Chris Huhne
House
Commons
Party
Liberal Democrat
Constituency
Eastleigh
Website
http://www.eastleighlibdems.org.uk/
Contact Details
House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA
Tel: 020 7219 4997
Fax: 020 7219 0214
Biography
Chris is unusual among modern politicians, because he had lots of experience outside politics before being elected. Chris was an economic and financial journalist for nineteen years, and a City economist for five years, before being elected as a member of the European Parliament in 1999. Chris resigned from the European Parliament when he was elected as Eastleigh's MP in 2005. He is married to Vicky (who is also an economist) and they have five children, three of them now grown up.
After Oxford University, Chris won his trade union card as a journalist by reporting under cover from India during Mrs Gandhi's emergency, when other western journalists had been expelled. His travels around India gave him an abiding interest in third world development. In 1977, Chris became Britain's youngest staff foreign correspondent when posted to Brussels by The Economist where he covered the European Union and the world trade talks. During his time on The Economist, Chris first appreciated the disastrous impact of poor environmental policy when he saw deforestration and desertification in Tanzania.
Chris wrote an award-winning economics column every week for ten years first for the Guardian and then for the Independent on Sunday, and then edited the business sections of both the Independent and Independent on Sunday and won the prestigious Wincott award both as junior and as senior financial journalist of the year. In 1994, Chris founded what became one of the largest teams of economists in the City to rate the risks of overseas investments for pension funds and other investors.
During Chris's time in the European Parliament from 1999, he was the economic spokesman for the pan-european Liberal group and showed that he could put together cross-party coalitions to reform Europe. Chris forced the European Central Bank to become more open, publishing forecasts each six months. Chris also proposed and won support for the first "sunset clauses" - time limits on the EU Commission's powers - introduced into EU law. "By setting a four year time limit on the Commission's powers, the parliament can ensure that it uses them wisely, or loses them". And Chris radically changed the EU Commission's proposals for financial services laws that would have penalised small business, instead ensuring that companies can raise money for expansion more simply and easily with one set of documents for investors across Europe. "I believe Britain must play a central role in Europe, which is why I am so keen that Europe's unacceptable features should be reformed" says Chris.
On election to Westminster in 2005, Charles Kennedy asked Chris to become the shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, dealing with tax and public spending as a Treasury spokesman for the party. Chris was the Liberal Democrat spokesman on the Finance Bill 2005, advocating changes in self-invested pension plans to stop a loophole whereby rich investors will be able to get 40 per cent discount on property and other investments in their pension. This change was conceded by the Chancellor in his pre-budget report in October 2005. Chris ran for the leadership of the Liberal Democrats in early 2006, highlighting the need for green taxes to change our behaviour and tackle climate change, and was the runner-up to Sir Menzies Campbell, who then appointed him Shadow Environment Food and Rural Affairs Secretary. Chris ran for the leadership again in Autumn 2007 following the resignation of Sir Menzies, coming second to Nick Clegg in December 2007. He was then appointed Shadow Secretary of State for the Home Department.
During the last parliament, Chris chaired the Liberal Democrat Public Services Policy commission on reform of public services like health and education, and his proposals for more local control over the National Health Service are a key part of Liberal Democrat policy. "Britain is the most centralised state in Europe, which is the main reason why public services fail to satisfy" says Chris. He also chaired the expert group on Britain's adoption of the euro, and was co-chairman of the policy panel on global sustainability, stability and security that looked at key issues like global warming. "Global warming and the threats to our environment are the biggest challenge that our generation faces" says Chris. Chris was the Liberal Democrat economic adviser during the general election campaign of 1997, and for many years was a non-executive director of Electoral Reform (Ballot services) Ltd, the money-spinning company that funds campaigning for fair votes.
Chris has written four books mainly on the themes of third world debt and development, European integration and the Euro, and general economics. In his 1990 book "Real World Economics", Chris was an early advocate of tackling global warming. He has also contributed many articles to collections on British politics and policy, including an article about the reform of the United Nations and globalisation to the "Orange Book: Reclaiming Liberalism" (2004). Chris also wrote a weekly column about Europe for the London Evening Standard from 1999 to 2002.
Chris was educated at Westminster School, at the Universite de Paris-Sorbonne and at Magdalen College, Oxford University, where he took first class honours in Politics, Philosophy and Economics.
Parliamentary Career
Liberal Democrat Shadow: Chief Secretary to the Treasury 2005-06, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs 2006-07, Home Secretary 2007-10, Secretary of State for Justice and Lord Chancellor 2008-09; Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change 2010-
general election 2010-Eastleigh| Name | Party | Votes | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Huhne, Chris | Lib Dem | 24966 | 46.53% |
| Hutchings, Maria | Con | 21102 | 39.33% |
| Finch, Ray | UKIP | 1933 | 3.6% |
| Barraclough, Leo | Lab | 5153 | 9.6% |
| Low, Keith | NLP | 93 | 0.17% |
| Pewsey, Tony | England | 249 | 0.46% |
| Stone, Dave | Ind | 154 | 0.29% |
| Majority | 3864 | ||
| Turnout | 53650 | ||
| Electorate | |||
| Result | Lib Dem Hold (% from ) | ||
Party Groups
Chair Press and Broadcasting Policy Panel 1994-95; Economic adviser 1997 general election; Member Economic Policy Commission 1998; Advisory board member Centre for Reform 1998-; Joint chair Policy Panel on Global Stability, Security and Sustainability 1999-2000; Chair Expert Commission of Britain's adoption of the Euro 1999-2000; Commission on Public Services 2001-02; Contested Liberal Democrat leadership 2006 and 2007
Electoral History
Contested Reading East 1983, Oxford West and Abingdon 1987 general elections. Member for Eastleigh 2005-10, for Eastleigh (revised boundary) since 6 May 2010 general election
Political Interests
European single currency, economics, third world debt and development, Europe, electoral reform, financial services
Countries Of Interest
Hong Kong, China and ASEAN countries
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