- Salmond, Alex
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▪ 2009Alexander Elliot Anderson Salmondborn Dec. 31, 1954, Linlithgow, Scot.On May 14, 2008, almost exactly one year after the Scottish National Party (SNP) ended decades of Labour Party dominance in Scottish politics, First Minister Alex Salmond addressed the Scottish Parliament to review his first year at the head of the SNP's minority government. Salmond emphasized his government's ongoing emphasis on such issues as sustainable economic growth, fairer taxes, education, and environmental awareness. He also reiterated his earlier pledge to move forward with a national referendum on Scottish independence to be submitted in 2010.Salmond studied economics at the University of St. Andrews and joined the civil service before becoming an economist (1980–87) with the Royal Bank of Scotland. From an early age he gained a reputation as something of a rebel. He joined the SNP as a student and was a prominent member of the 79 Group, a socialist republican faction that called for the SNP to become more aggressively radical following the 1979 U.K. general elections. Salmond was expelled from the SNP in 1982 when the 79 Group was banned. His exclusion lasted just one month, however, and by 1985 he was one of the SNP's leading strategists. In the 1987 general election, he won the constituency of Banff and Buchan, a seat previously held by the Conservative Party. As an MP, he was ordered out of the House of Commons for a week in 1988 when he interrupted the chancellor of the Exchequer's annual budget speech to protest the Conservative government's decision to introduce a poll tax in Scotland while reducing income tax for more affluent people across the U.K.In 1990 Salmond succeeded Gordon Wilson as the national convener (leader) of the SNP. He cooperated with Labour and Liberal Democrat politicians in Scotland to produce a shared plan for devolution and was a prominent and articulate campaigner in the successful 1997 referendum to establish a Scottish Parliament, with limited tax-levying powers but virtually complete control over Scotland's legislation and public services. Salmond was elected the MSP for Banff and Buchan in 1999 in the new Scottish Parliament's first election and became leader of the opposition. The next year he suddenly resigned as SNP leader, following an internal dispute over the party's finances, and was replaced by John Swinney.After the SNP lost seats in 2003 in the second Scottish Parliament elections, Swinney stepped down (2004) and Salmond was reelected, winning 75% of the party members' votes. He waged a highly effective campaign in the 2007 general elections, and the SNP gained 20 seats for a total of 47 MSPs in the 129-seat Scottish Parliament, one more than Labour. Despite lacking an outright majority, Salmond secured his election as first minister on May 16, 2007. He quickly implemented a number of popular measures, such as freezing council tax rates, and began to promote his main ambition: full Scottish independence.Peter Kellner
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Universalium. 2010.