Friday, 26 April 2019
2252 Chris Davies
Constituency : Littleborough and Saddleworth 1995-97
Apart from a meagre contribution to the Chesterfield campaign in 1984, the Littleborough and Saddleworth by-election campaign was the only one in which I was directly involved. Fortunately, I was in America during the first two weeks so I escaped delivering all the leaflets. Chris was contesting the seat for the third time, having significantly cut the majority of sex-obsessed Tory buffoon Geoffrey Dickens in 1992
Dickens's death should have made the seat a shoe-in for Chris but a revitalised Labour party under Tony Blair fancied its chances too. Peter Mandelson masterminded a right wing campaign against Chris, painting him as a spendthrift who was soft on drugs. Labour did manage to run him close but the seat was not natural Labour territory and he got home,
Chris is a doctor's son from Lytham St Anne's. He was educated at Cheadle Hulme School and Cambridge. He contested Liverpool Scotland Exchange in 1979. He was elected a councillor in Liverpool aged 25 in 1980 and became chairman of the Housing Committee. He subsequently set up his own business as a housing consultant.
Chris was adopted as PPC for Littleborough and Saddleworth shortly after the 1983 election. The Liberal candidate in 1983 Richard Knowles had achieved a decent second place but the local party felt he'd been a below-par candidate. I got to know him reasonably well and he was friendly enough but very driven and single-minded with a habit of asking you a question and not waiting for the answer. He hated Cyril Smith.
Chris had hardly sat down in his seat before the Boundary Commission abolished his seat putting Littleborough in with Rochdale and Saddleworth in Oldham East. Chris fought the latter seat in 1997 but was unable to stem the Labour tide.
Chris soon bounced back as an MEP for the North West region first elected in 1999 . He became leader of the Liberal Democrat group in Strasbourg until he was forced to step down after a series of intemperate emails with a Jewish lobbyist. Despite this, he forged a good reputation as an environmental campaigner. He was also a strong advocate of more transparency over expenses .He lost his seat in 2014.
At the time of writing, Chris is hoping to regain his seat in the forthcoming European elections. He is now 64.
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