Everything about Chris Huhne totally explained
Christopher Murray Paul Huhne, known as
Chris Huhne, (born
2 July 1954) is a
British Liberal Democrat politician and the current
Member of Parliament for the
Eastleigh constituency in
Hampshire. He is the party's spokesman on Home Affairs in the
House of Commons.
He finished second to
Sir Menzies Campbell in the 2006 election for the
leadership of the Liberal Democrats and was one of the two candidates in the 2007 contest to succeed Campbell as party leader and came second again, with the party members preferring
Nick Clegg by a narrow margin of 1.2%.
Early life
He was educated at
Westminster School and at the
Sorbonne where he obtained a certificate in French Language and Civilisation, and
Magdalen College, Oxford where he was a scholar (Demy). At
Oxford, he edited the student magazine
Isis, served on the executive of the
Oxford University Labour Club, and achieved a first-class degree in
PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics). Huhne was active in student politics.
Before his political career, he was a
City economist, founding what became one of the largest teams of economists in the private sector. He founded Sovereign Ratings IBCA in 1994; in 1997 became managing director of Fitch IBCA, and from 1999 to 2003 was vice-chairman of
Fitch Ratings. Before that, Huhne was an economic commentator for
The Guardian,
The Independent and
The Independent on Sunday. He was the business editor – head of department – on the Independent and the Independent on Sunday notably during its investigations into Robert Maxwell's fraud on the Mirror group pension fund. He started in journalism as an undercover freelance reporter in India during Mrs Gandhi's emergency when western journalists had been expelled. He also worked as a journalist for the
Liverpool Daily Post and Echo and
The Economist. He won both the junior and senior Wincott awards for financial journalist of the year.
Huhne contested the 1983 general election as a Parliamentary Candidate for the
SDP-Liberal Alliance in Reading East. In the 1987 general election, he was the SDP-Liberal Alliance candidate in the
Oxford West and Abingdon seat and turned it for the first time into a marginal. The seat was won ten years later by
Evan Harris.
Member of European Parliament
Huhne was elected as a member of the
European Parliament for
South East England from 1999 to 2005, where he was deputy leader of the Liberal Democrat group in the European Parliament. While coming second in the regional poll of party members to select candidates for the 1999 Euro election, Huhne came a comfortable first in the selection for the 2004 Euro elections.
During his time in the European Parliament, Huhne was the only Liberal Democrat MEP in a ranking by the Economist of the three most high-profile UK MEPs (the others being
Glenys Kinnock and
Caroline Lucas). He was a member of the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee, concerned with economic and financial policy including regulation of the financial sector. He was economic spokesman for the pan-European Liberal group in the
European Parliament and was responsible for introducing "
sunset clauses" – time limits on powers – into
European legislation for the first time; for radically amending
Commission proposals on
financial services; and for opening up the
European Central Bank to greater scrutiny.
In addition to his European Parliament responsibilities, he was also active in the development of Liberal Democrat policy as chairman of four policy groups:
broadcasting and
the media;
globalisation; the introduction of the
euro and the reform of
public services. On public services, he argues that money was a necessary condition of improvement, but that the key is now decentralised and democratic control. Local voters need to be able to hold local decision-takers to account.
Member of Parliament
He was first elected to represent Eastleigh at the
general election on
5 May 2005, a constituency within the area for which he was previously the
Member of the European Parliament. The previous MP for the constituency,
David Chidgey, was also a Liberal Democrat who won his seat in what was historically a Conservative area in a
by-election in 1994 following the accidental death of
Stephen Milligan. The result in 2005 was close, with the swing away from the Liberal Democrats being half the average swing away when a Liberal Democrat MP stands down.
Charles Kennedy appointed Huhne a
Treasury spokesman for the party, as
Treasury spokesperson. Huhne led the opposition in the
House of Commons to new rules allowing full top-rate tax relief for the purchase of second homes, buy-to-let properties, vintage wine and other exotic assets for self invested pension plans, tabling an amendment to the finance bill in June, and repeatedly raising the issue. The Treasury reversed its position and accepted these points in the October pre-budget report.
Leadership contest, 2006
Huhne stood against
Sir Menzies Campbell and
Simon Hughes for the Liberal Democrat leadership after
Charles Kennedy's resignation, formally launching his campaign on
13 January 2006.
Huhne was able to carve out a unique position on the issue of
green taxation – he argued for a radical expansion of taxes on
pollution, allowing for reductions in the
income tax rate on the lowest paid. This theme endeared Huhne to
environmentalists and
market liberals alike, allowing him to gain a march on his rivals and pick-up supporters as the campaign went on. He also argued for a repeal of elements of the Labour government's anti-terrorism legislation, which many felt had undermined British civil liberties, and for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq within a year. He described himself as a 'social liberal'.
