Malcolm Rifkind
- In full:
- Sir Malcolm Leslie Rifkind
- Also Known As:
- Sir Malcolm Leslie Rifkind
- Political Affiliation:
- Conservative Party
Malcolm Rifkind (born June 21, 1946, Edinburgh, Scotland) is a British Conservative Party politician who served in the cabinets (1986–97) of Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and John Major and who encouraged a pro-European stance in his party’s policies.
Rifkind was born into a Jewish family of Lithuanian descent and went on to receive a law degree and a postgraduate degree in political science from the University of Edinburgh. From 1967 to 1969 he taught at a university in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). After his return to Britain he practiced law and entered politics. Though he lost in his first attempt to win a seat in the House of Commons, he was elected a city councillor in Edinburgh in 1970. Rifkind entered the House of Commons in February 1974 as Conservative MP for Edinburgh Pentlands. One year later Thatcher, the newly elected leader of the Conservative Party—then in opposition—appointed Rifkind as one of the party’s spokesmen on Scottish affairs. The following year, however, he resigned in protest against Thatcher’s hostility to a proposal (later dropped) on the creation of a Scottish assembly. (The Scottish Parliament was eventually created and began sitting in 1999.)
On winning the 1979 general election, Prime Minister Thatcher forgave Rifkind his earlier defiance and appointed him to a succession of middle-ranking ministerial posts. As minister of state at the Foreign Office (1983–86), he played a significant role in persuading a reluctant Thatcher to accept plans to create a single market in Europe, which involved removing all barriers to movements of goods, services, and people throughout the European Economic Community (later succeeded by the European Union) and coordinating a number of fiscal and commercial laws.
Rifkind entered Thatcher’s cabinet in 1986 as secretary of state for Scotland. (By this time he had lost his earlier enthusiasm for Scottish devolution.) In 1990 he became transport secretary, and after the 1992 general election Major appointed him defense secretary. In this post Rifkind faced two difficult tasks: to oversee the deployment of British troops in former Yugoslavia without provoking diplomatic trouble within the Atlantic alliance and to manage a succession of reductions in the United Kingdom’s defense budget without provoking hostility from the chiefs of the armed forces. Neither policy was popular with all sections of his party or of the wider British public. By applying himself to detail and refusing to descend into partisan hectoring, Rifkind won praise for his efforts on both fronts.
On Douglas Hurd’s retirement as foreign secretary in July 1995, Rifkind was the obvious successor. Rifkind immediately made it clear that he would maintain Hurd’s broadly pro-European policies, although, to pacify Conservative Euroskeptics, Rifkind also promised “a stalwart defence of British interests.” He also made it clear that he would maintain Britain’s evenhanded stance toward the Middle East.
Rifkind headed the Foreign Office until 1997, when he lost his seat in Parliament in elections that swept the Labour Party to power. In that same year Rifkind was knighted. He was returned to Parliament as MP for Kensington and Chelsea in 2005. In the general election of 2010, Rifkind easily won the redrawn Kensington constituency.
In February 2015, with the May general election in the offing, Rifkind was suspended from the Conservative Party after allegations surfaced of his involvement in an influence-peddling scandal that resulted from a sting investigation conducted by The Daily Telegraph and Channel Four. He chose not to stand for reelection. His memoir, Power and Pragmatism, was published in 2016.