WHO'S WHO
Chris Huhne MP
Lib Dem majority: 568 (1%)
Constituency: Eastleigh
Region: South Central
PA Number: 221
Address:
109A Leigh Road
Eastleigh
SO50 9DS
Tel: (023) 8062 0007
Email: chris@chrishuhne.org.uk
Web: http://www.chrishuhne.org.uk
Date of Birth: 02/07/1954
Occupation: MP
Education: Westminster School (1967-1971); Certificate in French language and civilisation, University of Paris (Sorbonne) (1971-1972); BA First Class Hons. (Politics, Philosophy and Economics), Magdalen College, Oxford (1975)
Experience: Economist, economic commentator, journalist, editor and author
Parliamentary Experience: 2008 - Shadow Secretary for Justice 2007- Shadow Home Secretary 2006- Shadow Environment Secretary, 2005-06 Shadow spokesperson on Treasury team. Previously candidate in Reading East 1983, Oxford West and Abingdon 1987 general elections.
Memberships: Chair, Liberal Democrats public services policy commission; economic adviser, Liberal Democrats 1997
Marital status/children: Married
Interests: European single currency, economics, third world debt and development, Europe, electoral reform

Seat:Eastleigh |
Liberal Democrats19,216 (39%) |
|
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Turnout:49,771 (65%) |
Conservative18,648 (37%) |
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Swing2.6% Lib Dem to Con |
Labour10,238 (21%) |
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Other1,669 (3%) |
BIOGRAPHY
Chris Huhne was first elected Westminster MP for Eastleigh
in May 2005. Chris is the Liberal Democrats’ Shadow Home Secretary
and Shadow Secretary for Justice. Chris was the pan-european Liberal
group’s economic spokesman while a member of the European Parliament from 1999
to 2006, and previously spent nineteen years as a journalist on the Guardian,
Independent and the Independent on Sunday and then five years founding and
building up one of the largest teams of economists in the City of
London.
Educated at Westminster School, the
Sorbonne in Paris and Magdalen College, Oxford, Chris Huhne took a first-class
degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE). After leaving university
Chris won his trade union card as a journalist with undercover reporting from
India during Mrs Indira Gandhi’s state of emergency, when other foreign
journalists had been expelled. In 1977 he became Britain’s youngest staff
foreign correspondent when The Economist posted him to Brussels. Chris
wrote an award-winning economics column every week for ten years, first for
The Guardian and then The Independent on
Sunday. He won the Wincott Award as Financial Journalist of the Year
1990.
In 1994 Chris founded, and subsequently headed, what was to become
one of the City of London’s biggest teams of economists, rating the risks of
overseas investments for pension funds and other investors.
A founder
member of the Social Democratic Party (SDP), Chris contested an Islington
council seat in 1982, and in 1983 stood for Parliament for the first time, as
SDP-Liberal Alliance candidate in Reading East. At the 1987 General Election he
was SDP-Liberal Alliance candidate for Oxford West and Abingdon, a seat later
won for the Liberal Democrats by Evan Harris. Although work commitments meant
Chris had to stand down as candidate, Chris remained active in the party, for
example chairing the policy group on broadcasting and the press and acting as
economic adviser during the 1997 election campaign.
In 1999
Chris won election to the European Parliament as a Liberal Democrat MEP for
South East England. His achievements in the European Parliament included the
first introduction of ‘sunset clauses’ - time limiting the powers of the
European Commission - in European legislation; the radical amendment of
Commission proposals for financial services which would have penalised small
business; and opening the Central European Bank to closer scrutiny by obliging
it to publish forecasts every six months.
In addition to his work in the
European Parliament - and writing a weekly column for the business pages of the
Evening Standard - Chris was also at this time very active
in the development of Liberal Democrat policy. He chaired the Liberal Democrat
Public Services Policy Commission covering health and education; the expert
group advising on entry to the the Euro; and the policy panel on global
sustainability, stability and security.
At the 2005 General Election
Chris succeeded in holding the Eastleigh seat won for the Liberal Democrats by
the retiring incumbent, David Chidgey. At Westminster Charles Kennedy, as party
leader, asked Chris to take on the role of Shadow Chief Secretary to the
Treasury, dealing with tax and public spending, ensuring that the party’s
figures added up and that its tax policies were fully credible.
Chris has
written books on Third World debt and development, European integration and
general economics. He became persuaded of the importance of environmental policy
when he saw at first hand the deforestation and desertification of Tanzania in
1978, and he was an early advocate of the importance of tackling climate change
– “first and foremost among the environmental threats” – in his 1990 book Real World Economics. His case in favour of British membership
of the Euro was published in Both Sides of the Coin in 1999. Chris has contributed to many
collections of political essays, including an essay on globalisation and reform
of the United Nations to the Orange Book: Reclaiming Liberalism. He also
contributed to The City in Europe and the World, published in
2005.
Chris is married to Vicky Pryce, Chief Economist at the Department
of Trade and Industry. They have five children, three now grown up. Chris and
his wife are both passionate filmgoers, and Chris says he is an eclectic
listener to music, enjoying anything from rock and jazz to his favourite,
Mozart.
Chris has twice run for party leader, finishing second in 2006
and narrowly losing to Nick Clegg in 2007. Chris changed briefs from Shadow
Envrionment Secretary to Shadow Home Secretary in Clegg's Cabinet reshuffle.
Since March 2008 Chris also holds the Shadow Secretary for Justice
brief.





























