Gordon Brown/Timelines: Difference between revisions

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* Pre-budget reports
* Pre-budget reports


 
* Financial Services and Markets Act 2000


''2001 General election: Labour 40% 413 seats; Conservative 32% 166 seats;  Liberal Democrats 18% 52seats''
''2001 General election: Labour 40% 413 seats; Conservative 32% 166 seats;  Liberal Democrats 18% 52seats''
:9 June - Brown delivers the Treasury assessment on the euro, saying that economic tests for UK membership have not been met.


* Enterprise Act 2002
* Competition Act 2002


:9 June - Brown delivers the Treasury assessment on the euro, saying that economic tests for UK membership have not been met.


''2005 General election: Labour 35% 356 seats; Conservative 32% 198 seats;  Liberal Democrats 22% 62 seats''
''2005 General election: Labour 35% 356 seats; Conservative 32% 198 seats;  Liberal Democrats 22% 62 seats''


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Revision as of 13:16, 27 May 2010

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A timeline (or several) relating to Gordon Brown.

Parliamentary Career

Opposition 1983-97

1983 Elected Member of Parliament for Dunfermline East as a member of the Labour Party under the leadership of Neil Kinnock.

(Maiden speech[1])

1984 Brown attends Democratic National Convention on San Francisco

1987 General election: Conservative 46% 358 seats; Labour 30% 155 seats; Liberal/SDP alliance 24% 10seats 1987 Brown appointed Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury

1989 Appointed Shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry

1992 General election: Conservative 42% 336 seats; Labour 34% 271 seats; Liberal Democrats 18% 20seats

Brown appointed Shadow Chancellor
John Smith replaces Neil Kinnock as Leader of the Opposition.

1993 3-day visit to the United States and meeting with Alan Greenspan.

1994 Death of John Smith

31 May - Meeting with Tony Blair at the Granita restaurant
8 September - Strategy conference at the Chewton Glen hotel

1997 General election: Labour 43% 418 seats; Conservative 31% 165 seats; Liberal Democrats 17% 46seats

Chancellor of the Exchequer

  • Independence for the Bank of England
(the Bank of England Act[2], 1998 gave the Bank responsibility for setting interest rates to meet the Government's stated inflation target}.
  • Five tests for Euro membership
  • Code for Fiscal Stability
  • Pre-budget reports
  • Financial Services and Markets Act 2000

2001 General election: Labour 40% 413 seats; Conservative 32% 166 seats; Liberal Democrats 18% 52seats

9 June - Brown delivers the Treasury assessment on the euro, saying that economic tests for UK membership have not been met.
  • Enterprise Act 2002
  • Competition Act 2002


2005 General election: Labour 35% 356 seats; Conservative 32% 198 seats; Liberal Democrats 22% 62 seats

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Prime Minister

  • October 2008 £500 billion bank rescue plan [1], including powers to take equity stakes in ailing banks and an undertaking to guarantee interbank loans.
  • Britain's bank rescue plan adopted in the EU and the USA[2]
  • Fiscal Responsibility Act[3] - imposes a duty on the Treasury to ensure that by the financial year ending 2014 public sector net borrowing as a percentage of GDP is at least halved from its level for the financial year ending 2010, and to make continuing reductions thereafter.

2010 General election Conservative 36% 306 seats; Liberal Democrats 23% 57 seats, Labour 29% 258 seats.

Opposition

Personal history

  • 1951 Born, Glasgow, Son of John Brown, a Presbeterian church minister
  • 1954 The family move to Kirkaldy
  • 1961 Starts at Kirkaldy High School
  • 1966 Passes Higher School Certificate (A-level equivalent) examinations with 5 A grades
  • 1967 Starts at Edinburgh University
    becomes a serious Rugby player, but sporting career is ended by an accident in which he loses the sight of his left eye
  • 1970 Awarded a Master of Arts (with 1st class honours)
  • 1973 Elected Student Rector, Edinburgh University
    Becomes a member of the Scottish Labour Party's National Executive
  • 1976: Politics lecturer, Glasgow College of Technology
    Selected as prospective parliamentary candidate for Edinburgh South
  • 1980: Journalist (current affairs) Scottish Television
  • 1982: Doctor of Philosophy, Edinburgh University
  • 1983: Selected as prospective parliamentary candidate for Dunfermline East - and elected to parliament
  • 1996: Appointed Member of Privy Council
  • 2000: Marriage to Sarah Macaulay

References