In November 2006, he was appointed as Chairman of the Advertising Standards Authority. He was awarded an Honorary Fellowship in 2010 from the University of Cumbria. Smith was appointed Chair of the London Cultural Consortium (successor body to the Cultural Strategy Group) by Ken Livingstone, the then Mayor of London, and served from 2005 to 2008. It was announced on 30 April 2005 that he was to be created a life peer, and the title was gazetted on 22 June 2005 as Baron Smith of Finsbury, of Finsbury in the London Borough of Islington. Appointment to the House of Lords Īfter over 20 years in Parliament, Smith stepped down from the House of Commons at the 2005 general election. He held this position throughout the Labour government's first term, but was sacked and returned to the back benches after the 2001 election, being replaced by Tessa Jowell. In 2000, he managed to secure a tax rebate that enabled many museums to give free admission. In this case, a Select Committee report later found that he had exceeded his authority and had improperly failed to seek advice from his Permanent Secretary. There were controversies, such as his approval during his first week as minister of the appointment of Mary Allen to the Royal Opera House. As a Minister known to have a close connection with the arts scene in Britain, his time at DCMS is generally regarded as a success, for many projects funded through the National Lottery came to fruition. In 1997, he was appointed to Tony Blair's Cabinet as the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport He became an opposition whip in 1986, a shadow Treasury minister from 1987 to 1992, and shadowed the environment, heritage, pensions and health portfolios between 19. He immediately received a standing ovation from most of the audience. (In 1975 Maureen Colquhoun had been effectively "outed" by press revelations.) During a rally in Rugby, Warwickshire, against a possible ban on gay employees by the town council, Smith began his speech: "Good afternoon, I'm Chris Smith, I'm the Labour MP for Islington South and Finsbury and I'm gay." This was unscripted, and the decision to include it in his speech was made at the last minute. There had been several gay MPs before this whose homosexuality had been common knowledge in some circles, including their constituents in some cases, but they had not been completely open about it. In 1984, he became Britain's first gay MP to choose to "come out". Cunningham stood again at the 1987 general election when Smith retained the seat. He came third at Epsom and Ewell in the 1979 general election before narrowly winning the seat of Islington South and Finsbury at the 1983 general election, defeating George Cunningham, who had ultimately defected to the Social Democrats from Labour. He worked for a housing charity and became a councillor in the London Borough of Islington. He attended Harvard University as a Kennedy Scholar, and was president of the Cambridge Union Society. At Cambridge he gained a first class honours degree in English, and a PhD with a thesis on Coleridge and Wordsworth. Since 2015 he has been Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge.Ĭhris Smith was born in Barnet, London, and educated at George Watson's College in Edinburgh and Pembroke College, Cambridge. He was the first openly gay male British MP, coming out in 1984, and in 2005, the first MP to acknowledge that he is HIV positive. For the majority of his career he was a Labour Party member. Christopher Robert Smith, Baron Smith of Finsbury, PC (born 24 July 1951) is a British politician and a peer a former Member of Parliament (MP) and Cabinet Minister and former chairman of the Environment Agency.
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