Robin Cook (born February 28, 1946, Belshill, Lanarkshire, Scotland—died August 6, 2005, Sutherland, Scotland) was a British politician who served as foreign secretary in the United Kingdom for four years following the Labour Party’s return to power in 1997. He was recognized as having one of the sharpest minds in British politics, and he wielded influence far beyond his official post.
Cook was educated at the University of Edinburgh and taught school for five years before entering politics. He was elected to the House of Commons as a Labour MP in 1974 and quickly established himself as a rousing and witty left-wing debater. In the 1980s, however, like many in the Labour’s left wing who were shocked by the scale of the party’s defeat in the 1983 general election, he became an active reformer. He worked closely with Neil Kinnock (Labour leader during 1983–92) and Tony Blair, who was elected party leader in 1994 and prime minister in 1997.
As foreign secretary, Cook asserted that the United Kingdom’s foreign policy would henceforth have “an ethical dimension,” and in 1999 he and Blair persuaded an initially reluctant U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton to commit American forces in Kosovo, then in the former Yugoslavia. Following the 2001 general election, Blair demoted Cook to the lesser cabinet post of leader of the House of Commons.
On March 17, 2003, Cook resigned from the government in protest against Blair’s decision to support the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. In his resignation speech, delivered from the backbenches, Cook revived his reputation as a clever and effective debater, and by 2005 it was widely predicted that he would return to the cabinet following Blair’s eventual resignation. Cook died from a heart attack while hill climbing in the Scottish Highlands.