List of Scottish Executive ministerial teams
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List of Scottish Executive Ministerial Teams is a list of Scottish Executive ministerial teams.
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Donald Dewar, Scotland's first First Minister, obtained the Scottish Parliament's approval to the first slate of members of the Scottish Executive and Junior Scottish Ministers on 19 May 1999.
| Portfolio | Holder |
|---|---|
| First Minister | Donald Dewar |
| Deputy First Minister | Jim Wallace |
| Minister for Children and Education | Sam Galbraith |
| Deputy Minister for Children and Education | Peter Peacock |
| Deputy Minister for Culture and Sport | Rhona Brankin |
| Minister for Communities | Wendy Alexander |
| Deputy Minister for Communities | Jackie Baillie |
| Deputy Minister for Local Government | Frank McAveety |
| Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning | Henry McLeish |
| Deputy Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning | Nicol Stephen |
| Deputy Minister for Highlands and Islands and Gaelic | Alasdair Morrison |
| Minister for Finance | Jack McConnell |
| Minister for Health and Community Care | Susan Deacon |
| Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care | Iain Gray |
| Minister for Justice | Jim Wallace |
| Deputy Minister for Justice | Angus MacKay |
| Minister for Parliament | Tom McCabe |
| Deputy Minister for Parliament | Iain Smith |
| Minister for Rural Affairs | Ross Finnie |
| Deputy Minister for Rural Affairs | John Home Robertson |
| Minister for Transport and the Environment | Sarah Boyack |
| Lord Advocate | Andrew Hardie, Lord Hardie QC |
| Solicitor General for Scotland | Colin Boyd QC |
In March 2000, Andrew Hardie was made a Senator of the College of Justice. His office as Lord Advocate was filled by the Solicitor General, Colin Boyd, and the office of Solicitor General was filled by Neil Davidson.
Following the death of Donald Dewar, Henry McLeish was appointed as First Minister on 26 October 2000.
| Portfolio | Holder |
|---|---|
| First Minister | Henry McLeish |
| Deputy First Minister | Jim Wallace |
| Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs | Jack McConnell |
| Deputy Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs | Nicol Stephen |
| Deputy Minister for Culture and Sport | Rhona Brankin |
| Minister for Social Justice | Jackie Baillie |
| Deputy Minister for Social Justice | Margaret Curran |
| Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning | Wendy Alexander |
| Deputy Minister for Enterprise & Lifelong Learning and Gaelic | Alasdair Morrison |
| Minister for Environment, Sport and Culture | Sam Galbraith |
| Deputy Minister for Sport and Culture | Allan Wilson (Scottish politician) |
| Minister for Finance and Local Government | Angus MacKay |
| Deputy Minister for Finance and Local Government | Peter Peacock |
| Minister for Health and Community Care | Susan Deacon |
| Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care | Malcolm Chisholm |
| Minister for Justice | Jim Wallace |
| Deputy Minister for Justice | Iain Gray |
| Minister for Parliament | Tom McCabe |
| Deputy Minister for Parliament | Tavish Scott |
| Minister for Rural Development | Ross Finnie |
| Deputy Minister for Rural Development | Rhona Brankin |
| Minister for Transport | Sarah Boyack |
| Lord Advocate | Colin Boyd QC |
| Solicitor General for Scotland | Neil Davidson QC |
Tavish Scott resigned on 9 March 2001 following disagreement with Scottish Executive policy on fisheries. He was replaced by Euan Robson. Sam Galbraith resigned on 20 March 2001, and his environment portfolio was combined with that of rural development. Planning was added to the Transport portfolio, and Lewis Macdonald was appointed as Deputy Minister for Transport and Planning. Allan Wilson became Deputy Minister for Sport, the Arts and Culture, reporting to the First Minister.
