Ed Balls

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The Right Honourable
 Ed Balls MP
Ed Balls

Incumbent
Assumed office 
28 June 2007
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Preceded by New Position
Succeeded by Incumbent

In office
6 May 2006 – 28 June 2007
Prime Minister Tony Blair
Preceded by Ivan Lewis
Succeeded by Kitty Ussher

Member of Parliament
for Normanton
Incumbent
Assumed office 
5 May 2005
Preceded by Bill O'Brien
Succeeded by Incumbent
Majority 10,002 (26.7%)

Born 25 February 1967 (1967-02-25) (age 40)
Norwich, UK
Nationality British
Political party Labour Co-operative
Spouse Yvette Cooper (Minister of State for Housing)
Children Ellie, Joe and Maddy
Residence Castleford
Alma mater Keble College, Oxford
Website www.EdBalls.co.uk

Edward Michael Balls (born 25 February 1967) is a British politician, and Labour and Co-operative Member of Parliament for the West Yorkshire constituency of Normanton. Since June 2007 he has been Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families.

Contents

Born in Norwich he was educated at Nottingham High School and Keble College, Oxford where he studied PPE, and later as a Kennedy Scholar at Harvard University. He joined the Labour Party at the age of 16 but while at Oxford joined all the main political societies so that he could "hear all the speeches at all the political clubs" [1]. His career began as economic leader writer at the Financial Times (19901994) followed by his appointment as an economic adviser to the then shadow chancellor Gordon Brown (19941997). In 1995, in a speech written for Gordon Brown to give to an economics conference, he managed to insert the jargon phrase "post neoclassical endogenous growth theory"[1]. This was later gleefully recounted by Michael Heseltine, who coined the humorous quip: "It's not Brown's - it's Balls'."[2]

As Labour swept to power in the General Election of 1997 he continued as an economic adviser to Brown, who was now Chancellor. He then served as chief economic adviser to HM Treasury from 1999 to 2004, in which post he was once named the most powerful unelected person in Britain.

In July 2004 he was selected to stand as Labour and Co-operative candidate for the parliamentary seat of Normanton in West Yorkshire, a Labour stronghold whose MP, Bill O'Brien, retired. He stepped down as chief economic adviser to the Treasury, but was given a position at the Smith Institute, a political thinktank with extremely close ties to Gordon Brown. He was controversially paid £100,000 for less than a year's work.[3] The Smith Institute is currently subject to its second Charity Commission investigation in five years regarding suspected breaches of the rules governing the impartiality of charitable organisations.[4]

In the 2005 general election he was elected MP for Normanton with a majority of 10,002 and 51.2% of the vote. The West Yorkshire seat has been occupied by Labour MPs for longer than any other constituency in the United Kingdom. It is, however, scheduled to disappear before the next election under the latest changes proposed by the Boundary Commission. Balls ran a campaign, in connection with the local newspaper the Wakefield Express, to save the seat and, together with the three other Wakefield MPs (Yvette Cooper, Mary Creagh and Jon Trickett), fought an unsuccessful High Court challenge against the Boundary Commission's proposals.

In March 2007 he was selected to be the Labour Party candidate for the new Morley and Outwood constituency, which contains part of the abolished Normanton constituency and part of Colin Challen's current Morley and Rothwell constituency. In return for giving way it was rumoured Gordon Brown offered Challen a job on an environmental think tank as well as a possible Lordship.[5][6][7]

He became Economic Secretary to the Treasury, a junior ministerial position in HM Treasury, in the Government reshuffle of May 2006.

Balls has played a prominent role in the Fabian Society, the think-tank and political society founded in 1884 which helped to found the Labour Party in 1900 and which is affiliated to the party but an independent democratically-constituted society. He published a 1992 Fabian pamphlet advocating Bank of England independence. Balls was elected Vice-Chair of the Fabian Society for 2006 and Chair of the Fabian Society for 2007. As Chair, he opened the Fabian Society's New Year Conference 'The Next Decade' [8] in January 2007, at which Gordon Brown was the keynote speaker. As Vice-Chair of the Fabian Society, he launched the Fabian Life Chances Commission [9] report in April 2006 and opened the Society's Next Decade lecture series[10] in November 2006, arguing for closer European cooperation on the environment. Balls had previously been seen as being a eurosceptic, in Labour party terms, because of his opposition to the euro and the EU constitution.

Balls has been a central figure in New Labour's economic reform agenda. But he and Gordon Brown have differed from the Blairites in being keen to stress their roots in Labour party intellectual traditions such as Fabianism and the co-operative movement as well as their modernising credentials in policy and electoral terms. In a New Statesman interview with Martin Bright in March 2006 [11], Martin Bright writes that Balls 'says the use of the term "socialist" is less of a problem for his generation than it has been for older politicians like Blair and Brown, who remain bruised by the ideological warfare of the 1970s and 1980s'.

‘When I was at college, the economic system in eastern Europe was crumbling. We didn't have to ask the question of whether we should adopt a globally integrated, market-based model. For me, it is now a question of what values you have. Socialism, as represented by the Labour Party, the Fabian Society, the Co-operative movement, is a tradition I can be proud of’, Balls told the New Statesman.

In September 2007, he with his wife Yvette Cooper were accused "breaking the spirit" of Commons rules by using MPs' allowances to help pay for a £655,000 home in north London. It was alleged that they bought a four-bed house in Stoke Newington, north London, and registered this as their second home (rather than their home in Castleford, West Yorkshire) in order to qualify for up to £44,000 a year to subsidise a reported £438,000 mortgage under the Commons Additional Costs Allowance. This is despite both spouses working in London full-time and their children attending local London schools. Through a spokesman, Balls and Cooper countered the allegation by saying "The whole family travel between their Yorkshire home and London each week when Parliament is sitting. As they are all in London during the week, their children have always attended the nearest school to their London house."[12].

He is married to Yvette Cooper MP, a Minister of State in the Communities and Local Government government department (formerly the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister). Cooper is Member of Parliament for Normanton's neighbouring constituency of Pontefract and Castleford, so together they form one of five sets of married couples in the Commons (Nicholas Winterton and Ann Winterton; Andrew Mackay and Julie Kirkbride; Peter Robinson and Iris Robinson; Alan Keen and Ann Keen - to this could be added Gordon Prentice and Bridget Prentice who entered the Commons as man and wife, but have been divorced for many years). They have three children: Ellie, Joe and Maddy.

His father Michael Balls is a former academic and European civil servant, an expert in alternatives to the use of animals in experiments and chairman of the Fund for the Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments (FRAME).

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Bill O'Brien
Member of Parliament for Normanton
2005 – present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by
Ivan Lewis
Economic Secretary to the Treasury
2006–2007
Succeeded by
Kitty Ussher
Preceded by
Office Created
Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families
2007 – present
Incumbent

  1. ^ It should, however, be noted that this phrase makes perfect sense to those with a background in economics, since endogenous theories of economic growth were developed after the neoclassical period in economics.

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