WHO'S WHO
Simon Hughes MP
Lib Dem majority: 5,406 (14%)
Constituency: Southwark North & Bermondsey
Region: London
PA Number: 522
Address:
House of Commons
London
SW1A 0AA
Tel: (020) 7219 6256
Email: simon@simonhughes.org.uk
Web: http://www.simonhughes.org.uk
Date of Birth: 17/05/1951
Occupation: MP
Education: Woodford Primary School, Llandaff Cathedral School, Cardiff, Christ College, Brecon, Selwyn College, Cambridge, College of Europe, Bruges
Experience: Trained at the European Commission in Brussels and the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, practised as a barrister in London from 1978
Parliamentary Experience: 2007- Shadow leader of the House of Commons, 2007 Shadow Secretary of State for Justice, 2005- Shadow Attorney General, 2006-07 Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, 2001-3 Shadow Home Secretary
Memberships: Briefly a member of the General Synod, President of the Redriff Club in the Surrey Docks, Joint Chairman of the Council of Education in the Commonwealth, Trustee and Director of the Rose Theatre Trust
Marital status/children: Single
Interests: Music, the theatre, history, sport, travel

Seat:Southwark North & Bermondsey |
Liberal Democrats17,874 (47%) |
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Turnout:37,959 (49%) |
Conservative4,752 (12%) |
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Swing5.9% Lib Dem to Lab |
Labour12,468 (33%) |
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Other2,865 (7%) |
BIOGRAPHY
Simon Hughes is President of the Liberal Democrats and sits in
the Liberal Democrat Shadow Cabinet as Shadow leader of the House of
Commons.
Simon was born in Cheshire, his family moving to
Wales when he was eight and settling in Herefordshire when he was eighteen.
He read Law at Selwyn College, Cambridge (1970-73), where he joined the Union of
Liberal Students and later became President of his College Students’ Union.
After moving to London and being called to the Bar by the Inner Temple in 1974,
he received a postgraduate Certificate in European Studies from the College of
Europe in Bruges in 1975 where he again became President of the Student
Union.
Simon has lived in Southwark since 1978 where before entering
local politics he was a youth leader with the Greenhouse Trust until 1982.
During that time Simon was the founding Chairman of the Burgess Park Residents’
Association. For nearly ten years he was a member of Southwark Area Youth
Committee, and was a Governor of Bacon’s Church of England Secondary School. He
is currently Chair of Governors of St. James' Primary School in
Bermondsey.
Simon joined the Liberal Party in 1971 inspired by the
campaigns for international justice in places such as South Africa and
Palestine. He was elected to Parliament as the youngest opposition MP in
the 1983 Bermondsey by-election which set a still unbeaten record for
swing between two parties in any British parliamentary election
(50.9%).
Simon was re-elected for the enlarged Southwark and Bermondsey
constituency in 1983, 1987 and 1992. At the 1997 election the seat was enlarged
again by the addition of a further ward - Newington - and renamed North
Southwark and Bermondsey. Simon was again elected to represent the seat in
2001 with a significantly increased majority, and was re-elected in the 2005
general election.
Simon won the Spectator Highland Park ‘Member to Watch’
award in 1985, and the National Motivation Week ‘Most Motivated MP’ award in
1989. In 1992, he was chosen as Green MP of the Year. Simon was runner up to
Charles Kennedy (with 43% of the vote) in the party's leadership election
in the summer of 1999 and was the party's Shadow Home Secretary until 2003. In
2004 Simon was elected Party President with 71 per cent of the votes
cast by party members. In July 2005 Simon was appointed both as Shadow
Attorney General and as spokesperson on Equality issues. In 2007 Simon was
appointed Shadow leader of the House of Commons.
Following the
resignation of Charles Kennedy as party leader in January 2006, Simon again
offered himself as a candidate for the leadership, but did not win.
Simon
has been a member of the Accommodation and Works Committee of the House of
Commons and is a member of the Ecclesiastical Committee of Parliament. He has
jointly authored booklets on human rights, the law, defence, and political
realignment, and has introduced bills in parliament on Empty Property, Access to
Information, to set up Parish and Community Councils in London, for
Disestablishment of the Church of England, Equal Rights for War Pensioners and
perhaps most famously to require the Queen to pay income tax and to change the
current sexist rules of succession to the throne.
He is a patron of the
Missing Persons Helpline and in 1994 became an Honorary Fellow of
South Bank University. Simon is a past president of the Bristol Youth Council,
Liberal Democrats against Apartheid, One World Democrats, and the Southwark
Chamber of Commerce, and was for five years until 1999 the chair of the Save
Guy's Hospital Campaign.
His recreations are music (everything from
Church music to Eurovision), the theatre, history, sport (including supporting
Wales at Rugby, Glamorgan at Cricket and Millwall and Hereford at football), the
countryside and open air, travel and spending time with family and friends. His
frequent ambition is to have more time to sleep.





























