Humphrey Vaughan ap David Gething[5] was born in Zambia in 1974, where his father, a whiteWelsh veterinarian from Ogmore-by-Sea in Glamorgan, met his mother, who is a black Zambian and was working as a chicken farmer.[7] Gething describes his father as "a white Welsh economic migrant".[7] When he was two years old, he moved to Abergavenny in Monmouthshire, Wales, with his family, which also included three brothers and a sister.[8][7] In Monmouthshire, his family experienced racism when an employer withdrew a job offer to Gething's father upon seeing the rest of his family.[8][9] Speaking of the incident, Gething said: "They said, 'Come back with your family and we'll sign everything up', but he walked in with my mother, and a trail of brown boys, and the job offer got withdrawn".[9] His father eventually found work in Dorset, England, where Gething was brought up.[8]
employment law. He eventually became a partner in Thompsons in 2007.[11]
In 2008, at the age of 34, Gething became the youngest President of Wales TUC, also becoming the first black person to serve in the role.[14][15]
Political career
Gething joined the
National Assembly for Wales in 1999, but was not elected.[16]
He served as a councillor from 2004 to 2008, representing Butetown electoral ward on Cardiff Council, having been elected with a majority of two votes over candidate Betty Campbell.[11][17] Following the election, Campbell sent a complaint letter to Cardiff Council alleging that Gething had infringed election rules by handing out leaflets to voters as they entered polling stations and telling them how to vote.[18] Campbell initially intended to have the vote re-examined in the High Court, but abandoned this because of the estimated cost of £12,000.[19]
In the
Welsh Conservative Party candidate, Ben Gray, placed second.[20][21] At the following 2016 election, Gething once again increased his majority in terms of vote share.[citation needed
]
Following the 2016 election,
Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport.[22]
Gething did not support Jeremy Corbyn in either the 2015 or 2016 Labour Party leadership election (against challenger Owen Smith); however, he stated in a 2017 BBC Radio Wales interview that he would still like to see Corbyn as Prime Minister, saying quote, "I want a Labour prime minister – and that means Jeremy Corbyn being prime minister. [...] I don't think it matters whether I'm a fan or not – it matters whether I think he can do the job in running the country".[23][24]
In August 2017, Gething walked away in the middle of an interview on
Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board, following allegations that an employee had sexually assaulted vulnerable patients.[25]
Minister for Health and management of the COVID-19 pandemic
Gething served as the Welsh Minister for Health and Social Services during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.
On 12 March 2020, despite a steady surge in the number of confirmed
Principality Stadium, which was due to be sold-out with 74,000 spectators.[26] On the following day, the Welsh Rugby Union announced that the match was officially cancelled.[27] Gething justified his decision in a BBC Radio Wales interview, saying quote, "The medical advice about the risk to people going to the rugby didn't change. What did change was the fact that the rest of sporting world decided that, regardless of that advice, they wanted to put off events".[28]
On 22 April 2020, Gething was caught swearing about fellow Labour MS Jenny Rathbone during a virtual session of the Senedd on Zoom. After Rathbone had asked the Minister a few questions about the Welsh Government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, he failed to mute his microphone as he told an unknown person, "What the fuck is the matter with her?".[29][30] Some undisclosed Labour MSs contacted by BBC Wales said they were also "very angry" over Gething's actions.[29]
In May of the same year, Gething was reportedly photographed by a Sun reporter eating chips with his young son in a local park, prompting criticism by those who suggested he was breaking the COVID-19 restrictions he had imposed himself. Gething denied the accusations, and the Welsh Government stated nothing he had done contravened such regulations.[31]
Gething was questioned at the UK COVID-19 Inquiry in July 2023, due to his former role as Wales' Minister for Health during the COVID-19 pandemic; in his deposition, he admitted that he had never read a report on Exercise Cygnus, a simulation exercise to estimate the impact of a hypothetical influenza pandemic on the UK population.[32]
In December 2023, Gething became one of two candidates in the Welsh Labour leadership election to replace Drakeford as party leader and Wales' First Minister.[33]
On 16 January, Gething and the other candidate,
Unite. Miles' team were then informed of a rule requiring that only people who had been "lay officials" could be nominated. Gething therefore received the nomination.[34] Miles claimed he was unfairly blocked from the union nomination.[35] An unnamed Unite official was quoted by BBC News as saying that the nomination of Gething was a "shocking mess".[36] Journalist Martin Shipton later uncovered that Gething had only joined Unite a few months beforehand.[37]
On 16 March, it was announced that Gething had won the election with 51.7% of the vote, thus becoming the leader of Welsh Labour and would be the new First Minister of Wales.[38][39]
Atlantic Recycling
In February 2024, it was reported that Gething had received a campaign donation of £200,000 from David John Neal, a businessman who had previously been convicted twice of environmental offenses as head of two companies, Atlantic Recycling and Neal Soil Suppliers.[40][41] One of Gething's ministerial colleagues, Lee Waters (who supported Miles in the Welsh Labour election), described the donation as "completely unjustifiable and wrong".[40][41]
The following month, an inquiry by BBC Wales shared letters written by Gething in 2016 and 2018 to Natural Resources Wales, requesting the public body to ease restrictions on Atlantic Recycling. Former Welsh Government minister, Leighton Andrews, was quoted as saying that the donations were "damaging devolution" and called for his fellow party member to return Neal's campaign donation,[42][43] which Gething refused to do.[43]
Gething was officially nominated as First Minister by the Senedd on 20 March 2024,[44][45] and announced his cabinet the following day.[46][47] In the process, he became the first Black First Minister of Wales,[38] as well as the first Black leader of any European country.[39][45]