Although the majority of Liberal Democrat MPs — and much of the party establishment — declared their support for Sir Menzies Campbell, Huhne did receive endorsements from some party notables including
Lord Maclennan and
Lord Rodgers. Amongst the media,
The Economist,
The Independent and
The Independent on Sunday supported his leadership bid. He was backed from an early stage by a number of bloggers, and gained much momentum from a sharp internet campaign.
In the final vote, Huhne finished runner-up, trailing by 21,628 votes to Sir Menzies Campbell's 29,697. The brevity of the campaign wasn't helpful to an outsider in an all-member ballot, and Huhne was still gathering momentum when the leadership race ended. Campbell appointed him as Liberal Democrat environment spokesman in the subsequent frontbench reshuffle, in order for Huhne to develop a viable programme to expand on his green campaign themes.
Environment spokesman, 2006-2007
The intellectual energy surrounding Huhne's leadership campaign did much to inform the Liberal Democrats' recent political agenda. His proposals for realigning green taxes and income tax - the
green tax switch - were at the heart of the fiscal package endorsed at the party's September 2006
conference.
Huhne has continued developing his party's thoughts on climate change and the environment, including a consideration of the challenges and opportunities they create for British businesses. He has also been prominent in critiquing the divergence between the
Conservative Party's recent environmental rhetoric and its policies.
Huhne was one of fourteen MPs forming an all-party parliamentary inquiry into
anti-Semitism in the UK. Their report criticised boycotts of
Israeli academics as "
an assault on academic freedom and intellectual exchange" and accused "
some left-wing activists and Muslim extremists [...] of using criticism of Israel as 'a pretext' for spreading hatred against British Jews". Huhne is, however, a critic of Israeli government policy in the Middle East, and strongly supports the creation of a separate
Palestinian state. He described the Israeli response in
Lebanon to Hizbollah's rocket attacks as disproportionate and counter-productive, arguing that a strong Lebanese state is in Israel's long-term interest.
In March 2007 it was falsely reported that he'd written to executives at
Channel 4 to try and stop them showing
The Great Global Warming Swindle. In an e-mail exchange with
Iain Dale, Mr Huhne stated that he only wrote to ask for the channel's comments and the
Daily Telegraph later ran a correction and apologised for the misunderstanding saying they were happy to accept that "Mr Huhne's letter wasn't an attempt to prevent the film being shown or suppress debate on the issue".
After Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman,
Nick Clegg, announced his intention during the 2007 party conference to stand for the leadership when Sir Menzies Campbell retires — widely seen as a swipe at Campbell's leadership — Chris Huhne issued a rebuke to journalists and observed that there's presently "
no vacancy, and it would be premature to even talk about the position of there being a vacancy".
Leadership contest, 2007
Following the resignation of Sir Menzies Campbell on
15 October 2007 — and following on from Huhne's strong performances in the 2006 contest and as environment spokesman — it was widely assumed that he'd run for the
leadership of the Liberal Democrats. On
17 October, Huhne became the first member of the party to announce his candidacy, declaring his vision of a "
fairer and greener society".
On 28 October 2007, Huhne announced that he'd secured the support of 10 of his 62 parliamentary colleagues for his formal nomination including 4 of the 16 Lib Dem
Liberal Democrat Frontbench Team. (His rival Clegg announced the support of 33 MPs and 12 frontbench team members.) Huhne also claimed backing from at least 12 peers, four MSPs and three Welsh Assembly members. After former Lib Dem leader
Lord Ashdown announced his support for Clegg, a previous Lib Dem leader
Lord Steel declared his support for Huhne based in part on Huhne's position on the
Trident missile system.
In the last week of campaigning his team were bullish about his chances, predicting as campaign teams do a win. He came very close to making the prediction a reality, but in the end the party membership chose his rival
Nick Clegg by a narrow margin of 511 votes.
Following the leadership election, Clegg chose Huhne to be the Lib Dem's Home Affairs Spokesman.
Criticism and controversies
Huhne has dealt with several controversies and criticisms during his political career.
