Everything about Alistair Darling totally explained
Alistair Maclean Darling (born
November 28,
1953) is a
British politician and
Chancellor of the Exchequer since
June 28,
2007. He is
Labour Party Member of Parliament for
Edinburgh South West in
Scotland.
Early life
Darling was born in
London,
England, the son of a civil engineer, Thomas, and his wife, Anna. He is the great-nephew of Sir
William Darling who was Conservative MP for Edinburgh South (1945–1957). He was educated in
Kirkcaldy, and the private
Loretto School,
Musselburgh,
East Lothian, then attended the
University of Aberdeen where he was awarded a
Bachelor of Laws (LL.B). He became the head of Aberdeen University Students Union. He became a
solicitor in 1978, then changed course for the Scots bar and was admitted as an advocate in 1984. He was elected as a councillor to the Lothian Regional Council in 1982 and served until he was elected to
Parliament. He was also a board member for the
Lothian and Borders Police. He became a governor of
Napier College in 1985 for two years.
Member of Parliament
He entered Parliament at the
1987 General Election in
Edinburgh Central defeating the sitting
Conservative MP Sir
Alexander Fletcher by 2,262 votes, and has remained an MP since.
After the creation of the
Scottish Parliament the number of
Scottish seats at Westminster was reduced, his Edinburgh Central seat was abolished. Since the
2005 election he's represented
Edinburgh South West. The Labour Party was so concerned that Darling might be defeated, several senior party figures, including
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott and
Chancellor Gordon Brown, made supportive visits to the constituency during the election campaign. Despite being a senior
Cabinet minister himself, Darling was hardly seen outside the area, as he was making the maximum effort to win his seat. In the event, he won it with a majority of 7,242 over the second-placed Conservative candidate, a 16.49% margin on a 65.4% turnout.
Shadow Cabinet
As a
backbencher he sponsored the
Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1988 . He soon became an Opposition
Home Affairs spokesman in 1988 on the frontbench of
Neil Kinnock.
After the
1992 General Election he became a spokesman on
Treasury Affairs until being promoted to Tony Blair's
Shadow Cabinet as the Shadow
Chief Secretary to the Treasury in 1996. Following the
1997 General Election he entered Cabinet as the Chief Secretary to the Treasury; he's one of only three people who have been in the Cabinet ever since (the others are Gordon Brown and
Jack Straw).
In Government
In 1998 he was made the
Secretary of State for Social Security replacing
Harriet Harman who had been dismissed. After the
2001 General Election, the department for Social Security was abolished and replaced with the new
Department for Work and Pensions, which also took employment away from the education portfolio, Darling headed the new department until 2002 when he was transferred to the
Department for Transport, in the wake of his predecessor
Stephen Byers resigning after a great deal of criticism.
As Transport Secretary, Darling was given a brief to "take the department out of the headlines" and was widely considered to have achieved this, although he was also criticised for achieving too little else whilst he held the transport brief. He oversaw the creation of
Network Rail, the successor to
Railtrack, which had collapsed in controversial circumstances for which his predecessor was largely blamed. He also procured the passage of the legislation - the
Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003 - which abolished the
Rail Regulator and replaced it with the
Office of Rail Regulation. He was responsible for the
Railways Act 2005 which abolished the
Strategic Rail Authority, a creation of the Labour government under the
Transport Act 2000. Darling was also responsible for the cancellation of several major
Light Rail schemes.
Although he wasn't at the Department for Transport at the time of the collapse of Railtrack, Darling vigorously defended what had been done in a speech to the House of Commons on
October 24 2005. This included the making of threats to the independent Rail Regulator that if he intervened to defend the company against the government's attempts to force it into railway administration - a special status for insolvent railway companies - the government would introduce emergency legislation to take the regulator under direct political control. This stance by Darling surprised many observers because during his tenure at the Department for Transport he'd made several statements to Parliament and the financial markets assuring them that the government regarded independence in economic regulation of the railways as essential.
After the
Scottish Office was folded into the
Department for Constitutional Affairs, he was made
Scottish Secretary in combination with his transport portfolio in 2003. In the Cabinet reshuffle of May 2006, he was moved to the position of
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry;
Douglas Alexander replaced him as both
Secretary of State for Transport and
Secretary of State for Scotland. On 10 November 2006 in a mini-reshuffle,
Malcolm Wicks, the Minister for Energy at the
Department for Trade and Industry and therefore one of Darling's junior ministers, was appointed Minister for Science. Darling took over day-to-day control of the Energy portfolio.
