Who is Vaughan Gething? A guide to Wales Labour leader hopeful
- Published
Wales' Economy Minister Vaughan Gething is one of the two men competing to be the country's next first minister.
Here's what you need to know about him - the BBC has also published a profile of his rival, Education Minister Jeremy Miles.
This is his second run at the top job
He also stood in 2018, coming second to Mark Drakeford in the race to succeed Carwyn Jones.
He was born in Zambia
His Welsh father, a vet from Ogmore-by-Sea in Vale of Glamorgan, met his mother - a chicken farmer - while he was working in the southern African country.
Mr Gething was born in the capital Lusaka in 1974 and the family moved to Britain two years later. His father was offered a job near Abergavenny in Monmouthshire, but Mr Gething says the offer was withdrawn when his father arrived with a black family.
He was brought up in England and studied in Wales
Mr Gething went to school in Dorset and attended university in Aberystwyth, studying law and becoming president of the Guild of Students. He was elected president of the National Union of Students Wales.
He would be Wales' first black leader if he wins
Mr Gething would become the fifth person to lead Wales as first minister since devolution began in 1999, following in the footsteps of Alun Michael, Rhodri Morgan, Carwyn Jones and Mark Drakeford. He would be the first black politician to do so.
He was in charge of health in Wales during the pandemic
Mr Gething was health minister between 2016 and May 2021, and oversaw Wales' initial response to Covid. He says that experience would stand him in good stead to be first minister, but he has also been criticised after admitting he had not read key documents relating to pandemic planning.
He beat Wales' first black head teacher to become a councillor
Mr Gething was elected councillor for the Butetown area of Cardiff in 2004, beating the previous councillor, independent Betty Campbell, by just two votes.
She was Wales' first black head teacher and a statue in her honour was unveiled in Cardiff city centre in 2021, five years after she died.
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