Drug article in 1973
A news story in
The Sunday Times on 21 October 2007 disclosed that an article credited to Huhne had appeared in the
University of Oxford's
Isis magazine in February 1973 stating that drugs such as opium, LSD, and amphetamines were an
“accepted facet of our society”. It included the assertion
“Opium is available in Oxford and, in its natural form can be safely experimented with.” In response to questions by The Times about his 1973 pronouncement Huhne responded
“To be honest I don’t have any memory of it,” insisting that he was entitled to a private life before politics. The controversy about the 1973 article continued in the
Daily Mail and
The Sun In an interview published on the Kent News website on 10 November 2007, Huhne distanced himself from his university views, saying “I clearly regret the views and I don’t agree with those views at all. I was a teenager and I’m now 53 and I think all of us do tend to move on in life.”
Traffic offence
Huhne was convicted in 2003 under the The Road Vehicles (Construction and Use) Act (Amendment No. 4) of using a hand held phone while driving his car on a busy London street. Following his conviction, he was banned from driving for three months.
Allegation of abusing EU election funds
A news story on
BBC TV’s “
Newsnight” on 17 February 2006 reported allegations by former Conservative MEP Edward Kellett-Bowman that Huhne had illegally used
European Parliament expenses to finance four newspapers distributed to promote his candidacy for the British Parliament in the 2005 General Election – a use of funds prohibited by regulations governing MEPs. Huhne appeared on the show and denied the allegations. A European Parliament investigation found no case to answer which was confirmed in writing by the President to Mr Huhne.
Investments and share holdings
A news story in
The Independent on 27 February 2006 reported that an unsigned document titled "Chris Huhne's Hypocritical Personal Share Portfolio" was being circulated at Lib/Dem leadership election meetings, alleging that Huhne had invested in companies that the document described as "unethical". The document stated "Chris Huhne is campaigning for the Lib Dem leadership on a green, carbon neutral platform, and further advocates increasing tax for the wealthy, which would include himself. However, his shareholdings include, or have included, mining companies, oil companies, and tax shelters."
Huhne has spoken of the need to "roll back [Labour's] security-obsessed surveillance state". He holds shares - listed on the Register of Members' Interests - in UK company IRISYS,
which specialises in producing
thermal imagers "for process, people and queue monitoring" and "which sells cameras to let shops count their customers." However, thermal imagers are not cameras and are unable to identify individuals.
Controversial comments about the Speaker of the House of Commons
On 6 November 2007, Huhne made remarks about the
Speaker of the House of Commons on the
BBC television programme
Newsnight in which he claimed that the Speaker (
Michael Martin) had fallen asleep during a speech by the
Prime Minister Gordon Brown. "The Speaker unfortunately fell asleep during Gordon Brown's speech … I'm not sure I'm allowed to say that, but he reacted in an entirely understandable way to what wasn't the most riveting of parliamentary occasions." After the remarks were repeated in several publications, Huhne decided to make a public apology to the Speaker in the House Of Commons on 8 November in which he unreservedly withdrew his prior comments. “It was wrong of me to draw the Chair into a matter of political dispute. I hope you'll accept I intended no personal offence and fully withdraw my comments.”
Personal life
Huhne married a Greek-born economist Vicky Pryce (presently Chief Economist in the
Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform) in 1984 after she divorced her first husband with whom she'd had two daughters. Huhne and Pryce have had three children together.
Huhne owns seven houses – five that are let as rental properties and two in which he lives. (One in Eastleigh, his constituency, and a town house in Clapham, south London).
Huhne is a member of the
European Movement,
Green Lib Dems,
Association of Liberal Democrat Trade Unionists and the
National Union of Journalists.
Writing
He has written four books that are mainly on the themes either of
third world debt and development or European integration: the latest is entitled
Both Sides of the Coin (1999, with
James Forder), in which he argues the case for
British membership of the
Euro. The first was "Debt and Danger", an analysis of the 1984 third world debt crisis co-written with Lord Harold Lever, the former Labour cabinet minister.
He was also a contributor to the (2004), in which he advocates reforms to the
United Nations and international governance. Huhne was critical of the most controversial article in the Orange Book, in which
David Laws proposed an insurance-based
National Health Service. He didn't take part in the successor volume,
Britain after Blair and has voiced dismay at the way its predecessor was presented as a break with the party's social liberal traditions.
More recently, he contributed to the book
The City in Europe and the World (2005) and two articles to
Reinventing the State (2007) edited by
Duncan Brack,
Richard Grayson and
David Howarth. These cover the case for localism in which Huhne argues that there's no contradiction between localism and equality, and the need for environmental policy to tackle climate change.
Huhne has also written articles for the
Financial Times,
The Guardian,
The Independent and the
New Statesman.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Chris Huhne'.
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