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Iain McNicol

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Political party
  
Labour

Alma mater
  
Abertay University

Party
  
Labour Party

Role
  
Politician

Name
  
Iain McNicol



Leader
  
Jeremy Corbyn Ed Miliband

Preceded by
  
The Baron Collins of Highbury

Born
  
17 August 1969 (age 54) (
1969-08-17
)

Occupation
  
Political organiser, trade unionist

Profiles

Iain mcnicol s speech to annual conference


Iain McNicol (born 17 August 1969) is a British Labour politician and trade unionist. He is the General Secretary of the Labour Party, the most senior employee of the Labour Party, following on from being National Political Officer of the GMB Union, and has a long history of organising in both the Labour Party and the trade union movement.

Contents

Iain mcnicol hangout


Political career

McNicol began his involvement in political organising as president of the Student Union at Dundee Institute of Technology in 1991.

He then moved to the Labour Party, first in an elected role as National Campaigns and Membership Officer for Labour Students, and then variously as an organiser and agent in south and east England from 1994 to 1997.

Following the United Kingdom general election, 1997 at which Labour returned to office, McNicol served as a research, organisation, and political officer with the GMB Union, and in 1998 he was appointed as a regional organiser for its Southern Region. McNicol continued in that role until 2004, when he was promoted to National Political Officer. He served in that capacity through to 2011, coordinating the political strategy of the union and representing its members’ interests in both the public and private sector.

On 19 July 2011, Labour’s National Executive Committee selected McNicol to become the party’s next General Secretary under leader Ed Miliband.

2016 Labour Party leadership election

In June and July 2016, McNicol had a difficult role in the 2016 Labour Party leadership crisis. The Financial Times reported that the office of the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn believed that McNicol tried to prevent Corbyn from attending a crucial National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting, and was complicit in trying to exclude Corbyn from entering the forthcoming leadership election. It reported that senior figures in the trade union movement were discussing replacement options for McNicol in his General Secretary role.

A civil High Court legal challenge was brought by Labour donor and former parliamentary candidate Michael Foster, to contest the decision to allow Corbyn to be a candidate without having to secure nominations from Labour MPs. The case went to court on 26 July 2016. McNicol was the first defendant on behalf of the members of the Labour Party. Corbyn applied to the court, and was accepted, to be a second defendant with his own legal team as Corbyn was "particularly affected and particularly interested in the proper construction of the rules" and that McNicol was "being expected to vigorously defend a position which he regarded as incorrect prior to the NEC decision". The High Court ruled that the NEC's decision that Corbyn should automatically be on the ballot was a correct interpretation of the Labour Party Rule Book.

An additional court case was brought against McNicol in August 2016 regarding the NEC's decision to disallow party members who had joined after 12 January 2016 from voting in the leadership election. The claimants won their case in the High Court, but this decision was overturned on appeal. In late September, it was reported that a Labour party member was lodging a claim at the County Court in response to her suspension by the NEC and that it would cite McNicol as claimant.

Personal life

McNicol is married and has a son and daughter. He holds a black belt in karate.

References

Iain McNicol Wikipedia


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