Jack Stewart-Clark

Sir Jack Stewart-Clark
Bt
Member of the European Parliament
for East Sussex and Kent South
In office
19 July 1994  19 July 1999
Member of the European parliament
for Sussex East
In office
17 July 1979  18 July 1994
Personal details
Born (1929-09-17) 17 September 1929
Dalmeny, Scotland
Political party Conservative and Unionist
Spouse(s) Lydia Loudon
Education Eton College
Alma mater Balliol College, Oxford
Harvard Business School
Military service
Allegiance  United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Rank Lieutenant
Unit Coldstream Guards

Sir John "Jack" Stewart-Clark, 3rd Baronet (born 17 September 1929) is a British businessman and former Member of the European Parliament (MEP). He represented the Conservative and Unionist Party in the European Parliament from 1979 until 1999.[1] He is the owner of Dundas Castle in West Lothian, Scotland.

Early life

John Stewart-Clark was born in Dalmeny, Scotland. Stewart-Clark is the son of Sir Stewart Stewart-Clark, 2nd Baronet, and his wife Jane. Stewart-Clark was educated at Eton. He also attended Balliol College, Oxford, followed by the Harvard Business School.[2] He was commissioned into the Coldstream Guards in 1948, serving in North Africa. He was appointed in 1958 to the Royal Company of Archers, the Queen's Bodyguard in Scotland.

From 1953 to 1969, Stewart-Clark worked with the family firm of J. & P. Coats Ltd in Uruguay, Canada, Spain, Holland, Portugal and Pakistan. In 1969, he joined Philips, and he was Managing Director of Philips Electrical Ltd from 1970 to 1975, and of Pye Ltd. from 1975 to 1979. From 1979, he served as a non-executive director of several firms, including A.T. Kearney and TSB Scotland.

Political career

Baronet's neck badge

Stewart-Clark stood in the General Election of 1959 as Unionist candidate for Aberdeen North, coming second to Hector Hughes. In the first direct elections to the European Parliament, in 1979, Stewart-Clark successfully stood in Sussex East, holding the seat until it was abolished in 1994. He continued as an MEP, sitting for the successor East Sussex and Kent South constituency until 1999. Within the European Parliament, Stewart-Clark represented the Conservative and Unionist Party, which was aligned with the European Democrat Group until 1992, after which Stewart-Clark sat with the Group of the European People's Party.[1] Although sitting for an English constituency, he also acted as a representative of the Scottish Conservatives, who had no MEPs. He served as a Vice-President of the European Parliament from 1992 to 1997.[1] He took part in several parliamentary delegations and chaired a number of initiatives, with a particular interest in the prevention of drug abuse, and subsequently became a trustee of the substance abuse group Mentor Foundation.[2]

Stewart-Clark said in 2016 that he was in favour of continued UK membership of the European Union.[3] Sir Jack said "We absolutely have to stay...It would be dreadful if we didn’t. It’s a plunge into the unknown."[3] Following the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum of 2016, Stewart-Clark and the former Scottish Labour Member of Parliament Tam Dalyell proposed that Parliament should block the leave result. [4]

Personal life and post-political career.

In 1958, he married Lydia Loudon, and the couple have five children. In 1995, they inherited Dundas Castle from Stewart-Clark's mother and began a programme of restoration. The castle, built in 1818 adjacent to a 15th-century tower house, had been bought by Stewart-Clark's great-grandfather, the Paisley thread manufacturer Stewart Clark, in 1899. Stewart-Clark and his wife now live in one wing, with the rest of the house rented out for weddings and other events.[5]

Stewart-Clark is involved with the charity Passion Trust.[6] In 2016, Stewart-Clark gained approval from the Vatican to take a Passion Play, dramatising the last days of Christ, to the Opera Jail in Milan, Italy. Stewart-Clark has said: "[Prisoners] can become redeemed in prison, even if you’re never getting out". It was reported that Archbishop Leo Cushley was supportive of this project.[7]

References

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