Member of Parliament (UK) Wallace joined the then-
Liberal Party in the early 1970s, but did not become very active in it until after completing his second degree. His first foray as a parliamentary candidate was in the
constituency of
Dumfriesshire in 1979, where he failed to win, coming third of four candidates with 14.3% of the vote. He also stood, unsuccessfully, as the Liberal candidate in the
South of Scotland constituency at the
European Parliament elections of that year. Four years later, he was selected as the Liberal nomination for the seat of
Orkney and Shetland, the seat being vacated by former party leader
Jo Grimond, and won election to the
Parliament. At the time, it was extremely rare for Liberal candidates to successfully win elections to succeed former Liberal MPs, although many have since done so. He was to serve as the MP there for 18 years, occupying a number of front bench posts for the Liberal Party (and, from 1988 onwards, the
Liberal Democrats), including Employment spokesman and Chief Whip. In 1992, he was unopposed in becoming the new leader of the
Scottish Liberal Democrats, succeeding
Malcolm Bruce. Scottish politics at this time was dominated by the question of constitutional reform. There were few opportunities for legislation affecting Scots Law to be debated or effectively scrutinised at Westminster and, especially after the
1987 election, with only ten
Conservative MPs in Scotland but with a large majority in the House of Commons, it was argued that there was a democratic deficit in Scotland. He was appointed
Queen's Counsel (QC) in 1997. He led the Scottish Liberal Democrats in the first election to the new Scottish Parliament in
1999, himself winning the constituency of Orkney with 67% of the votes cast. This meant he served as a Member of both the Scottish and Westminster Parliaments for a time with a
dual mandate, although like other MPs elected to Holyrood (such as
John Swinney,
John Home Robertson and
Donald Gorrie) he stood down from Westminster at the
2001 general election.
Member of the Scottish Parliament As expected, the proportional election system for the new Scottish Parliament meant that
Labour failed to gain an outright
majority in the first elections. Their leader,
Donald Dewar, chose to seek a formal
coalition government with a working majority rather than try to operate as a
minority government.
Deputy First Minister Dewar contacted Wallace and a week of formal negotiations were held between the two parties' representatives, following which a partnership agreement was signed, committing both parties to support a negotiated joint agenda. Wallace became Deputy First Minister and
Minister for Justice, and maintained these briefs throughout the first term of the Parliament. The decision to enter a coalition government with Labour was controversial at the time. British politicians were unaccustomed to coalition politics, and the Liberal Democrats came under fire from Conservative and SNP opponents who claimed they had 'sold out' their principles. Key to this criticism was the Labour policy of making students pay tuition fees, which the Liberal Democrats had promised to abolish as their price of entering a coalition, but which became merely the subject of an inquiry as the coalition was formed. In the event, the Liberal Democrats did insist on the abolition of tuition fees after the inquiry reported in 2001, but in 1999, the delay was perceived to have been a compromise, and Wallace in particular became the focal point for extremely bitter criticism. Despite this, and other difficult moments, he and his party stayed firm and remained in power. Wallace established himself as a minister.
Acting First Minister On three occasions over the first term of the Parliament, he became
Acting First Minister: twice in 2000 due to at first the illness and later the death, of the first First Minister
Donald Dewar, and then again in 2001, after the resignation of Dewar's successor as First Minister,
Henry McLeish. In the first instance, Dewar returned to office in less than four months. Under his continued leadership, the Scottish Liberal Democrats' popularity grew steadily. After leading the party through the second Holyrood elections in
2003 Elections, again winning 17 MSPs but with a higher share of the vote, he led the party into a second coalition with Labour. The 2003 coalition negotiation process was widely seen as a more successful enterprise by the Liberal Democrats than the preceding one, with key aspects of Labour's proposals on
anti-social behaviour dropped or limited, and with the promise of
proportional representation for Scotland's 32 local councils. Wallace remained as Deputy First Minister, but left the Justice brief, becoming instead the
Minister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning.
Resignation and peerage On 9 May 2005, following the
2005 General Election, Wallace announced his intention to stand down as party leader and Deputy First Minister. He would remain as
MSP for
Orkney until the 2007 election, but would serve his time out as a
backbencher. He ceased to be an MSP with the
dissolution of the Scottish Parliament on 2 April 2007. On 13 September 2007, it was announced that he was to be appointed to the
House of Lords. He was subsequently created a
life peer on 17 October 2007 taking the title
Baron Wallace of Tankerness,
of Tankerness in Orkney. On 28 April 2008, it was announced that the new Lord Wallace would be a member of the
Commission on Scottish Devolution, chaired by
Sir Kenneth Calman, established by the Scottish Parliament to consider the future powers of the Parliament, including powers over finance. In November 2008, Wallace received a lifetime achievement award in the
Scottish Politician of the Year Awards. In March 2010, Wallace briefly returned to the bar. In May 2010, he was appointed Advocate General for Scotland, one of the
Law Officers of the Crown, who advise the government on Scots law. He was elected unopposed, as the leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords on 15 October 2013, replacing
Lord McNally, who had stepped down earlier in the month. In September 2016, he stepped down as the Leader of the Liberal Democrat in the House of Lords, citing a desire to step back from "frontline" politics stating "I was first elected to the House of Commons 33 years ago. For 28 of these years, I have been on the frontline, including sixteen years in a leadership role, here in the Lords and in Scotland." Wallace was chair of the charity
Reprieve until 2021, when he was succeeded in that role by
Elish Angiolini. == Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland ==