Joe Bossano
The Honourable Joseph Bossano MP | |
---|---|
Minister for Enterprise, Training, Employment and Health and Safety | |
Assumed office 8 December 2011 | |
Prime Minister | Fabian Picardo |
5th Chief Minister of Gibraltar | |
In office 25 March 1988 – 17 May 1996 | |
Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Preceded by | Adolfo Canepa |
Succeeded by | Peter Caruana |
Personal details | |
Born |
Gibraltar | 10 June 1939
Nationality | British (Gibraltarian) |
Political party | GSLP |
Spouse(s) | Rose Marie |
Children | 4 |
Alma mater | University of Birmingham London School of Economics |
Joseph John Bossano (born 10 June 1939) is a Gibraltarian politician, and the former leader of the Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party. He was Chief Minister of Gibraltar from 25 March 1988 to 17 May 1996. He served as the Leader of the Opposition in the Gibraltar House of Assembly from 1984 until 1988 and again from 1996 until April 2011, by when the House of Assembly had become the Gibraltar Parliament. On 20 April 2011, Bossano stood down as leader of the GSLP, to be replaced by Fabian Picardo.
Early life and career
Bossano was born in Gibraltar and has a degree in Economics from the London School of Economics,[1] as well as a degree in Italian from the University of Birmingham. He became part of the trade union movement in the 1960s while working as a seaman in Britain,[1] where he was a member of the British Labour Party.
He was asked by a group of Gibraltarian politicians to return to Gibraltar and was elected a member of the House of Assembly in 1972, as a candidate of the Integration with Britain Party (IWBP). In 1969 the IWBP leader, then the Chief Minister, Sir Robert Peliza, was the mover of the Preamble to the Constitution[2] which safeguards Gibraltar from ever passing to Spain without the expressed wishes of the Gibraltarians. He also became the Branch Officer for the Transport and General Workers Union (responsible for the public sector in Gibraltar and was the main force behind the attainment of parity of wages with the UK for Gibraltarians).
In 1975, he left the IWBP to form the Gibraltar Democratic Movement, which won four seats in the Assembly in the 1976 election and two years later became the Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party.
He has always kept a hard line stance against any sovereignty deal with Spain without the consent of the Gibraltarians. In 1980 he led a demonstrations of about 2,000 Gibraltarians protesting at the opening of negotiations between Spain and the United Kingdom agreed on the Lisbon Agreement.[3] In 1987 he supported the position of the Government of Gibraltar and the Assembly against any agreement between Spain and the United Kingdom with regard to the joint use of the Airport of Gibraltar. On 10 November, Bossano and Joshua Hassan, then Chief Minister, led a demonstration of about 12,000 Gibraltarians, one of the largest ever held in the territory.[4] In February 1988, Bossano and Adolfo Canepa, the leader of the Association for the Advancement of Civil Rights, stated that the Gibraltar House of Assembly would not approve the agreement reached by Spain and UK in December 1987 on the joint use of the Airport unless Spain accepted the British sovereignty over the isthmus.[5]
In the key 1988 election, Bossano's party called for the self-determination, expressed its opposition to the negotiations over the sovereignty and future of Gibraltar between Spain and the United Kingdom, and opposed to any transfer of sovereignty to Spain. It also asked for the withdrawal of the negotiations on the Brussels Declaration and opposed to the Airport agreement. The GSLP got 8 seats and a 58.2% of the popular vote. Bossano received a personal vote of 8,1128, about 4,000 more than his contender, Adolfo Canepa.[6] Therefore Bossano was the new Chief Minister.
His re-election in 1992 with a 72% share of the vote (using the campaign slogan "Give Spain No Hope"), caused considerable friction with governments in both London and Madrid who were looking for a solution to the 300-year-old Spanish claim to Gibraltar. As Chief Minister he maintained good relations with Spanish politicians at municipal level, but would not sit to discuss the sovereignty of Gibraltar with them. During his time in office, Bossano also oversaw significant economic change, resulting from the decline of traditional sources of employment, such as the UK Ministry of Defence, and the creation of a private sector economy based on offshore finance and tourism. He broke the back of the severe housing problem existing in Gibraltar before he came into power, by reclaiming land from the sea and constructing hundreds of affordable flats, which were offered at very reasonable prices, albeit with numerous serious construction defects which took many years and millions of pounds to fix. For the first time, and since then, Gibraltarians have become home owners, rather than renting from the government, as was traditional.
His main quest is and has always been to achieve the decolonisation of Gibraltar through the maximum level of self-government possible resulting in the removal of Gibraltar from the United Nations list of Non-Self-Governing Territories.
As leader of the GSLP and the Opposition and following his retirement as party leader, Bossano is still prominent in Gibraltar politics. He stood down as GSLP leader in April 2011, replaced by Fabian Picardo. Bossano remains active in politics and was a GSLP candidate in the Gibraltar general election in December 2011. Upon the Liberal-GSLP victory, Bossano got a seat in the Gibraltar Parliament and was appointed Minister for Enterprise, Training and Employment by the Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo.[7]
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Party founded |
Leader of Gibraltar Socialist Labour Party 1978–2011 |
Succeeded by Fabian Picardo |
Preceded by Adolfo Canepa |
Chief Minister of Gibraltar 1988–1996 |
Succeeded by Peter Caruana |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joe Bossano. |
References
- 1 2 Delaney, Paul (27 March 1988). "Socialist's Victory on Gibraltar Favors Britain". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 January 2010.
- ↑ Garcia, Joseph J. (1994). "The 1969 Constitution". Gibraltar, The Making of a People: The Modern Political History of Gibraltar and its People (1st ed.). Gibraltar: Mediterranean SUN Publishing Co. Ltd. pp. 150–155.
- ↑ Peter Gold (2005). Gibraltar: British or Spanish?. Routledge. p. 28. ISBN 0-415-34795-5.
- ↑ Peter Gold (2005). Gibraltar: British or Spanish?. Routledge. p. 92. ISBN 0-415-34795-5.
- ↑ Peter Gold (2005). Gibraltar: British or Spanish?. Routledge. p. 100. ISBN 0-415-34795-5.
- ↑ Peter Gold (2005). Gibraltar: British or Spanish?. Routledge. p. 101. ISBN 0-415-34795-5.
- ↑ Gibraltar Chronicle, ed. (2011-12-13). "Picardo Announces New Govt. Ministerial Portfolios". Retrieved 2012-09-14.