Alan Duncan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alan James Carter Duncan MP (born March 31, 1957) is a British Conservative politician, and Member of Parliament for Rutland and Melton. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, where he was Head Monitor (head student), and St John's College, Oxford, where he coxed the college's first eight crew and was elected President of the Oxford Union. He went on to win a Kennedy Scholarship to study at Harvard.
Alan Duncan was born in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, and before beginning his political career he worked as a trader of oil and refined products, first with Shell and latterly working as a self employed broker and consultant for Marc Rich [1] [2], but he remained involved in politics as an active member of Battersea Conservative Association, except from 1984 to 1986 when he lived in Singapore.
Contents |
Duncan first stood for Parliament as a Conservative candidate in the 1987 general election, unsuccessfully contesting the safe Labour seat of Barnsley West and Penistone. For the 1992 general election he was selected as the Conservative candidate for Rutland and Melton, a safe Conservative seat in rural Leicestershire, which he won with 59% of the vote. In the Labour landslide of 1997 his share of the vote was cut back to 45.8% but has since increased to 48.1% in 2001 and 51.2% in 2005.
From 1993 to 1995 Duncan sat on the Social Security Select Committee. His first governmental position was as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of Health, a position he obtained in December 1993 and resigned from in January 1994. Gyles Brandreth describes this event in his famous diaries, 'little Alan Duncan has fallen on his sword . He did it swiftly and with good grace.'[3]
In July 1995 he was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Chairman of the Conservative Party, Dr Brian Mawhinney.
In November 1995 Mr Duncan performed a citizen's arrest on an Asylum Bill protester who threw paint and flour at Brian Mawhinney on College Green.
In June 1997 Duncan was entrusted with the positions of Vice Chairman of the Conservative Party and Parliamentary Political Secretary to the Party Leader. In June 1998 he became Shadow Health Minister. In June 1999 he was made Shadow Trade and Industry spokesman. In September 2001 he was appointed a Front Bench Spokesman on Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs. In November 2003 he became Shadow Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs. In September 2004 he was appointed Shadow Secretary of State for International Development. From May 2005 until December 2005 he sat on the front bench as Shadow Secretary of State for Transport. After David Cameron won the party leadership in December 2005 he appointed Duncan Shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry. Along with being Shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry he is now also Shadow Minister for Tyneside.
Duncan is a libertarian. One of the chapters in his book Saturn’s Children: How the State Devours Liberty, Prosperity and Virtue is devoted to an explanation of his support for the legalisation of all drugs. However this chapter was removed when the paperback edition was published later to prevent embarassment to the party leadership. Duncan was the first sitting Conservative MP voluntarily to acknowledge that he is gay; he did this in an interview with The Times on 29 July 2002, although he was open about the matter in private for several years before this.[citation needed]
Duncan is also a Thatcherite on some matters. He believes in minimising the size of government, and in Saturn’s Children advocates limiting government responsibility to essential services such as defence, policing and health. He is on the council of the Conservative Way Forward group.
On 10 June 2005 Duncan became the first Conservative to publicy declare his intention of standing in the 2005 leadership election. [4]. However, on 18 July 2005 he withdrew from the race and cited in The Guardian a lack of "active lieutenants". He also urged the party not to listen to those promoting "censorious judgementalism". Duncan wrote in The Times that: "We should take J. S. Mill as our lodestar, and allow people to live as they choose until they actually harm someone. If the Tory Taleban can't get that, they'll condemn us all to oblivion. Thank heavens for the new intake of MPs who do."[5]
Duncan was voted third most eligible bachelor and best looking male politician by the gay news website Pink News in a 2005 poll of their readers.
Duncan has made several appearances on the satirical news quiz Have I Got News For You, his most recent being on October 20, 2006.
Alan has two nieces named Rosie and Shaunagh Duncan.
- An End To Illusions (Demos, 1993) ISBN 1-898309-05-1
- Saturn’s Children: How the State Devours Liberty, Prosperity and Virtue [with Dominic Hobson], (Sinclair-Stevenson, 1995) ISBN 1-85619-605-4
- Alan Duncan MP official site
- ePolitix.com - Alan Duncan profile
- Guardian Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: Alan Duncan MP
- TheyWorkForYou.com - Alan Duncan MP
- The Public Whip - Alan Duncan MP voting record
- Open Directory Project - Alan Duncan directory category
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Current Conservative MPs (UK) | UK MPs 1992-1997 | UK MPs 1997-2001 | UK MPs 2001-2005 | UK MPs 2005- | Alumni of St John's College, Oxford | Coxes | Presidents of the Oxford Union | Gay politicians | LGBT politicians from the United Kingdom | 1957 births | Living people