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Vaughan Gething

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Vaughan Gething
Official portrait, 2024
First Minister of Wales
In office
20 March 2024 – 5 August 2024
MonarchCharles III
Preceded byMark Drakeford
Succeeded byEluned Morgan
Leader of Welsh Labour
In office
16 March 2024 – 24 July 2024
DeputyCarolyn Harris
Preceded byMark Drakeford
Succeeded byEluned Morgan
Minister for the Economy
In office
13 May 2021 – 20 March 2024
First MinisterMark Drakeford
Preceded byKen Skates
Succeeded byJeremy Miles
Minister for Health and Social Services
In office
19 May 2016 – 13 May 2021
First MinisterCarwyn Jones
Mark Drakeford
Preceded byMark Drakeford
Succeeded byEluned Morgan
Deputy Minister for Health
In office
11 September 2014 – 19 May 2016[1]
First MinisterCarwyn Jones
MinisterMark Drakeford
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byRebecca Evans
Deputy Minister for Tackling Poverty
In office
26 June 2013[2] – 11 September 2014
First MinisterCarwyn Jones
MinisterJeffrey Cuthbert
Member of the Senedd
for Cardiff South and Penarth
Assumed office
6 May 2011
Preceded byLorraine Barrett
Majority10,606 (29.2%)
Personal details
Born (1974-03-15) 15 March 1974 (age 50)[3]
Lusaka, Zambia[4]
NationalityWelsh
Political partyLabour and Co-operative
SpouseMichelle Gething
Children1
Alma materAberystwyth University University of Cardiff
OccupationSolicitor, trade unionist
Signature

Humphrey Vaughan ap David Gething (born 15 March 1974)[3] is a Welsh Labour and Co-operative Party politician who served as First Minister of Wales from March to August 2024, and served as leader of Welsh Labour from March to July 2024, making him the first black[5] leader of any European country.[6][7] He has been the Member of the Senedd (MS) for Cardiff South and Penarth since 2011.

Gething was born in Zambia to a Welsh father and Zambian mother. He moved to Britain as a child and studied law at Aberystwyth University and Cardiff Law School, at the University of Cardiff. He trained as a solicitor with Cardiff-based firm Thompsons and subsequently specialised in employment law. Gething joined the Labour Party when he was 17 and contested Mid and West Wales for Labour in the inaugural elections to the National Assembly for Wales in 1999. He later represented Butetown electoral ward on Cardiff Council from 2004 to 2008.

Gething was elected to the Senedd at the 2011 National Assembly for Wales election, representing the Cardiff South and Penarth constituency. He was re-elected at the 2016 election and was subsequently appointed Minister for Health and Social Services in Mark Drakeford's government. His tenure notably included the COVID-19 pandemic in Wales. Gething subsequently served as Minister for the Economy from 2021 to 2024. Following Drakeford's resignation, he defeated Jeremy Miles in the Welsh Labour leadership election to become his successor in the party leadership and as First Minister of Wales.

Gething was sworn in as First Minister in March 2024. Less than two months into his term of office, allegations were raised that he had perjured himself at a COVID-19 inquiry by falsely denying that he had deleted text messages from his phone. In response, Plaid Cymru withdrew from its co-operation agreement with Labour and supported a non-confidence motion introduced by the Welsh Conservatives, which passed by two votes. Gething initially refused to resign, sparking a government crisis, but following a mass resignation of cabinet ministers in July 2024 announced that he would leave office. Eluned Morgan was elected unopposed as his successor and he formally resigned as First Minister in August 2024, making him the shortest-serving holder of the office.[8]

Early life

[edit]

Humphrey Vaughan ap David Gething[9] was born on 15 March 1974 in Lusaka, Zambia,[10][11][12] where his father, a white Welsh veterinarian from Ogmore-by-Sea in Glamorgan, met his mother, who is a black Zambian and was working as a chicken farmer.[13] Gething describes his father as "a white Welsh economic migrant".[13] When he was two years old, he moved to Abergavenny in Monmouthshire, Wales, with his family, which also included three brothers and a sister.[14][13] In Monmouthshire, his family experienced racism when an employer withdrew a job offer to Gething's father upon seeing the rest of his family.[14][15] Speaking of the incident, Gething said: "They said, 'Come back with your family and we'll sign everything up', but he walked in with my mother, and a trail of brown boys, and the job offer got withdrawn".[15] His father eventually found work in Dorset, England, where Gething was brought up.[14]

Gething studied at Beaminster Comprehensive and Sixth Form in Dorset, followed by Aberystwyth University, where he graduated with a degree in Law in 1999;[16] he then attended the University of Cardiff Law School, University of Wales.[13][17] During his academic career, Gething became President of Aberystwyth University Guild of Students, as well as the first black president of the National Union of Students Wales.[13][18][19]

