He was convener of the
Scottish Parliament's Transport and Environment
Committee and served on the
Confederation of British Industry working group designed to bring
Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) and business closer together as well as being on the cross-party group on ageing and the elderly. Kerr is considered to be an ally of
Motherwell and Wishaw MSP
Jack McConnell, working with him on his two successive bids for the leadership of Scottish Labour and the position of First Minister. Kerr was first appointed
Minister for Finance and Public Services in the
Scottish Executive in November 2001 and moved to become Minister for Health and Community Care in October 2004, replacing
Malcolm Chisolm. As Health Minister, Kerr oversaw significant NHS restructuring. He was also responsible for the Scottish ban on
smoking ban in public places which was introduced on 26 March 2006. In November 2006, he won the
Scottish Politician of the Year award in recognition of his work to bring in the smoking ban. Kerr retained the health portfolio in McConnell's shadow cabinet upon the
Scottish National Party's victory at the
2007 election. Having ruled himself out of contention as a successor for Jack McConnell, Kerr voted for Wendy Alexander to become leader of the Scottish Labour Party. On 17 September 2007 he was appointed Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Public Services and Local Government. With
Wendy Alexander's resignation as leader of the Labour Party in Scotland, Kerr stood for election as the next leader. However, following the victory of Iain Gray in the leadership election, Kerr was appointed Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Sustainable Growth. At the
2011 Scottish Parliament election, Kerr was one of many Labour casualties, losing his seat after 12 years to
Linda Fabiani of the SNP. Kerr did not stand on the regional list, so therefore did not return as an MSP. == After Politics ==