'David Maurice Curry' (born
June 13,
1944)
British politician. He is the
Conservative Member of Parliament for
Skipton and Ripon.
David Curry, the son of a teacher, was educated at the
Ripon Grammar School where he was
head boy in
1962, and then at
Corpus Christi College, Oxford where he received a
Bachelor of Arts degree in
modern history in
1966. He also attended the
Kennedy School of Government at
Harvard University. He began his career as a
reporter on the
Newcastle Journal in
1966. In
1970 he became the world trade editor at The
Financial Times where he remained until he was elected to the
European Parliament. In
1977 he founded the
Paris Conservative Association. He contested the safe
Labour seat at
Morpeth at the
February 1974 general election, but was soundly beaten by the sitting Labour MP George Grant by 13,034. The two met again at the
October 1974 general election, when on this occasion Grant won by 14,687. Curry was elected as a
Member of the European Parliament in
1979 for
Essex North East, he served in
Strasbourg (and
Brussels) until
1989.
David Curry was elected to the
House of Commons for the very safe Conservative seat of Skipton and Ripon at the
1987 general election on the retirement of the sitting Conservative MP John Watson. Curry held the seat with a strong majority of 17,174 and has held the seat safely since. On his election he became a member of the
Agriculture Select Committee until he was promoted to the government of
Margaret Thatcher in
1989 as the
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, and was promoted within the same department to
Minister of State after the
1992 General Election by
John Major, a year later he moved sideways to the
Department for the Environment wher he remained until the Major government fell at the
1997 general election. He became a
Member of the Privy Council in
1996. In opposition he became the
Shadow Agriculture Secretary, but resigned from the
Shadow Cabinet in December
1997 in protest at the policy of ruling out Britain joining the
single European currency for the next ten years. In
1998 he became the chairman of the Agriculture Select Committee, and after the
2001 general election, its successor the
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee until
2003 when he promoted again to the Shadow Cabinet by
Michael Howard as the Shadow
Local and Devolved Government Secretary until he resigned again, this time citing 'family reasons' in
2004[1], he was replaced by
Caroline Spelman. He has been a member of the Public Accounts Select Committee since 2004.
He has been married to Anne Helene Maud Roullet, who is
French, since
1971 and they have a son and two daughters. His wife is a well known
sculptor who was asked to sculpt
Roy Jenkins by the Works of Art Committee. He is a supporter of
Kenneth Clarke. His is a patron of the
Tory Reform Group. He writes a monthly column for the
Local Government Chronicle. He was in a minority of Conservative MPs who supported an equal
age of consent for
gay men. His constituency is set in the heart of the
Yorkshire Dales. He enjoys growing
vegetables and
dinghy sailing.
Publications
★ ''The Food War: US-EU Food Politics'' by David Curry, 1982, EDG
★ ''The Conservative Tradition in Europe'' Edited by David Curry, 1998, Mainstream
★ ''Lobbying Government: A practical Guide for the Housing Industry and Lobby'' by Davud Curry, 1999, Chartered Institute of Housing, ISBN 1-900396-48-3
★ ''The Sorcerers Apprentice: Government and Globalisation'' by David Curry, 2000, Local Government Association, ISBN 1-84049-161-2
External links
★
The Rt Hon David Curry MP official site
★
ePolitix.com - David Curry MP
★
Guardian Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: David Curry MP
★
TheyWorkForYou.com - David Curry MP
★
The Public Whip - David Curry MP voting record
★
BBC News - David Curry MP profile 10 February, 2005
★
Open Directory Project - David Curry directory category