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| Hubert Alexander Ingraham | |
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|---|---|
| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office 04 May 2007 | |
| Monarch | Elizabeth II |
| Governor General | Arthur Dion Hanna |
| Preceded by | Perry Christie |
| In office 21 August 1992 – 03 May 2002 | |
| Monarch | Elizabeth II |
| Governor General | Clifford Darling Orville Turnquest Ivy Dumont |
| Preceded by | Lynden Pindling |
| Succeeded by | Perry Christie |
| Born | 4 August 1947 Pine Ridge, Grand Bahama, Bahamas |
| Political party | FNM |
| Spouse | Delores Miller |
Hubert Alexander Ingraham (born 1947) is the Prime Minister of the Bahamas. He served from 1992 until 2002 and became Prime Minister again in 2007. He is a member of the Free National Movement Party (FNM). The Rt. Hon. Hubert A. Igraham now heads the FNM as Party Leader and is a Member of Parliament for the North Abaco constituency; he also served as Leader of the Opposition in the House of Assembly from 2002 to 2007.
Ingraham served as Prime Minister of The Bahamas from August 1992 until May 2002. In the historic election of August 1992 when the FNM unseated the Progressive Liberal Party, Ingraham succeeded the late Prime Minister Sir Lynden Pindling, who had headed the PLP government since January 1967. Following his party\'s victory in the May 2007 election, he became prime minister again.
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Ingraham was born 4 August 1947 in Pine Ridge, Grand Bahama. He is the son of Jerome and Isabella Laroda (nee Cornish) Ingraham. He grew up in Cooper\'s Town on the island of Abaco and began his education at Cooper\'s Town Public School, later attending the Southern Senior School and the Government High School Evening Institute in Nassau.
Ingraham studied law in Nassau, was called to the Bahamas Bar in December 1972, and eventually became senior partner in the law firm of Christie, Ingraham and Co. He entered front-line politics in 1975, when he was elected to the National General Council of the then ruling Progressive Liberal Party. He had previously served as a member of the Air Transport Licensing Authority and Chairman of the Real Property Tax Tribunal.
In 1976, Ingraham was elected National Chairman of the PLP and a member of that party\'s National Executive Committee. In 1977, still Chairman of the PLP, he was elected to the House of Assembly.
In Parliament, Ingraham served as a member of the Standing Committee on Privilege and Public Accounts, and as Chairman of an investigative Select Committee on Influence Peddling and Political Contributions.
He was re-elected to Parliament in the general election of June 1982, and appointed Minister of Housing, National Insurance and Social Service. In 1982, he also became Chairman of The Bahamas Mortgage Corporation, an institution established to secure and guarantee housing financing for Bahamians in need of that service.
In 1984, in the midst of a Commission of Inquiry into illegal drug-trafficking and trans-shipment through The Bahamas and the attendant disclosures of corruption inside the government and the civil service, Ingraham, as a result of his protests against that situation, was dismissed from The Bahamas Cabinet.
Ingraham offered as an independent candidate in the 1987 general election, and was one of only two Members of Parliament to have been expelled from the ruling PLP to have gone on to immediate independent re-election.
Ingraham joined the Official Opposition in April 1990, and was immediately appointed Parliamentary Leader. When the Leader of the Opposition, Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield, died in May 1990, Ingraham was unanimously elected Leader of the Free National Movement and was appointed Leader of the Official Opposition on 18 May 1990, by the Governor-General.
In June 1990, as freshman Leader of The Free National Movement, he led his party to a Marco City, Grand Bahama by-election victory over the governing party.
On 19 August 1992, Ingraham led the Free National Movement to a stunning 32-17 victory over the Progressive liberal Party and ended the 25- year hold on power of former Prime Minister Sir Lynden Pindling.
The new Prime Minister had Cabinet responsibility for the Ministry of Finance. Later, in a streamlined Cabinet, he took on responsibility for trade and industry, and quickly established a one-stop Investment Authority promoted fresh investment in The Bahamas.
In July 1993, Prime Minister Ingraham was made a Member of Her Majesty\'s most honourable Privy Council. Again on 14 March 1997, Ingraham led the FNM to an even greater election victory.
Ingraham\'s having pledged earlier that he would serve no longer than two terms or 10 years as Head of Government, the FNM in 2001 held special elections for Leader-Designate and Deputy Leader-Designate of the Party, with Sen. Tommy Turnquest emerging as the victor who would assume leadership of the FNM on the night of the next general elections.
Although the FNM lost the 2002 general elections, Ingraham retained his North Abaco seat. During the Party\'s November 2005 convention, he was again elected FNM Leader.
In the General Election held on 2 May 2007, the FNM won a majority of seats, defeating the PLP, and Ingraham was sworn in as prime minister on 4 May."Hubert Ingraham sworn in as Bahamas’ PM", radiojamaica.com, May 4, 2007. He also became Minister of Finance in the new government.Juan McCartney, "Ministers Sworn In", The Bahama Journal, May 8, 2007.
The Rt. Hon. Hubert Ingraham is married to the former Delores Miller of Long Island, and they have five children.
In the General Election held in May, 2007, Ingraham\'s platform closely resembled that of the residents of Great Guana Cay, who brought the issue of the failures of Prime Minister Christie\'s anchor project to light through their own struggle against the Baker\'s Bay Club.
But shortly after being elected, Prime Minister Ingraham implied that the 75% of Guana Cay residents who were against the development were \'terrorists\', even though the residents have acted lawfully throughout their three year ordeal.
| Heads of government of the Bahamas | |
|---|---|
| (Chief Minister, 1955-1964) Symonette • (Premiers, 1964-1969) Symonette • Pindling • (Prime Ministers, 1969–) Pindling • Ingraham • Christie • Ingraham | |
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