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Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Chris McCall

Jackie Baillie 'humbled' after being made a dame in King's first Birthday Honours list

Jackie Baillie has told how she was “humbled” to be made a dame in the King’s first Birthday Honours.

The Scottish Labour deputy leader said the honour was “totally unexpected” with news of of its award “coming as quite a shock to me”.

She is understood to be the first sitting MSP at Holyrood to either be knighted or be given a damehood – the female equivalent of a knighthood.

The veteran MSP has represented Dumbarton since the first Scottish Parliament election in 1999.

"I understand I was nominated by constituents and when you have represented people for 24 years this is such a humbling experience," she said. "And so I was delighted to accept on that basis.”

With recipients of honours sworn to secrecy about their awards ahead of the honours list being made public, the Labour politician told just two people about the award – her daughter and the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar. The 59-year-old is one of only three MSPs at Holyrood who have represented the same constituency for the lifetime of the Parliament – the others being former deputy first minister John Swinney, and the SNP’s Fergus Ewing.

And she vowed that the awarding of the honour, given in recognition of her political and public service, would not change her. In her time in Holyrood Baillie has fought for a public inquiry to be held into the outbreak of Clostridium difficile at the Vale of Leven hospital in West Dunbartonshire.

When the inquiry was held it highlighted “serious personal and systemic failures” at the hospital, finding that C.diff was a factor in the death of 34 out of 143 patients who had tested positive for the infection there over the course of 2007 and 2008.

“I hated the fact the C.diff at the Vale of Leven hospital damaged so many of my constituents and so many of them lost their lives as a result,” Dame Jackie said. “It was my job to make sure that I relentlessly pursued a public inquiry for them, against the then health minister Nicola Sturgeon.

“I think it took five years to get there, but we finally got a public inquiry that made all sorts of recommendations that I think have benefited not just the Vale of Leven but the NHS across Scotland.”

With her constituency including the Faslane nuclear submarine base on the Clyde, she has also supported the jobs there, even at times when Labour as not been in favour of nuclear weapons. Baillie added: “I’m a multilateralist, I want to see nuclear weapons across the world removed, but these are good jobs in my constituency.”

The MSP, who was born in Hong Kong to a Portuguese father and Scottish mother, was made deputy communities minister by Holyrood’s first first minister Donald Dewar, before becoming social justice minister under his successor Henry McLeish.

In opposition at Holyrood, she brought forward a member’s bill to tackle the abuse of disabled parking bays, with legislation passed by Holyrood in 2009 establishing fines for those who park in them without holding a blue badge..

But she said: “The reality is I can’t get over the fact that I think there are many, many more people in my constituency who are much more deserving of this honour than me. The NHS staff that I know, the care staff that I know, who went above and beyond during the pandemic to care for us. This is less about me, this is for them. It is for them as much as it is for me.”

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