'Colin Berkeley Moynihan, 4th Baron Moynihan' (born
September 13,
1955) is a former Olympic
coxswain who became a politician.
Colin Moynihan was educated at
Monmouth School, and went up to
University College, Oxford, in the
1970s. He coxed for victorious
Oxford University in the
1977 Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race. He was also the first but short-lived
pianist for the
Oxcentrics jazz band.
Subsequently, Moynihan was an
Olympic cox for the
Great Britain men's eight
rowing squad in the
1980 Moscow Olympic Games, earning a silver medal. In
1981 he coxed the team to silver medal success in the World Championships.
He was elected as a
Conservative MP, to represent
Lewisham East in
1983. From
1987 to
1990, Moynihan was the
Minister for
Sport in the Conservative government of
Margaret Thatcher. He lost his seat to Labour in the
United Kingdom general election in
1992.
The
Barony of Moynihan having become dormant on the death of his half brother in 1991, Moynihan spent five years trying to prove his claim to the title which was complex due to the number of marriages of the 3rd baron and questions over their legality. In
1997 the Committee for Privileges decided:
''...that neither of the two sons purporting to be the sons of the Third Baron can, in fact, be an heir to the peerage. In the case of the elder, Andrew, the committee was shown overwhelming genetic evidence that he cannot be the son of the late Lord Moynihan; and so far as the younger, Daniel, is concerned, the evidence clearly shows that he is the child of a bigamous marriage and is therefore illegitimate. In those circumstances, it is clear beyond doubt that the petitioner, Colin Moynihan, must be the rightful heir and that his Petitions must succeed.''
[1]
Lord Moynihan was elected as one of the
hereditary peers to remain in the house following the
House of Lords Act 1999. He was
Shadow Minister for Sport in the Lords from July
2003 to February
2005.
On
5 October 2005, he was elected Chairman of the
British Olympic Association (BOA), for the run-up to the
2012 London Olympic Games. He beat the
1968 Olympic hurdles champion,
David Hemery, by a vote of 28 to 15.
See also
★
Baron Moynihan
★
Members of the House of Lords
★
MPs elected in the UK general election, 1983 and
1987
★
Rowing at the 1980 Summer Olympics
External links
★
Independent Sports Review information
★
Baron Moynihan information
★
Ugandan Discussions – on the
cover of
Private Eye (Issue 692,
24 June 1988)
★
Moynihan named new BOA chairman,
BBC news (
5 October 2005)