Jackie Baillie

British Politician

Jackie Baillie was born in Hong Kong, China on January 15th, 1964 and is the British Politician. At the age of 60, Jackie Baillie biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
January 15, 1964
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Hong Kong, China
Age
60 years old
Zodiac Sign
Capricorn
Profession
Politician
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Jackie Baillie Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 60 years old, Jackie Baillie physical status not available right now. We will update Jackie Baillie's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
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Hair Color
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Eye Color
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Jackie Baillie Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
New College Lanarkshire, University of Strathclyde, University of Glasgow
Jackie Baillie Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Stephen Baillie ​(m. 1982)​
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Jackie Baillie Career

Baillie was chair of Scottish Labour in 1997. She was first elected at the inaugural election for the Scottish Parliament in May 1999. A member of the Scottish Executive, she served as Minister for Social Justice when Henry McLeish was First Minister of Scotland, during which time she was involved with the Homelessness Task Force. She was re-elected in 2003 and became a member of the Scottish Parliament's Justice 2 Committee and Public Petitions Committee. She supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

In December 2007, Baillie defended Labour leader Wendy Alexander on Newsnight Scotland, during the controversy regarding alleged illegal donations to Alexander's leadership campaign.

In 2009, Baillie successfully brought into being an act of the Scottish Parliament, with the unanimous support of all MSPs, to allow for greater protection of disabled parking spaces.

Baillie has opposed minimum pricing of alcohol, being unconvinced about the overall benefits. In 2010, she stated it would not be the best way of tackling the country's alcohol-related problems but instead backed a tax-based alternative amongst other measures. The legislation was passed setting a minimum unit pricing floor price for a unit of alcohol of 50 pence per unit.

Baillie held the position of Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Health in the Shadow Cabinet of Iain Gray, retaining the post in December 2011 following the election of Johann Lamont as Gray's successor. When Lamont announced a major shakeup of the Labour frontbench team on 28 June 2013, Baillie was moved from Health to Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Social Justice and Welfare.

On 27 March 2014, Baillie stood in for Johann Lamont at First Minister's Questions while Lamont was attending the funeral of veteran Labour politician Tony Benn. She also stood in at FMQs following Lamont's resignation as Labour leader in October 2014. Baillie ruled herself out of standing in the leadership election that followed Lamont's departure, stating that she wanted a "supporting role" rather than to be Labour leader.

As a backbench MSP, Baillie campaigned for a public inquiry into a lethal outbreak of Clostridium difficile colitis at the Vale of Leven Hospital in her constituency. The inquiry into the outbreak cost £10 million, while the families were offered £1 million, something which prompted Baillie to plead Health Secretary Shona Robison for greater compensation for those affected, during a session of the Scottish Parliament in November 2014.

In December 2017, Baillie was reduced to tears when raising the concern of fire safety following the deaths of two men in the Cameron House Hotel Fire.

After Kezia Dugdale resigned as Scottish Labour leader in August 2017 and interim leader Alex Rowley was suspended, Baillie served as acting leader until Richard Leonard was elected as the new leader following the 2017 Scottish Labour leadership election. Baillie continued to serve as Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Economy, Jobs and Fair Work until October 2018 when she was sacked by Leonard, who also replaced her in the role.

In January 2020, Baillie announced that she would be standing as a candidate for the post of Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party. On 3 April, it was announced she had won the contest by 10,311 votes to Matt Kerr's 7,528 votes. After she was elected, Leonard reappointed her to his frontbench as Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Finance. She served as acting Leader of the Scottish Labour Party since after the resignation of Leonard on 14 January 2021 and served until the election of Anas Sarwar as leader.

On 1 March 2021, Baillie was moved from shadowing Finance to Health, Social Care and Equalities.

Between 2020 and 2021, Baillie was a member of Committee on the Scottish Government Handling of Harassment Complaints that concluded that the Scottish Government's handling of harassment complaints against Alex Salmond was "seriously flawed". As a committee member, Baillie quizzed both Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon, asking the latter: "You have described these errors as catastrophic. That's a strong word, tell me why then nobody has resigned? Nobody has taken responsibility of this, because at the heart of this two women have been let down." Former BBC journalist Andrew Neil said of Baillie's questioning, "As a professional interviewer... there were many times when I thought Jackie Baillie was the only one that knew the questions to ask."

On 19 March 2021, the findings of the committee were pre-emptively leaked to the media by an MSP. Baillie backed an inquiry into the leak and said: "The leaks against the women were particularly bad, because they had the bravery to come forward to speak to the committee. It was entirely inappropriate that that information was leaked to the public domain."

In the run up to the 2021 Scottish Parliament election, former SNP Depute Leader Jim Sillars donated £2,000 to her campaign to be re-elected. “I would prefer her in the parliament to a clone on the backbenches," Sillars said. "I don’t think there is any doubt she is an asset to the parliament. My concern, in donating to Jackie Baillie, was to have a very able person in parliament."

Ballie was re-elected in May 2021 with an increased majority of 1,483, with Dumbarton becoming the only seat to have voted Labour for the entirety of the devolved era. After her victory, she told her constituents: "You want a recovery, not a referendum. You want us to prioritise your jobs, the economy, the NHS. You want us to make sure that our kids at school have all the opportunities they deserve. I pledge to you that I will do that in this next parliament."

Source

SNP gives Greens the Bute: Under-pressure Humza Yousaf ends Scottish coalition agreement by turfing junior party's leaders out of government amid row over environment and trans rights policies

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 25, 2024
Mr Yousaf sacked Green co-leaders Patrick Harvie and Lorna Slater from junior ministerial roles after a week of furious infighting between and within both parties. Tensions have been rising between the two parties over the government's approach to trans rights, while Net Zero targets were watered down last week. It prompted the Greens to set a vote for next month on collapsing the 2021 deal. But Mr Yousaf acted first to spare his own blushes, with Mr Slater and Ms Harvie reportedly leaving Bute House, the FM's Edinburgh residence, before the meeting started. At a hastily arranged press conference Mr Yousaf confirmed the end of the agreement, saying: 'It has served its purpose.'

Scottish gender clinic WILL stop using puberty drugs

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 18, 2024
Scotlands's gender clinic has 'paused' the prescribing of puberty blockers after 'days of shameful silence and dithering' from the Scottish Government. The Sandyford clinic in Glasgow said no prescriptions would be issued to new patients and under-18s would not get other gender hormone treatments. The U-turn comes after a review of gender services for children in England found there was 'not enough evidence' puberty ­blockers are safe or effective. The findings by Dr Hilary Cass piled ­pressure on the NHS in Scotland to scrap the controversial practice of giving such drugs to gender-questioning children.

Now stop giving puberty blockers to Scots children demands SNP MP

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 10, 2024
Puberty blocker prescriptions for children should be immediately halted in Scotland in the wake of the devastating Cass review, an MP has demanded. A report published yesterday found children have been let down by a lack of research and 'remarkably weak' evidence in gender care. The Cass review found the quality of evidence on whether puberty blockers are beneficial for youngsters was 'poor'. Nationalist MP Joanna Cherry is now leading calls for the drugs to be 'removed from use in Scotland'. The report by Dr Hilary Cass said the use of the hormone drugs in trans children is traced back to a single Dutch study that found they may improve mental health, and the practice 'spread at pace' without further scrutiny.
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