Menzies Campbell
Sir Walter Menzies Campbell (known as Ming Campbell), CBE, QC (born 22 May 1941, Glasgow) is a Scottish advocate and the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for North East Fife. He was elected leader of the Liberal Democrat party on 2 March 2006.
"Menzies" is correctly pronounced MING-iss (IPA: /ˈmɪŋɪs/), the "z" being a transliteration of the yogh originally included in the name.
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Early life
Menzies Campbell was educated at Hillhead High School, Glasgow, and the University of Glasgow, graduating MA and LL.B. Campbell's contemporaries at the University of Glasgow included Lord Irvine, the former Lord Chancellor, Donald Dewar and John Smith, who attempted to recruit him for the Labour Party. He was elected President of the Glasgow University Union and later received a scholarship to Stanford University, California.
A successful sprinter at University, he competed for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland team in the 200 m at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo and captained the Scotland team at the 1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica. He also captained the UK athletics team in 1965 and 1966, and held the British 100 metres record from 1967 to 1974.
He qualified as an advocate before he became a politician. He was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1968 and became a Queen's Counsel in 1982.
Campbell married Elspeth, Lady Suttie, daughter of Major General Roy Urquhart, in June 1970. They have no children. [1]
Political career
He became chairman of the Scottish Liberals in 1975, and was a candidate at various general elections between 1974 and 1983. After three failed attempts, he was finally elected as Member of Parliament, for North East Fife, in 1987. He was made the Liberal Democrat chief spokesman on foreign affairs and defence in 1992, and he has served as a Shadow Foreign Secretary since the Liberal Democrats decided to operate a Shadow Cabinet in 1997. He considered standing as a candidate to replace Paddy Ashdown as party leader in 1999 but ultimately decided against. He later said that he regretted that decision "for about 10 minutes a day". He was also spoken of as a candidate for Speaker when Betty Boothroyd stood down in 2000.
He was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma, a form of cancer, in 2002 and underwent a course of intensive chemotherapy before going on to make a full recovery.
Campbell replaced Alan Beith as deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats in February 2003 and has on occasion had to act as a stand-in Leader of the party. He took over in the general election campaign for three days from 12 April 2005 when Charles Kennedy took paternity leave, and from 7 January 2006 he was the interim Leader following Kennedy's resignation, before winning the subsequent leadership contest. Despite his relatively advanced age compared to the leaders of the other two main parties, Tony Blair and David Cameron, he started as the front-running candidate in the 2006 leadership election following the resignation of Charles Kennedy, having been backed by more than a third of Lib Dem MPs and party grandees such as Lord Steel of Aikwood, Baroness Williams of Crosby and Lord Ashdown of Norton-sub-Hamdon. As the race drew on it appeared that Chris Huhne, initially the outsider, had more popular support and became favourite with the bookmakers[2], but Campbell went on to win the leadership election with 57% of the second round votes.
Leader of the Liberal Democrats
On the 2nd March 2006 at 15.00 GMT, Campbell was declared leader of the Liberal Democrats after winning the leadership election. The election was carried out using the Single Transferrable Vote method. The first round votes placed him well in the lead at 23,264 to Chris Huhne's 16,691 and Simon Hughes' 12,081. Simon Hughes was accordingly eliminated and his second preference votes were roughly equally split between the two remaining candidates. The final result was Menzies Campbell 29,697, Chris Huhne 21,628 on a 72% turnout of the membership.
Honours
Campbell was appointed CBE in the 1987 New Years Honours List; he became a Privy Counsellor in the 1998 New Year Honours; and he was awarded a knighthood in the 2004 New Year Honours for "services to Parliament".
He has honorary degrees from Glasgow and Strathclyde universities. He was the only person nominated to succeed Sir Kenneth Dover after he retired as Chancellor of St Andrews University on 1 January 2006, and took office immediately after nominations closed on 9 January 2006.
See also
External links
- The Campbell Campaign - Ming Campbell's campaign to lead the Liberal Democrats
- Rt Hon Sir Menzies Campbell CBE QC MP profile at the site of Liberal Democrats
- Sir Menzies Campbell MP (Guardian Unlimited Politics, Ask Aristotle)
- Menzies Campbell MP (from TheyWorkForYou.com)
- Menzies Campbell MP voting record (from The Public Whip)
- Open Directory Project - Menzies Campbell directory category
- 1999 New Year Honours (BBC News, 31 December, 1998)
- Campbell abandons Lib Dem race (BBC News, 27 May, 1999)
- Review of 1999: Menzies Campbell (BBC News, 30 December, 1999)
- Who will replace the Speaker? (BBC News, 17 July, 2000)
- Cancer treatment for Lib Dem Campbell (BBC News, 22 November, 2002)
- Lib Dems elect deputy leader (BBC News, 12 February, 2003)
- Campbell heads political honours (BBC News, 31 December, 2003)
- Cartoon by Steve Bell dubs him "Ming the Merciless" (The Guardian, 16 December 2005
- Menzies Campbell profile (BBC News, 2 March, 2006)
- Ashdown gives Sir Menzies backing (BBC News, 9 January 2006)
- What to call Ming's backers? Mignons? Mingites? Mongos? Mingers? (BBC News, 9 January 2006)
- Why is Menzies pronounced Mingis? (BBC News, 10 January 2006)
- Sir Menzies Campbell MP elected new Chancellor of the University of St Andrews. (University of St Andrews Press Office, 11 January 2006)
http://www.campbellcampaign.org/
| Preceded by: Alan Beith | Deputy Leader of the British Liberal Democrats 2003–2006 | Succeeded by: To be decided: Liberal Democrats deputy leadership election, 2006 |
| Preceded by: Charles Kennedy | Leader of the British Liberal Democrats 2006–present | Incumbent |


