| |||||||||
The Right Honourable Sir Malcolm Leslie Rifkind, KCMG, QC (born 1946), is a Scottish Tory politician, and former Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
He became member of Parliament for Edinburgh Pentlands in 1974, and was promoted into the cabinet as Secretary of State for Scotland in 1986. In 1990 he moved by John Major to Transport, and became Defence Secretary in 1992. In the dying years of the Major administration he was the Foreign Secretary.
In the 1997 election he lost his Pentlands seat as part of the massacre of the Tories in Scotland and Wales, and was succeded by Labour candidate Lynda Clark. However, unlike many Tories who either retired from politics or tried to find a safe seat elsewhere to contest, he stood again for the same seat against Clark for the 2001 general election, and improved his showing somewhat.
In February 2004 he was selected as the Tory candidate for the constituency of Kensington and Chelsea, one of the party's safest seats, on the retirement from politics of Michael Portillo after the following general election.
He has been a critic of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the Tony Blair government's support of it. He is a patron of the Tory Reform Group.
| Preceded by: George Younger | Secretary of State for Scotland 1986–1990 | Followed by: Ian Lang |
| Preceded by: Cecil Parkinson | Secretary of State for Transport 1990–1992 | Followed by: George Young |
| Preceded by: Tom King | Secretary of State for Defence 1992–1995 | Followed by: Michael Portillo |
| Preceded by: Douglas Hurd | Foreign Secretary 1995–1997 | Followed by: Robin Cook |