![Ex-President Bill Clinton Climate Change and Other Jokes at Vancouver Board of Trade Ex-President Bill Clinton Climate Change and Other Jokes at Vancouver Board of Trade](http://web.archive.org./web/20110831200600im_/http://i.ytimg.com/vi/xJkM3MU2Ikc/0.jpg)
- Order:
- Duration: 1:19
- Published: 21 May 2010
- Uploaded: 04 Jan 2011
- Author: RayVanEng
Post | Secretary |
---|---|
Body | State for Business, Innovation and SkillsandPresident of the Board of Trade |
Insignia | Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg |
Insigniacaption | Arms of Her Majesty's Government |
Department | Department for Business, Innovation and SkillsBoard of Trade |
Incumbent | Vincent Cable |
Incumbentsince | 12 May 2010 |
Style | The Right Honourable |
Appointer | David Cameron |
Appointerpost | Prime Minister |
Inaugural | The Earl of Shaftesbury (First Lord of Trade)The Lord Mandelson (Secretary of State for Business, Innovation, and Skills) |
Formation | 16 September 1672 (First Lord of Trade) 5 June 2009 (Secretary of State for Business, Innovation, and Skills) |
Website | Business, Innovation and Skills |
The Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills (formerly the Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and previously Secretary of State for Trade and Industry) is a cabinet position in the United Kingdom government. Its secondary title is the President of the Board of Trade. The Secretary of State is responsible for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (formerly the Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and previously the Department of Trade and Industry).
After the Board was re-established in 1696, there were 15 (and later 16) members of the Board - the 7 (later 8) Great Officers of State, and 8 unofficial members, who did the majority of the work. The senior unofficial member of the board was the President of the Board, commonly known as the First Lord of Trade. The board was abolished on 11 July 1782, but a Committee of the Privy Council was established on 5 March 1784 for the same purposes. On 23 August 1786 a new Committee was set up, more strongly focused on commercial functions than the previous boards of trade. At first the President of the Board of Trade only occasionally sat in the Cabinet, but from the early 19th century it was usually a cabinet level position.
During the government of Sir Alec Douglas-Home, the then President of the Board of Trade Edward Heath was given in addition the job of Secretary of State for Industry, Trade and Regional Development. This title was not continued under Harold Wilson, but when Heath became Prime Minister in 1970 he decided to merge the Board of Trade and the Ministry of Technology to create the Department of Trade and Industry. The head of this department became known as Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and President of the Board of Trade.
When Harold Wilson re-entered office in March 1974, the office was split into the Department of Trade, the Department of Industry and the Department of Prices and Consumer Protection. The title President of the Board of Trade became the secondary title of the Secretary of State for Trade. In 1979 the Department of Prices and Consumer Protection was abolished by the incoming Conservative government and its responsibilities were reintegrated into the Department of Trade. In 1983 the offices of trade and industry were remerged and the title of Secretary of State for Trade and Industry was recreated. When Michael Heseltine held this office, he preferred to be known by the older title of President of the Board of Trade, and this practice was also followed by Ian Lang and Margaret Beckett. Heseltine's decision to reuse the old title caused some comment and it was discovered that the Board of Trade had not in fact met since the mid-nineteenth century.
† - Primarily referred to as President of the Board of Trade, and not as Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
†† - Alan Johnson was initially announced on 6 May 2005, after the general election, as being "Secretary of State for Productivity, Energy and Industry and President of the Board of Trade", but after just a week, on 13 May, it was declared that the new title would not be used, after widespread derision of the new name, because the abbreviation for Johnson's title, Productivity, Energy and Industry Secretary, would have been "PENIS"
Trade and Industry Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.