Difference between revisions of "Bridget McConnell"

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==Commonwealth Connections==
 
==Commonwealth Connections==
  
Bridget McConnell was instrumental in launching the campaign for Glasgow to host the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Plans are afoot to house the offices of Culture and Sport Glasgow at the site of the Commonwealth Games. <ref>Carolyn Churchill, ‘Seven years for area's regeneration’, ''The Herald'', 10 November, 2007</ref>  
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Bridget McConnell was instrumental in launching the campaign for Glasgow to host the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Plans are afoot to house the offices of Culture and Sport Glasgow at the site of the Commonwealth Games. <ref>Carolyn Churchill, ‘Seven years for area's regeneration’, ''The Herald'', 10 November, 2007</ref>
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==National Galleries in Glasgow==
 
==National Galleries in Glasgow==
  
 
Following the renovation of Kelvingrove Museum, McConnell is now campaigning to establish a National Gallery in Glasgow.<ref>David Leask, 'Call for national gallery in west' ''The Herald'' 9 January 2008, 4.</ref>
 
Following the renovation of Kelvingrove Museum, McConnell is now campaigning to establish a National Gallery in Glasgow.<ref>David Leask, 'Call for national gallery in west' ''The Herald'' 9 January 2008, 4.</ref>
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==Nationalist Tensions==
 
==Nationalist Tensions==
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With connections to the top of the Scottish Labour administration, Bridget McConnell has had run-ins with SNP councillors. <ref>Russell Findlay, 'CCTV Clears Crime Fighter of Bust-up with Bridget: Council boss says gangland campaigner shouted in her face but they were not even in the same room', ''Sunday Mail'', 12 August 2007, 33.
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Revision as of 12:04, 15 April 2008

Bridget McConnell: no 15 in the Power 100 list published by Scotland on Sunday .[1]


Early Years and Family Connections

Born Bridget Mary McLuckie on 28 May 1958, she was educated at Our Lady's High School, Cumbernauld, St Andrew's University (MA Hons 1982), Dundee College of Commerce (DIA 1983) and Stirling University (MEd 1992). [2] Her brother, Robert McLuckie, is a millionaire property tycoon who has been portrayed in the press as drunken, sectarian and lewd.[3]

In 1990, Bridget married Jack McConnell who would go on to become First Minister of Scotland from November 2001 to May 2007.


Cultural Interests

In 2006, Bridget spearheaded the controversial devolution of Glasgow City Council's Cultural and Leisure Services to form the company/charity known as Culture and Sport Glasgow with a separate trading arm, Culture and Sport Glasgow (Trading) CIC. Since March 2007, she has held the post of Chief Executive of both companies.

Controlling all cultural provision in Glasgow, Bridget McConnell would be expected to have an interest in culture.



Glasgow the Brand

Bridget McConnell is fully conversant with the fact that culture and sport generate tourism and increase the revenue of a city. In her introduction to Glasgow’s Cultural Strategy, published in 2005, she noted that cultural tourism accounted for 37% of all tourism to the city.[4]


Commonwealth Connections

Bridget McConnell was instrumental in launching the campaign for Glasgow to host the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Plans are afoot to house the offices of Culture and Sport Glasgow at the site of the Commonwealth Games. [5]


National Galleries in Glasgow

Following the renovation of Kelvingrove Museum, McConnell is now campaigning to establish a National Gallery in Glasgow.[6]


Nationalist Tensions

With connections to the top of the Scottish Labour administration, Bridget McConnell has had run-ins with SNP councillors. Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag


Notes

  1. Power 100 Scotland on Sunday, 28 May 2006 (accessed 11 April 2008)
  2. Who's Who 2008. A&C Black, London, p. 1453
  3. Annabelle Steggles 'You asked for sex education' The Sun, 3 December 2007.
  4. Bridget McConnell in C. Landry (ed)Glasgow: The People, The Place, The Potential. Glasgow’s Cultural Strategy, 2006 (accessed 11 February 2008).
  5. Carolyn Churchill, ‘Seven years for area's regeneration’, The Herald, 10 November, 2007
  6. David Leask, 'Call for national gallery in west' The Herald 9 January 2008, 4.