Saturday, 8 June 2019
2295 David Laws
Constituency : Yeovil 2001-2015
David took over from Paddy Ashdown at Yeovil.
David was born in Surrey. He was educated at St George's College,Weybridge , where e won the Observer Schools Mace Debating Championship in 1984 and Cambridge. He became an investment banker at JP Morgan and Barclays. In 1994 he became economics advisor to the Liberal Democrats and contested Folkestone and Hythe in 1997 coming second to Michael Howard. He subsequently became the Liberal Democrats' Director of Policy and Research. He was a major architect of the Scottish coalition agreement with Labour. He was selected as PPC for Yeovil and, despite initially being suspected of being a Tory mole by Paddy Ashdown, he accompanied the former leader on constituency business.
David was originally deputy Defence spokesman but was soon switched to Treasury spokesman, He co-edited the Orange Book in 2004 making the case for economic liberalism. After the 2005 election he became Work and Pensions spokesman. He had attracted the attention of the Tories and George Osborne offered him a shadow cabinet position if he'd defect. David's response was "I am not a Tory and if I merely wanted a fast track to a top job I would have acted on this instinct a long time ago." Before the 2010 election, he impersonated David Cameron to help prepare Nick Clegg for the TV debates.
After the 2010 election, David was one of the negotiating team with the Tories. He became Financial Secretary to the Treasury under George Osborne. He made public a note left by his predecessor, Liam Byrne, saying sorry there's no money left and was somewhat taken aback by its use for propaganda. He attracted a lot of positive press for his initial performance in the job.
David became the first casualty of the new government when the Daily Telegraph revealed that he had claimed rent expenses for a property owned by his gay lover in breach of the rules. avid was not in a civil partnership and had not previously revealed his sexuality. He felt obliged to resign. A subsequent investigation by the Parliamentary Commission for Standards accepted that there were legitimate arrangements which would have allowed David to claim more so his intention was not to financially benefit from the deception. Nevertheless he was suspended from the Commons for 7 days.
While out of government, David published his account of the coalition negotiations, 22 Days in May.
In 2012 , Nick Clegg judged that enough time had elapsed to bring him back into government as a schools minister and Minister of State in the Cabinet office which allowed him to attend Cabinet meetings.
In 2015, the voters of Yeovil gave their verdict on David's conduct, throwing him out by over 5,000 votes. He was blocked from receiving a peerage due to the expenses scandal.
In 2016 David became Director of the Education Policy Institute. He has subsequently published books on the coalition government and the |Munich Agreement.
Malcolm Bruce described him as "an unreconstructed 19th century Liberal. He believes in free trade and small government. Government should do the job only government can do. There's no point in having a large public sector if the users of the public sector are getting poorer".
David welcomed Tim Farron's resignation as leader in 2017 saying his position was "fundamentally illiberal and prejudiced".
He is now 53.
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