Following Henry McLeish's resignation as First Minister, Jack McConnell was appointed as First Minister 22 November 2001.
| Portfolio | Holder |
|---|---|
| First Minister | Jack McConnell |
| Deputy First Minister | Jim Wallace |
| Minister for Education and Young People | Cathy Jamieson |
| Deputy Minister for Education and Young People | Nicol Stephen |
| Deputy Minister for Culture and Sport | Rhona Brankin |
| Minister for Social Justice | Iain Gray |
| Deputy Minister for Social Justice | Margaret Curran |
| Minister for Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning | Wendy Alexander |
| Deputy Minister for Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning | Lewis Macdonald |
| Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport | Mike Watson |
| Deputy Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport | Elaine Murray |
| Minister for Finance and Public Services | Andy Kerr |
| Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services | Peter Peacock |
| Minister for Health and Community Care | Malcolm Chisholm |
| Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care | Hugh Henry |
| Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care | Mary Mulligan |
| Minister for Justice | Jim Wallace |
| Deputy Minister for Justice | Richard Simpson |
| Minister for Parliament | Patricia Ferguson |
| Deputy Minister for Parliamentary Business | Euan Robson |
| Minister for Environment and Rural Development | Ross Finnie |
| Deputy Minister for Environment and Rural Development | Allan Wilson |
| Lord Advocate | Colin Boyd QC |
| Solicitor General for Scotland | Elish Angiolini |
On 4 May 2002, Wendy Alexander resigned from the Scottish Executive. Her post as Enterprise Minister was filled by Iain Gray, and his post as Social Justice Minister was in turn filled by Margaret Curran, who had been his deputy. Hugh Henry moved from Health to become Deputy Minister for Social Justice and Frank McAveety returned to ministerial office as one of the Deputy Ministers for Health and Community Care. In November 2002 Richard Simpson resigned, Hugh Henry replaced him and Des McNulty became Deputy Minister for Social Justice.
A further reshuffle followed the Scottish Parliamentary Election, 2003.
| Portfolio | Holder |
|---|---|
| First Minister | Jack McConnell |
| Deputy First Minister | Jim Wallace |
| Minister for Education and Young People | Peter Peacock |
| Deputy Minister for Education and Young People | Euan Robson |
| Deputy Minister for Culture and Sport | Rhona Brankin |
| Minister for Communities | Margaret Curran |
| Deputy Minister for Communities | Mary Mulligan |
| Minister for Enterprise & Lifelong Learning | Jim Wallace |
| Deputy Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning | Lewis Macdonald |
| Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport | Frank McAveety |
| Minister for Finance and Public Services | Andy Kerr |
| Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services | Tavish Scott |
| Minister for Health and Community Care | Malcolm Chisholm |
| Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care | Tom McCabe |
| Minister for Justice | Cathy Jamieson |
| Deputy Minister for Justice | Hugh Henry |
| Minister for Parliament | Patricia Ferguson |
| Deputy Minister for Parliamentary Business | Tavish Scott |
| Minister for Environment and Rural Development | Ross Finnie |
| Deputy Minister for Environment and Rural Development | Allan Wilson |
| Minister for Transport | Nicol Stephen |
| Lord Advocate | Colin Boyd QC |
| Solicitor General for Scotland | Elish Angiolini |
In October 2004, Frank McAveety and Mary Mulligan stepped down as ministers. Andy Kerr moved from Finance to Health, with Rhona Brankin as his deputy. Margaret Curran moved from Communities to Parliamentary Business, and Patricia Ferguson took over Tourism, Culture & Sport. Malcolm Chisholm moved to Communities, with Johann Lamont as his deputy. Tom McCabe moved to Finance to replace Andy Kerr, and Allan Wilson and Lewis Macdonald exchanged their Environment & Rural Development and Enterprise & Lifelong Learning portfolios.
In June 2005, Jim Wallace stood down as Deputy First Minister and Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning, and was replaced by Nicol Stephen. Tavish Scott was moved to take on the Transport portfolio, and was replaced as Deputy Minister for Finance and Public Services and Parliamentary Business by George Lyon. Robert Brown replaced Euan Robson at Education. Rhona Brankin and Lewis Macdonald exchanged their Health and Environment posts.
On 4 October 2006, Colin Boyd resigned as Lord Advocate. On 5 October, the Parliament approved the nomination of Elish Angiolini as Lord Advocate and of John Beckett as Solicitor General.
On 14 November 2006, Peter Peacock resigned as Education Minister due to ill-health, and was replaced by Hugh Henry. Johann Lamont replaced Henry as Deputy Minister for Justice and Des McNulty returned to ministerial office as her replacement.
On 21 December 2006, Malcolm Chisholm resigned as Minister for Communities. On 9 January 2007 Rhona Brankin replaced Chisholm and Sarah Boyack returned to the executive as Deputy Minister for Environment and Rural Development.
The current ministerial team can be seen at Scottish Executive website[1].