottish Liberal Democrats
spouse =
relations =
children =
residence =
alma_mater = University of Aberdeen, University of Edinburgh
occupation =
profession =
cabinet =
committees =
religion =


website =
footnotes =

Nicol Ross Stephen (born 23 March 1960) is the Member of the Scottish Parliament for Aberdeen South, and was leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats from 2005 to 2008. He is a former Deputy First Minister of Scotland and Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning.

He became an MSP in the first elections to the Scottish Parliament in 1999. Following the coalition agreement between the Scottish Liberal Democrats and Labour in the Scottish Parliament, he became Deputy Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning. Later in the same parliamentary term he became Deputy Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs, and then for Education and Young People. Following the 2003 Scottish Parliament election, he joined the Scottish Executive cabinet as Minister for Transport. In 2005, following the resignation of his predecessor Jim Wallace, he was elected leader of the party and also became Deputy First Minister and Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning. He led his party into the 2007 election, where they won 16 seats (down one on 2003). He resigned as party leader on 2 July 2008, triggering a leadership election.

Background and family life

Born in Aberdeen [ [http://gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk/aspect/aspect2003/sld/a03sldabs.htm Strathclyde University- Scottish Parliamentary Election Candidate Materials 2003] ] , he was educated at Robert Gordon's College in Aberdeen and at the University of Aberdeen, where he obtained an LLB in 1980. He then took his Diploma in Legal Practice at the University of Edinburgh School of Law and worked for a number of years as a solicitor before moving into corporate finance as a senior manager with Deloitte & Touche.

He was a former Chair of CREATE (a group campaigning for rail electrification between Aberdeen and Edinburgh); a chairperson of STAR (Save Tor-na-Dee Hospital and Roxburghe House); and the founder and director of Grampian Enterprise.

He is married with 4 children. [ [http://www.nicolstephen.org.uk/biog.php Nicol Stephen | Scottish Liberal Democrats] ]

Early political career

He was elected to Grampian Regional Council in 1982 (as Scotland's youngest councillor) and was Chair of Grampian's Economic Development and Planning Committee from 1986 to 1991.

He was briefly a Member of Parliament for the Kincardine and Deeside constituency, elected in the November 1991 by-election following the death of Conservative and Unionist Alick Buchanan-Smith. He was a member of the Liberal Democrat treasury team and spokesperson on small business during his time in the House of Commons. The seat returned to the Conservative and Unionist party at the 1992 general election, when it was won by George Kynoch.

He later stood for the Aberdeen South constituency in the 1997 election for Aberdeen South, but was defeated by the Scottish Labour candidate. [ [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,,-4973,00.html Guardian Unlimited- Nicol Stephen] ]

cottish Parliament

Minister and Deputy Minister roles

Stephen was elected as MSP for Aberdeen South in the first elections to the Scottish Parliament. He later helped negotiate the Partnership Agreement for the coalition government with the Labour Party. [ [http://www.scotland.gov.uk/About/Ministers/Deputy-First-Minister Scotland.gov.uk- Deputy First Minister] ]

He later served in the Scottish Executive as Deputy Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/346831.stm BBC News- "Scottish junior ministers named "] ] (1999 to 2000), then as Deputy Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs (2000 to 2001) [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/997287.stm BBC News- "Cabinet reshuffle - the full line-up"] ] , and as Deputy Minister for Education and Young People (2001 - 2003).

Following the 2003 election, he was appointed Minister for Transport. During his time in this post, he was responsible for approving the controversial M74 extension. [ [http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=317052005 Scotsman.com- "M74 link driven past green lobby"] ] .

Deputy First Minister

Following the resignation of Jim Wallace in May 2005 as leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats, Stephen announced his intention to stand for the leadership. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4532137.stm BBC News- "Stephen to stand for leadership"] ] He defeated rival candidate, Mike Rumbles, who advocated ending the coalition agreement with the Scottish Labour Party, winning 76.6%, becoming the Deputy First Minister on 23 June 2005. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4122106.stm BBC News- "Lib Dems choose Stephen as leader"] ] Following his leadership victory, a mini-reshuffle of the Scottish cabinet, saw him take on the role of Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4624841.stm BBC News- "Reshuffle reveals cabinet line-up"] /]

Opposition

Following the 2007 election, with the SNP emerging the largest party by one seat but short of an overall majority, it held discussions with the Scottish Green Party and also intimated that it would be open to discussions with the Liberal Democrats. However, since the Liberal Democrats had indicated that they would not enter discussions with parties which continued to favour a referendum on independence, no formal talks were held: the SNP became a minority administration and Stephen led his party to the opposition benches.

Despite being out of government, his party worked with the minority SNP Government on certain issues where they broadly agreed, including replacing the council tax with a local income tax to fund a proportion of local government revenue. He developed a reputation among some journalists as an effective and forceful critic of some aspects of the Scottish Government's policy and performance, especially at First Minister's Question Time. [ [http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/briantaylor/2008/06/05/index.html Brian Taylor's blog "Blether with Brian", 5 June 2008] ]

Along with Wendy Alexander and Annabel Goldie, he took his party into the Commission on Scottish Devolution chaired by Sir Kenneth Calman, but was opposed to any suggestion that this would result in powers of the Parliament being returned to Westminster. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/7271094.stm Holyrood 'won't give back powers' (BBC News, 29 February 2008] ,]

Resignation as Party Leader

On 2 July 2008, Stephen announced he was stepping down as party leader with immediate effect because of the pressures of leading a political party while having a young family based in Aberdeen, some distance from the Parliament in Edinburgh. Stephen's resignation took many in Scottish politics by surprise, and came only four days after the resignation of the former leader of Labour in the Scottish Parliament, Wendy Alexander. He was succeeded by Tavish Scott.

Questions about work-rate

Following long-term rumours about Stephen's work-rate, a Point of Order was raised on 22 February 2007 which highlighted his failure to answer 41% of written questions within the normal 10 working days. A busier Labour Minister only missed the 10 day target on 14% of occasions. This caused the Presiding Officer to comment, "the differences in performance are striking". [ [http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/business/officialReports/meetingsParliament/or-07/sor0222-02.htm#col32419 Point of Order (Scottish Parliament Official Report, 22 February 2007] ,]

ee also

*List of United Kingdom MPs with the shortest service

References

External links

* [http://www.nicolstephen.org.uk/ Nicol Stephen] Nicol Stephen's personal website
* [http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/msp/membersPages/nicol_stephen/ Nicol Stephen MSP] official biography at the Scottish Parliament website
* [http://www.scotlibdems.org.uk/people/holyrood/nicol-stephen Nicol Stephen MSP] profile at the site of Scottish Liberal Democrats
* [http://www.scotland.gov.uk/ Scottish Executive]

###@@@KEY@@@###succession box
title = Member of Parliament for Kincardine and Deeside
years = 1991–1992
before = Alick Buchanan-Smith
after = George Kynoch
Incumbent succession box | title=Member of the Scottish Parliament for Aberdeen South | start=1999 | before=Constituency Createdhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/7486589.stm

Template group
title = Nicol Stephen
titlestyle = style="background:#eee;
list =


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