Professional career

[edit]

Having completed his training as a solicitor with the trade union firm Thompsons in Cardiff in 2001, Gething chose to specialise in employment law. He became a partner in Thompsons in 2007.[17]

In 2008, at the age of 34, Gething became the youngest President of Wales TUC, also becoming the first black person to serve in the role.[20][21]

Political career

[edit]
A video of Gething representing the First Minister in a COVID-19 press conference in January 2021

Gething joined the Labour Party when he was 17, to campaign in the 1992 UK general election.[13] He contested Mid and West Wales for Labour in the inaugural elections to the National Assembly for Wales in 1999, but was not elected.[22]

He served as a councillor from 2004 to 2008, representing Butetown electoral ward on Cardiff Council, having been elected with a majority of two votes over candidate Betty Campbell.[17][23] Following the election, Campbell sent a complaint letter to Cardiff Council alleging that Gething had infringed election rules by handing out leaflets to voters as they entered polling stations and telling them how to vote.[24] Campbell initially intended to have the vote re-examined in the High Court, but abandoned this because of the estimated cost of £12,000.[25]

In the 2011 National Assembly for Wales election, Gething was selected as the Welsh Labour candidate for the Cardiff South and Penarth constituency in the Senedd, after Lorraine Barrett, who had represented Cardiff South and Penarth since the Senedd's creation in 1999, had stood down from her role. On 5 May 2011, Gething increased the Labour vote with a swing of 12.5%. At 13,814, his share of the vote was over 50%, giving him a majority of 6,259 over the Welsh Conservative Party candidate, Ben Gray, placed second.[26][27] At the following 2016 election, Gething was re-elected.[28]

Following the 2016 election, First Minister Carwyn Jones promoted Gething to the Welsh Cabinet, nominating him as Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport.[29]

Gething did not support Jeremy Corbyn in either the 2015 or 2016 Labour Party leadership election against challenger Owen Smith; however, he stated in a 2017 BBC Radio Wales interview that he would still like to see Corbyn as prime minister, saying quote, "I want a Labour prime minister – and that means Jeremy Corbyn being prime minister. [...] I don't think it matters whether I'm a fan or not – it matters whether I think he can do the job in running the country".[30][31]

In August 2017, Gething walked away in the middle of an interview on ITV Wales, when questioned by journalist James Crichton-Smith over his decision not to hold a public inquiry into Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board, following allegations that an employee had sexually assaulted vulnerable patients.[32]

Gething, alongside Eluned Morgan and Mark Drakeford, was one of the three contenders in the 2018 election for the leadership of Welsh Labour, but was defeated by the latter candidate. Drakeford subsequently re-appointed Gething in the Welsh Cabinet, by nominating him as Health Minister, with the position renamed as Minister for Health and Social Services.[33]

In January 2020, he criticised Corbyn and his failure to tackle antisemitism in the Labour Party.[34] He endorsed Corbyn's successor Keir Starmer.

On 13 May 2021, Gething was appointed as new Minister for the Economy, replacing Ken Skates.[35]

Minister for Health and management of the COVID-19 pandemic

[edit]

Gething served as the Welsh Minister for Health and Social Services during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

On 12 March 2020, despite a steady surge in the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Wales and other sporting events getting cancelled, Gething resisted calls to postpone a rugby union match between Wales and Scotland at the Principality Stadium, which was due to be sold-out with 74,000 spectators.[36] On the following day, the Welsh Rugby Union officially cancelled the match.[37] Gething justified his decision in a BBC Radio Wales interview, saying "The medical advice about the risk to people going to the rugby didn't change. What did change was the fact that the rest of sporting world decided that, regardless of that advice, they wanted to put off events".[38]

On 22 April 2020, Gething was caught swearing about fellow Labour MS Jenny Rathbone during a virtual session of the Senedd on Zoom. After Rathbone had asked the Minister a few questions about the Welsh Government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, he failed to mute his microphone as he told an unknown person, "What the fuck is the matter with her?".[39][40] Some undisclosed Labour MSs contacted by BBC Wales said they were also "very angry" over Gething's actions.[39]

In May of the same year, Gething was reportedly photographed by a Sun reporter eating chips with his young son in a local park, prompting criticism by those who suggested he was breaking the COVID-19 restrictions he had imposed himself. Gething denied the accusations, and the Welsh Government stated nothing he had done contravened such regulations.[41]

Gething was questioned at the COVID-19 Inquiry in July 2023, due to his former role as Wales' Minister for Health during the COVID-19 pandemic; in his deposition, he admitted that he had never read a report on Exercise Cygnus, a simulation exercise to estimate the impact of a hypothetical influenza pandemic on the UK population.[42]

