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Interim Rhodri Morgan administration

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(Redirected fromInterim Morgan Government)
Welsh government (2000)

Interim Morgan administration

2nddevolved administration ofWales
9 February 2000 – 16 October 2000
Date formed9 February 2000
Date dissolved16 October 2000
People and organisations
MonarchElizabeth II
First MinisterRhodri Morgan
Member party
Status in legislatureMinority
28 / 60 (47%)
Opposition party
Opposition leaderDafydd Wigley
Ieuan Wyn Jones
History
Legislature term1st National Assembly for Wales
PredecessorMichael administration
SuccessorFirst Rhodri Morgan government

Theinterim Rhodri Morgan administration was a temporary government ofWales formed on 9 February 2000 byRhodri Morgan, following the resignation of Alun Michael asFirst Secretary,[1] which was pre-empted by avote of no-confidence byPlaid Cymru.

Rhodri Morgan was named as Acting First Secretary on 9 February and confirmed as the permanent First Secretary on 15 February 2000.[2] This Ministry ran until Morgan formed acoalition government with theLiberal Democrats in October 2000.

This administration was always viewed as temporary and Labour had mooted looking for a coalition partner following their perceived poor showing in the1999 election.[3]

Cabinet

[edit]
OfficePortraitNameTermParty
First Secretary of Wales and Secretary for Economic DevelopmentRhodri Morgan*9 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Minister for Assembly BusinessAndrew Davies*22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Finance SecretaryEdwina Hart**22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Secretary for Post 16 Education and TrainingTom Middlehurst***22 February - 9 OctoberLabour
Minister for Health and Social ServicesJane Hutt*22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Secretary for Education and ChildrenRosemary Butler***22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Secretary for Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentChristine Gwyther22 February - 23 JulyLabour
Carwyn Jones**23 July - 16 OctoberLabour
Secretary for Local Government andHousingPeter Law***22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Secretary for Environment, Planning and TransportSue Essex**22 February - 16 OctoberLabour
Office holders given special provisions to attend Cabinet:
Chief WhipKaren Sinclair22 February - 16 OctoberLabour

* Indicates that the individual kept the same or similar job in the next government.
** Indicates that the individual was moved to a new job in the next government.
*** Indicates that the individual was either sacked or quit and held no ministerial role in the next government.

Deputy Secretaries

[edit]

Deputy Secretaries prior to the enactment of theGovernment of Wales Act 2006 were not officially part of the Government, were not paid and received limited official support.

OfficePortraitNameTermParty
Deputy Secretary for Health and Social ServicesAlun Pugh**23 February 2000 - 17 October 2000Labour
Deputy Secretary for Agriculture, Local Government and EnvironmentCarwyn Jones23 February 2000 - 23 July 2000Labour
Delyth Evans*24 July 2000 - 17 October 2000Labour
Deputy Secretary for Education and the EconomyChristine Chapman***23 February 2000 - 17 October 2000Labour

* Indicates that the individual kept the same or similar job in the next government.
** Indicates that the individual was moved to a new job in the next government.
*** Indicates that the individual was either sacked or quit and held no ministerial role in the next government.

All job titles and dates are taken from the History of The National Assembly section of their website[2]

Aftermath

[edit]

Between February and October 2000 Rhodri Morgan's Labour Party had 28 of the Assembly's 60 seats. The six Liberal Democrat seats would provided a comfortable working majority.

Developments quickly occurred during the autumn of 2000 culminating inTom Middlehurst resigning as Secretary for post-16 education on 9 October claiming he could not “contemplate sitting down at the Cabinet table with the Liberal Democrats”.[4]

A newcoalition government (the coalition used the term government rather than administration; officially referred to as theCoalition Partnership) was officially announced on 5 October 2000 with policy details emerging the day later. Cabinet Ministers (the coalition replaced the title of Secretary with Minister) were then appointed on 16 October and Deputies on 17 October. That government lasted until the2003 election.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Acting Welsh first secretary announced". 9 February 2000. Retrieved13 December 2018.
  2. ^ab"First Assembly". National Assembly for Wales. Archived fromthe original on 1 February 2020. Retrieved13 December 2018.
  3. ^"Labour seeking Welsh partner". BBC Wales. 7 May 1999. Retrieved17 December 2018.
  4. ^"Welsh cabinet member resigns".The Times. 10 October 2000. Retrieved13 December 2018.
Leaders
Deputy Leaders
General Secretaries
  • Cliff Prothero (1947)
  • Emrys Jones (1965)
  • Hubert Morgan (1979)
  • Anita Gale (1984)
  • Jessica Morden (1999)
  • Chris Roberts (2005)
  • David Hagendyk (2010)
  • Louise Magee (2017)
  • Jo McIntyre (2022)
Current MSs
Current MPs
Structure
Factions
In Government
Leadership elections
Deputy leadership elections
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