Minister for Higher and Further Education
Minister for Higher and Further Education | |
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Scottish Gaelic: Ministear airson Foghlam Àrd-ìre agus Adhartach | |
since 29 March 2023 | |
Member of | |
Reports to | Scottish Parliament |
Seat | Edinburgh |
Appointer | First Minister |
Inaugural holder | Maureen Watt Minister for Schools and Skills |
Formation | 17 May 2007 |
Salary | £106,185 per annum (2024)[1] (including £72,196 MSP salary) |
Website | www |
This article is part of a series within the Politics of the United Kingdom on the |
Politics of Scotland |
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The Minister for Higher and Further Education is a Junior ministerial post in the Education Department of the Scottish Government. As a result, the Minister does not attend[2] the Scottish Cabinet. The post was created in May 2007 after the appointment of the Scottish National Party minority administration and the Minister reports to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills, who has overall responsibility for the portfolio, and is a member of cabinet. The Minister has specific responsibility for further education and colleges, higher education and universities, science and STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics, student funding, youth work, and widening access to education.[3]
The post is one of two reporting to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills, alongside the Minister for Children and Young People.
Minister
Minister for Schools and Skills | ||||||
Name | Portrait | Entered Office | Left Office | Party | First Minister | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maureen Watt | 17 May 2007 | 10 February 2009 | Scottish National Party | Alex Salmond | ||
Keith Brown | 12 February 2009 | 18 January 2010 | Scottish National Party | |||
Minister for Skills and Lifelong Learning | ||||||
Keith Brown | 18 January 2010 | 12 December 2010 | Scottish National Party | Alex Salmond | ||
Angela Constance | 12 December 2010 | 20 May 2011 | Scottish National Party | |||
Minister for Learning and Skills | ||||||
Alasdair Allan | 20 May 2011 | 7 December 2011 | Scottish National Party | Alex Salmond | ||
Minister for Learning, Science and Scotland's Languages | ||||||
Alasdair Allan | 7 December 2011 | 18 May 2016 | Scottish National Party | Alex Salmond | ||
20 November 2014 | 18 May 2016 | Nicola Sturgeon | ||||
Minister for Further Education, Higher Education and Science | ||||||
Shirley-Anne Somerville | 18 May 2016 | 27 June 2018 | Scottish National Party | Nicola Sturgeon | ||
Richard Lochhead | 4 September 2018 | 20 May 2021 | Scottish National Party | Nicola Sturgeon | ||
Minister for Higher Education and Further Education, Youth Employment and Training | ||||||
Jamie Hepburn | 20 May 2021 | 29 March 2023 | Scottish National Party | Nicola Sturgeon | ||
Minister for Higher Education and Further Education | ||||||
Graeme Dey | 29 March 2023 | Incumbent | Scottish National Party | Humza Yousaf |
History
The responsibilities of the junior ministerial reporting to the Education Secretary have changed considerably over time. The post was originally focused on schools: from 1999 to 2000, responsibility for schools rested with the Minister for Children and Education, which became the Minister for Education, Europe and External Affairs in the McLeish Government of 2000 to 2001. From 2001 to 2007, the schools portfolio rested with the Minister for Education and Young People. The skills brief also rested with the Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning between 1999 and 2007.
The Salmond government, elected following the 2007 Scottish Parliament election, created the junior post of the Minister for Schools and Skills who assisted the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning, in the Scottish Executive Education Department. This was then retitled on 7 December 2011 following the creation of the Minister of Youth Employment post which took over the responsibility for skills and training. A further change occurred in May 2016, following Nicola Sturgeon's reshuffle. The post was rebranded as Minister for Further Education, Higher Education and Science.
The post was vacant for a period over as the summer of 2018, as First Minister Nicola Sturgeon's original choice, Gillian Martin, was revealed to have posted comments of a transphobic nature in a blog in 2007. Ms Martin's name was omitted from the list of appointments to be approved by Parliament on 28 June 2018 following a reshuffle.[4] Richard Lochhead was later appointed to the role. Following the formation of the Third Sturgeon Government, the post was once more retitled to Minister for Higher Education and Further Education, Youth Employment and Training. In March 2023, Humza Yousaf appointed Graeme Dey to take over the post of Minister for Higher and Further Education where he returned to government after having resigned on health grounds during the Third Sturgeon Government in January 2022.
See also
References
- ^ "MSP salaries". parliament.scot. The Scottish Parliament. 10 May 2024.
- ^ Scotland Act (1998), Only those appointed under Section 47 of the Scotland Act "attend" Cabinet. Junior ministers are appointed under Section 49 and may be "present".
- ^ "Minister for Further Education, Higher Education and Science". Scottish Government. 27 June 2018. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
- ^ "SNP Minister Gillian Martin axed from education role". The Scotsman. 28 June 2018. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
External links
- Cabinet and Ministers on Scottish Government website
- Minister for Further Education, Higher Education and Science on Scottish Government website