First Minister of Wales (2024)

[edit]

Labour leadership election

[edit]
Gething with his predecessor Mark Drakeford in 2024

In December 2023, Gething became one of two candidates in the Welsh Labour leadership election to replace Drakeford as party leader and Wales' First Minister.[43]

On 16 January, Gething and the other candidate, Jeremy Miles, took part in a hustings event to get the nomination from the trade union Unite. Miles' team were then informed of a rule requiring that only people who had been "lay officials" could be nominated. Gething therefore received the nomination.[44] Miles claimed he was unfairly blocked from the union nomination.[45] An unnamed Unite official was quoted by BBC News as saying that the nomination of Gething was a "shocking mess".[46] Journalist Martin Shipton later uncovered that Gething had only joined Unite a few months beforehand.[47]

On 16 March, Gething emerged victorious with 51.7% of the vote, thus becoming the leader of Welsh Labour.[48][49]

Appointment

[edit]
Gething being sworn in as first minister on 20 March 2024

Gething was officially nominated as First Minister by the Senedd on 20 March 2024,[50][51] and presented his cabinet the following day.[52][53] In the process, he became the first black First Minister of Wales,[48] as well as the first black leader of any European country.[49][51] He was appointed to the Privy Council on 28 March 2024 as part of the 2024 Special Honours.[54] He was sworn in as a member of the privy council on 10 April 2024 at Buckingham Palace,[55] entitling him to the honorific prefix "The Right Honourable" for life.

Government crisis and resignation

[edit]
Gething with Keir Starmer, July 2024

During the inquiry into the COVID-19 pandemic response, Gething stated that he had not deliberately deleted any messages from his phone.[56] On 7 May, Nation.Cymru obtained text messages from Gething in a Welsh Government group chat, in which he said "I'm deleting the messages in this group. They can be captured in an FOI [Freedom of Information request] and I think we are all in the right place on the choice being made."[56] Gething denied allegations of perjury put to him in by Rhun ap Iorwerth in First Minister's Questions the same day, describing the allegations as 'obnoxious'.[57] A few days later, he removed Hannah Blythyn from her role as Minister for Social Partnership, alleging that she was the leak of the text messages.[58] She denied this.[59] Blythyn was replaced by Sarah Murphy on 17 May.[60]

On 17 May, Plaid Cymru withdrew from the co-operation agreement with Welsh Labour.[61] On 5 June, after just 78 days as First Minister, Gething faced a non-binding vote of no-confidence in him as First Minister, tabled by the Welsh Conservatives, in which he lost by a margin of 29 votes to 27.[62] Gething at first refused to resign[63] but did so on 16 July, an hour after ministers Mick Antoniw, Julie James, Lesley Griffiths and Jeremy Miles stepped down from their posts.[64][12][65] His resignation took formal effect on 5 August, and he was succeeded by Eluned Morgan, Baroness Morgan of Ely, who had won the Welsh Labour leadership election the previous month.[8] In the period between 16 July and 5 August he exercised the functions of the Counsel General for Wales, according to a Welsh Government press release, alongside the role of First Minister.[66]

Personal life

[edit]

Gething and his wife Michelle live in Penarth, where he has lived since 2011.[67] They have one son.[68]

