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(3 June 1939 – 24 January 2011)
Early life
Gallie was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire and was educated at Dunfermline High School in Fife.[2] He trained as an electrical fitter before joining the CEGB as a planning engineer. He rose to be a station manager before entering politics.[2]
Parliamentary career
Gallie was elected as Member of Parliament at Westminster for the Ayr constituency in the 1992 general election.[3] He lost his seat, along with all other Conservatives in Scotland, at the 1997 general election.[3]A vice-chairman of the Scottish Conservative Party, he was elected to the Scottish Parliament in 1999.[3] Gallie was elected to represent the South of Scotland area as a list member, having narrowly failed to win the Ayr constituency seat by 25 votes.[3] Gallie again stood unsuccessfully for the Ayr Westminster seat in 2001, but was re-elected in the 2003 Scottish Parliament election, again as a list member.[3][2]
Gallie stood for the leadership of the Conservative group in the Scottish Parliament, but lost to David McLetchie.[1] He was the Scottish Conservative spokesman on constitutional affairs. He did not stand for re-election in 2007, intending to focus on his ambition of becoming a Member of the European Parliament.[1]
Gallie was initially selected to contest the United Kingdom general election, 2010 in the Ayrshire Central constituency,[4] [5] but Maurice Golden was eventually chosen as the election was not held until May 2010. Gallie was still active in politics when he died in January 2011, aged 71.[1]
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