Mark Field
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Mark Christopher Field (born October 6, 1964) is British Conservative Party politician and Member of Parliament to the Cities of London and Westminster.
Mark Field was born at the British Medical Hospital in Hanover, Germany, the son of a British Army officer father and German mother, was educated at the Reading School before attending St Edmund Hall, Oxford where he obtained a Master's degree in law in 1987 and was chairman of the Oxford University Conservative Association 1985-6. He finished his education at The College of Law in Chester where he qualified as a solicitor in 1988.
In 1984 he became a personal assistant to the MP for Oxford West and Abingdon, John Patten, before working as a solicitor with Freshfields in 1990. He was a director of his own employment agency, Kellyfield Consulting between 1994 and 2001, when on election to parliament he sold his share of the business to a consortium led by his former business partner.
He became the vice chairman of the Islington North Conservative Association for two years from 1989, and was elected as a councillor in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in 1994 before standing down after his election to Westminster in 2002. He contested the Conservative held seat of Enfield North at the 1997 general election following the retirement of the sitting MP Tim Eggar. However, 1997 was not a good year for the British Conservatives and he was defeated at the election by Labour's Joan Ryan by some 6,822 votes.
In December 1999 he was selected to contest the safe Conservative seat of the Cities of London and Westminster following the retirement of the former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Peter Brooke at the 2001 general election. Field was successful at the election and won the seat with a majority of 4,499 and has remained the MP there since. He made his maiden speech on June 27, 2001, in which he announced his great political hero was the former prime minister Andrew Bonar Law.[1]
In parliament, Mark Field was a member of the Lord Chancellor's Department and the renamed Constitutional Affairs Select Committee for a year from 2003. He was made an Opposition Whip by Iain Duncan Smith in 2003, becoming the Shadow Minister for London later that year. Between May and December 2005 he was Shadow Financial Secretary to the Treasury. He became a spokesman on Culture, Media and Sport under the new leadership of David Cameron in 2005.
He is opposed to the scheme of congestion charging introduced by the Mayor of London Ken Livingstone.
He was married to Michéle Acton - a former director of Hong Kong Shanghai Investment Bank and currently Executive Officer for the Fight for Sight Charity- between 1994 and 2006, before their marriage ended in divorce where his adultery with prospective Conservative candidate Elizabeth Truss being cited in the reasons for divorce. They have no children, however it is possible that the child that Elizabeth Truss gave birth too some months after the end of their liaison is Fields offspring. He is engaged to be married in April 2007 to the celebrity agent, Victoria Elphicke, with whom he lives in Westminster and Majorca.
He takes an interest in Parkinson's Disease, and has been a keen supporter of Bury F.C. since boyhood.
His constituency takes in most of the famous sites of London and is very much the heart of the country, the seat includes St Paul's Cathedral, Westminster Abbey, the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, Piccadilly Circus, Trafalgar Square, Whitehall and the Houses of Parliament.
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Peter Brooke |
Member of Parliament for the Cities of London and Westminster 2001 – present |
Incumbent |
[edit] External links
- Mark Field official site
- ePolitix.com - Mark Field MP
- Guardian Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: Mark Field MP
- TheyWorkForYou.com - Mark Field MP
- The Public Whip - Mark Field MP voting record
Categories: 1964 births | Living people | Current British MPs | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from English constituencies | Councillors in Greater London | Old Redingensians | Current Conservative MPs (UK) | Conservative MPs (UK) | UK MPs 2001-2005 | UK MPs 2005- | Alumni of St Edmund Hall, Oxford