(Redirected from Douglas Martin Hogg, 3rd Viscount Hailsham)
'Douglas Martin Hogg, 3rd Viscount Hailsham',
QC,
MP (born
2 February,
1945), is a
British politician and
barrister and the
Conservative Member of Parliament for
Sleaford and North Hykeham.
Douglas Hogg is the son of
Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone, a former
Lord Chancellor. He inherited the Viscountcy on
12 October,
2001 upon the death of his father who had disclaimed that title for life in 1963, but who later accepted a life peerage in 1970; he is the grandson of
Douglas Hogg, 1st Viscount Hailsham, also a former Lord Chancellor. He is known as simply 'Douglas Hogg'.
He was educated at
Eton College,
Berkshire and
Christ Church, Oxford where he was graduated with a degree in history in 1968. In 1967, he served as the President of the
Oxford Union. He was
called to the Bar in 1968, and has worked as a
barrister since. He became a
Queen's Counsel in 1990, a year after his sister, Dame Mary Hogg, who is now a judge in the Family Division of the
High Court. He was elected as a
Member of Parliament at the
1979 General Election for the
Lincolnshire seat of
Grantham following the retirement of the sitting
Conservative MP
Joseph Godber.
Hogg held the seat with a majority of 18,150 and has remained an MP since. His seat at
Grantham was abolished, and since the
1997 General Election he has represented
Sleaford and North Hykeham, gaining an
absolute majority at the
2005 General Election.
In
Parliament he served as a member of the
agriculture, fisheries and food select committee from 1979 until he was appointed as the
Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the
Chief Secretary to the Treasury Leon Brittan in 1982.
He became a member of the government of
Margaret Thatcher following the
1983 General Election when he was appointed as a
whip for a year. He rejoined the government in 1986 when he was appointed as a
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the
Home Office and was promoted in 1989 as the
Minister of State at the
Department of Trade and Industry.
On Tuesday
17 January 1989 Hogg used parliamentary privilege to name solicitors which he claimed were sympathetic to the IRA. One month later, on
12 February,
Pat Finucane, a Belfast solicitor, was murdered by loyalists. Hogg reportedly stands by his comments.
He was moved in 1990 under the leadership of
John Major to the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, becoming a member of the
Privy Council in 1992. He joined Major's
Cabinet as the
Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food in 1995, serving in that capacity during the
BSE crisis for which he received much criticism
[1] and remaining in post until the election of the
Tony Blair government in 1997. Following the
1997 General Election he was a member of the home affairs select committee for a year, and has remained on the
backbenches since. The
house of Lords Act 1999, which removed the right of hereditary peers to sit in the
House of Lords, meant that Viscount Hailsham did not have to disclaim his peerage to remain an MP on the death of his father.
He has been married to
Sarah, daughter of
John Boyd-Carpenter, since 1968 and they have a son and a daughter.
References
1. Minister without a friend Richard Wilson
External links
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Conservative Party - Rt Hon Douglas Hogg QC MP biography
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Guardian Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: Douglas Hogg MP
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TheyWorkForYou.com - Douglas Hogg MP
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The Public Whip - Douglas Hogg MP voting record
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BBC News - Douglas Hogg profile 15 February, 2005