He is a member of the trade unions GMB, UNISON and Unite.[20][69]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Lib Dem Williams named in new cabinet". BBC News. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 2 November 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  2. ^ "Lewis named as education minister". BBC News. 26 June 2013. Archived from the original on 4 December 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Vaughan Gething to become Wales' first black leader". BBC News. 15 March 2024. Retrieved 18 July 2024.
  4. ^ Davies, Daniel (9 November 2018). "Welsh Labour's mystery runners?". BBC News. Archived from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  5. ^ Gething is referred to as "black" in multiple sources.
  6. ^ "Who is Vaughan Gething, Wales' next first minister?". BBC News. 16 March 2024. Archived from the original on 19 March 2024. Retrieved 20 March 2024.
  7. ^ The following sources describes Gething to lead a "country".
  8. ^ a b Gething, Vaughan [@PrifWeinidog] (5 August 2024). "I have today written to His Majesty The King to tender my resignation as Prif Weinidog. It has been an honour to serve the people of Wales. The decency, generosity and creative spirit that defines our nation is, and will continue to be, our greatest strength. Diolch o galon" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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  10. ^ Mercer, Rosie; Deans, David (16 July 2024). "The Welsh first minister who lasted 118 days". BBC News. Retrieved 17 July 2024. Mr Gething, whose full name is Humphrey Vaughan ap David Gething, was born in Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, in southern Africa in 1974.
  11. ^ Gregory, Andy (16 March 2024). "Vaughan Gething to become Wales's first minister and country's first Black leader". The Independent. Retrieved 17 July 2024. Mr Gething was chosen by Welsh Labour members to be their party leader in a result announced in Cardiff on Saturday, the day after his 50th birthday.
  12. ^ a b Aitken, Catriona. "Wales' FM Gething denies wrongdoing as he resigns". BBC News. Retrieved 16 July 2024. 15 March 2024: Vaughan Gething celebrates his 50th birthday
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  34. ^ "'Labour's general election campaign was staggeringly inept, the next leader must do something about it'". WalesOnline. 23 January 2020.
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  46. ^ "Welsh Labour leadership nomination a shocking mess – Unite official". BBC News. 29 January 2024. Archived from the original on 12 February 2024. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  47. ^ "Vaughan Gething only joined 'stitch-up' union months ago". Nation.cymru. 29 January 2024. Archived from the original on 12 February 2024. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  48. ^ a b Browne, Adrian; Deans, David (16 March 2024). "Welsh Labour leadership: Vaughan Gething to be Wales' next first minister". BBC News. Archived from the original on 15 March 2024. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
  49. ^ a b Morris, Steven (16 March 2024). "Vaughan Gething to become Welsh first minister after Labour leadership win". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 16 March 2024. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
  50. ^ "Plenary 20/03/2024". Welsh Parliament. 20 March 2024. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  51. ^ a b Cassidy, Maria; Shuttleworth, Peter (20 March 2024). "Vaughan Gething appointed Wales' first minister". BBC News. Retrieved 20 March 2024.
  52. ^ Mosalski, Ruth (21 March 2024). "Live updates as Vaughan Gething confirms his cabinet appointments in first full day in Wales' top job". WalesOnline. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  53. ^ Browne, Adrian (21 March 2024). "New First Minister Vaughan Gething announces cabinet". BBC News. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  54. ^ "Privy Council appointment: March 2024" (PDF). GOV.UK. 28 March 2024. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  55. ^ Tilbrook, Richard (10 April 2024). "Orders Approved and Business Transacted at the Privy Council Held by the King at Buckingham Palace on 10th April 2024" (PDF). The Privy Council Office. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  56. ^ a b Mansfield, Mark (7 May 2024). "Vaughan Gething misled UK Covid Inquiry by not admitting he deleted messages". Nation.Cymru. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  57. ^ Mosalski, Ruth (7 May 2024). "Vaughan Gething denies 'obnoxious' claim he committed perjury at Covid inquiry". Wales Online. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  58. ^ Mosalski, Ruth (16 May 2024). "Vaughan Gething sacks member of cabinet over leak". Wales Online. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  59. ^ "I am deeply shocked and saddened by what has happened today. I am clear and have been clear that I did not, nor have I ever leaked anything. Integrity is all in politics and I retain mine. 1/2 🧵". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  60. ^ Price, Emily (17 May 2024). "Sarah Murphy replaces sacked junior minister Hannah Blythyn". Nation.Cymru. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  61. ^ Hayward, Will (17 May 2024). "Plaid Cymru pulls out of deal to support Labour in the Senedd". Wales Online. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  62. ^ "Vaughan Gething: Welsh first minister to face no-confidence vote". BBC News. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  63. ^ "Vaughan Gething won't quit after losing vote of no confidence". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  64. ^ Grierson, Jamie (16 July 2024). "Vaughan Gething resigns as first minister of Wales". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 July 2024.
  65. ^ Grierson, Jamie (16 July 2024). "Vaughan Gething's leadership in peril as four Welsh ministers resign". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 July 2024.
  66. ^ McKeon, Christopher (17 July 2024). "Vaughan Gething reshuffles Welsh Labour top team after resignations". The Independent. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  67. ^ "Vaughan Gething-about". Vaughan Gething. 2011. Archived from the original on 30 June 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  68. ^ Crampton, Robert (13 April 2024). "Vaughan Gething: You look at my name, you don't think I'm black". The Times. Retrieved 22 July 2024.
  69. ^ "Vaughan Gething AM: Minister for Health and Social Services". GOV.WALES. Archived from the original on 15 November 2019. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
[edit]
Senedd
Preceded by Member of the Senedd for Cardiff South and Penarth
2011–present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Deputy Minister for Health
2014–2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Health and Social Services
2016–2021
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for the Economy
2021–2024
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Minister of Wales
2024
Succeeded by
Trade union offices
Preceded by President of the Wales TUC
2008–2009
Succeeded by
Paul O'Sheay