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Douglas Carswell

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Douglas Carswell MP
Douglas Carswell

Member of Parliament
for Harwich
Incumbent
Assumed office 
5 May 2005
Preceded by Ivan Henderson
Majority 920 (1.8%)

Born 3 May 1971 (1971-05-03) (age 38)
City of Westminster, London
Nationality British
Political party Conservative
Spouse Clementine
Alma mater Charterhouse School
University of East Anglia
King's College London
Website www.douglascarswell.com

John Douglas Wilson Carswell (born 3 May 1971) is a British politician. He is the Conservative Member of Parliament for Harwich.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Carswell is the son of two medical doctors and grew up in Africa where his parents worked amongst resource-starved communities.[1] His home was in Uganda until his late teens. His father, Wilson Carswell, a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, diagnosed the first confirmed cases of HIV/AIDS in Uganda in the early 1980s[2] and was instrumental in drawing the world's attention to the unfolding pandemic.[3]

Carswell was educated at St. Andrews School, Turi, Kenya, Charterhouse School, the University of East Anglia, where he read history, and at King's College London. He worked as Corporate Development Manager for Television Broadcasting in Italy from 1997-9, and as Chief Projects Manager for INVESCO from 1999 before entering politics. At the 2001 General Election he was the Conservative candidate at Sedgefield, the constituency of the Prime Minister Tony Blair. Blair's majority fell by 7,500 votes, and Carswell managed to increase the Conservative share of the vote by 3.1% of the electorate.[4] In the months before the 2005 General Election, he worked in the Conservative Party's Policy Unit, reporting to David Cameron.

[edit] Member of Parliament

Carswell was elected to Parliament at the 2005 General Election for the constituency of Harwich defeating the sitting Labour MP Ivan Henderson by 920 votes. Carswell made his maiden speech on 28 June 2005 in the debate on the Identity Cards Bill.[5] He is a member of Conservative Friends of Israel. Carswell serves on the House of Commons Education Select Committee and the Public Accounts Committee.

Shortly after entering Parliament, Carswell wrote a publication "Direct Democracy; an agenda for a new model party". This publication has been described by the Spectator Magazine (June 2, 2007) as "one of the founding texts of the new, revitalised Toryism .... written by some of the brightest young Conservative thinkers". It sets out much of the thinking that has now become central to the Conservatives under David Cameron MP.

Carswell has also founded Direct Democracy, a group of like-minded modernisers within the party committed to making localism the core of the Conservative Party's platform. The group has been described by The First Post as one of the most influential Tory think tanks.[6]

Carswell made his mark at Westminster, bringing about the removal of a Speaker of the House of Commons for the first time in over 300 years. [7] He defied convention in April 2008 when he became the first MP to publicly call for the Speaker of the House of Commons Michael Martin to be fired after his failure to ensure greater transparency as to how the House of Commons is run. [8] In May 2009, he then put forward the motion of no confidence, backed by 23 MPs, which triggered Martin's downfall in June[9][10]

Dod's political biography describes Carswell as being "Tall and Eurosceptic ... one of his party’s radical thinkers". Carswell was described in The Sunday Times Magazine on July 27 2008 as "one of the energetic young Tory modernisers elected to the Commons in 2005".[11]

[edit] Publications

  • Direct Democracy – Agenda for a New Model Party[12]

The Spectator said of Carswell’s publication Direct Democracy: “One of the founding texts of the new, revived Toryism was the 2005 pamphlet Direct Democracy, written by some of the brightest young Conservative thinkers, which argued compellingly that the party should embrace radical localism”.[13]

* "Paying for Localism,"[14]

  • Chief author of "The Localist Papers"[15]
  • "The Plan: Twelve Months to Renew Britain" - co-written with Daniel Hannan.

[edit] Influence In The Conservative Party

Carswell and his co-author Daniel Hannan, have claimed that ideas in The Plan have informed much of the thinking in speeches and policy announcements made by the leader of the Conservative Party David Cameron - see for example [4] and [5]. However while Cameron has spoken of decentralising power in the UK [6] he has not adopted all 30 proposals outlined in The Plan. Nor has he yet subscribed to the view that Britain should withdraw from the EEC [7], as Carswell and Hannan advocate.

However, various independent bloggers have noted key similarities between ideas outline in The Plan and Conservative party policy under David Cameron. ConservativeHome drew attention to parallels between the text of The Plan and a speech made by David Cameron in Milton Keynes in May 2009. [16]

Guido Fawkes, who describes The Plan as a “huge hit, an Amazon bestseller and the all-time best-selling publish-on-demand publication ever sold by Amazon” also noted the influence of the book on Conservative thinking.[17]

Carswell has been invited to speak at various conferences on a range of policy topics in which he has no formal role within the party, such as reform of the criminal justice system [18], constitutional reform [19], defence and local government.

In July 2009, the Conservatives announced they would be using full, open primary contests to select candidates for the first time, yet another illustration of the way that ideas in The Plan have been adopted by the Conservatives.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ L.A. Times, May 24, 1986- "AIDS Epidemic Sweeps Through Uganda; Experts Say 10% of the Sexually Active Populace May Be Infected" "...[J. Wilson Carswell], a Scottish physician at Mulago who has been in the country for 18 years..."
  2. ^ Village Voice, July 4, 2000- "Proof Positive; How African Science Has Demonstrated That HIV Causes AIDS"
  3. ^ L.A. Times, May 24, 1986- "AIDS Epidemic Sweeps Through Uganda; Experts Say 10% of the Sexually Active Populace May Be Infected" ""It was an epidemic last year. It is now a disaster. It is going to wipe out many, many people here.""
  4. ^ UK Polling Report - Sedgefield Election results
  5. ^ House of Commons Hansard Debates for 28 Jun 2005 (pt 28)
  6. ^ About Douglas - Douglas Carswell's website
  7. ^ [http://www.dodonline.co.uk/engine.asp?lev1=4&lev2=37&menu=45&biog=y&group=6&tab=3&id=31685
  8. ^ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-559309/Fearless-Tory-MP-Speaker-quit.html
  9. ^ [1]
  10. ^ [2]
  11. ^ "Michael Martin: the speaker cornered". The Sunday Times magazine. 27 July 2008. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article4384015.ece. Retrieved on 2009-03-10. 
  12. ^ 13 June 2005. ISBN 1-84275-057-7
  13. ^ The Spectator, 2 June 2007
  14. ^ published by the Adam Smith Institute
  15. ^ published by the Centre for Policy Studies, serialised in the Daily Telegraph May - June 2007. [3]
  16. ^ http://conservativehome.blogs.com/thetorydiary/2009/05/daniel-hannan-and-douglas-carswell-wrote-david-camerons-speech-on-devolving-power.html
  17. ^ http://order-order.com/2009/05/26/cameron-my-government-will-be-open-online-all-the-time/
  18. ^ http://www.ippr.org/events/?id=3468
  19. ^ http://www.thersa.org/events/audio-and-past-events/electoral-reform-right-question-right-answer-and-who-decides
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Ivan Henderson
Member of Parliament for Harwich
2005present
Incumbent
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