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In June 2007, the new Prime Minister Gordon Brown appointed Darling
Chancellor of the Exchequer, a promotion widely anticipated in the media. Journalists observed that three of Darling's four junior ministers at the
Treasury (
Angela Eagle,
Jane Kennedy and
Kitty Ussher) are female and dubbed his team, "Darling's Darlings".
In September 2007, for the first time since 1860, there was a run on a British bank,
Northern Rock. Although the
Bank of England and the
Financial Services Authority have jurisdiction in such cases, ultimate authority for deciding on financial support for a bank in exceptional circumstances rests with the Chancellor. The
2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis had caused a liquidity crisis in the UK banking industry, and Northern Rock was unable to borrow as required by its business model. Darling authorised the Bank of England to lend Northern Rock funds to cover its liabilities and provided an unqualified taxpayers’ guarantee of the deposits of savers in Northern Rock in an attempt to stop the run. Northern Rock borrowed up to £20 billion from the Bank of England, and Darling was criticized for becoming sucked into a position where so much public money was tied up in a private company. On
March 12,
2008, Darling gave his first
Budget in the
House of Commons.
In March 2008, Alistair Darling became the first British Chancellor to be censured for the Budget by a media campaign spread by a social networking site. James Hughes, the landlord of
Utopia Pub in Edinburgh, symbolically barred Darling from his pub, and a passing reporter from the Edinburgh Evening News ran the story. A Facebook group was created, leading dozens of pubs across the UK to follow Hughes, barring Darling from their pubs. The story was eventually picked up by most national press and broadcast media in the UK, and leader of the opposition cited the movement at Prime Minister's Questions on 26 March.
Child benefit data scandal
Darling was Chancellor when the personal and confidential details of over 25 million British citizens went missing while being sent from his department to the
National Audit Office. A former Scotland Yard detective stated that with the current rate of £2.50 per person's details this data could have been sold for £60 million.
(External Link
) The acting leader of the
Liberal Democrats,
Vince Cable, put the value at £1.5bn, or £60 per identity.
(External Link
)
10p Tax Fiasco
Darling’s predecessor
Gordon Brown before becoming
prime minister in his final budget on 21st March 2007 axed the 10% starting rate of taxation whilst reducing basic rate income tax from 22% to 20%. Although the majority of tax payers would be marginally better off by these changes some 5.1 low earners including those earning less than £18,000 were worse off. On October 18th 2007 the Treasury releases figures showing that childless people on low incomes could lose up to £200 a year as a result of the changes, while parents and those earning more than £20,000 will be better off.
Increasing political backlash to the additional tax burden put immense pressure onto the government including the new chancellor Darling with Gordon Brown facing criticism from his own Parliamentary Labour party.
On May 13th 2008 Mr Darling announces in the Commons that he'll help low-paid workers hit by the scrapping of the 10p rate by raising this year's personal tax allowance by £600 funded by borrowing £2.7 billion.
Personal life
Darling has been married to Margaret McQueen Vaughan (a former journalist on the former newspaper
Sunday Standard) since 1986 and they've one son (Calum, born 1988, and studying law at the
University of Aberdeen) and one daughter (Anna, born 1990). He had a previous marriage in the 1970s.
In his book
Servants of the People, about New Labour's first term of office (1997-2001),
Andrew Rawnsley described Darling as a "managerial technocrat" of a type preferred by former Prime Minister Tony Blair. He was voted Britain's most boring politician, and worst ever Chancellor two years running .
On
September 10,
2007, Alistair's pet cat
Sybil moved from Edinburgh with the family to 11 Downing Street, Sybil was located to the 3-bedroomed flat above No. 11. She was named after
Sybil Fawlty from the 1970s sitcom
Fawlty Towers, sharing a
thespian name with her predecessor
Humphrey, who was named after
Sir Humphrey Appleby in
Yes Minister.
He enjoys listening to
Pink Floyd,
Coldplay and
Leonard Cohen . He lives in the
Morningside area of Edinburgh, in the same street as
JK Rowling.
He is sometimes referred to in the media as "Ali D", in reference to
Ali G.
Further Information
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