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Tom Watson (politician)

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Tom Watson MP
Tom Watson (politician)

Tom Watson at 5th COMMUNIA Workshop


Incumbent
Assumed office 
5 October 2008
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Preceded by Gillian Merron

Member of Parliament
for West Bromwich East
Incumbent
Assumed office 
7 June 2001
Preceded by Peter Snape
Majority 11,652 (32.8%)

Born 8 January 1967 (1967-01-08) (age 42)
Nationality British
Political party Labour
Alma mater University of Hull

Thomas Anthony Watson (born 8 January 1967) is a politician in the United Kingdom. He is Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for West Bromwich East, known for being the first MP to start a blog. Watson is currently a Parliamentary Secretary at the Cabinet Office.

Contents

History and career

Tom Watson was educated at King Charles I school, Kidderminster, and the University of Hull, where he was elected President of the Students Union in 1992. He was Chair of the National Organisation of Labour Students from 1992–93. He then worked as a marketing officer and advertising account executive. In 1993, he began to work for the Labour Party as National Development Officer for Youth. He then worked on the party's 1997 general election campaign. He then went on to become National Political Officer of the AEEU trade union.

He was elected MP for West Bromwich East in 2001. In 2003, he included a weblog on his website. Attention was drawn to it by a page in which he parodied attempts by professional politicians to communicate with younger readers, entitled 'Teens!', which included such phrases as "We know that you're too busy fighting off your biological urges and being l33t hax0rs to Get Involved, but politics is cool, m'kay?". In 2004, he won the New Statesman New Media Award in the category of elected representative for using his weblog to further the democratic process. He is also an active user of Twitter[1].

Parliamentary achievements

In his first year in Parliament Watson launched a campaign to ban album sales of convicted sex offender Gary Glitter.[2]

In 2002, Watson moved a Ten Minute Rule Bill to liberalise organ donation laws. The Organ Donation - Presumed Consent (with safeguards) Bill was part of a joint campaign with the British Medical Association to increase the supply of organ donors in the UK. [3]

Tom Watson was campaign organiser for the Labour Party in the Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election in July 2004, in which he succeeded in narrowly retaining the seat in difficult political times for the party in the wake of the Iraq War. This campaign drew criticism for its 'dirty' tactics, particularly a Labour leaflet proclaiming "Labour is on your side - the Lib Dems are on the side of failed asylum seekers" [4] [5] [6] [7]

Watson was appointed as an Assistant Government Whip on 9 September 2004 and was nominated as a Top Toadie by The Guardian Diary on 6 January 2005[8]. He was promoted on 5 May 2006 to Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Ministry of Defence.

During his time at the MoD, Watson was instrumental in ensuring that the soldiers shot for cowardice in World War One received pardons.[9] Watson was said to have acted having met the relatives of Corporal Harry Farr, who was executed during the Great War despite strong evidence that he was suffering shellshock.[10]

Parliamentary scandals

On 5 September 2006, it was reported that he had signed a letter to Tony Blair requesting that the Prime Minister resign to end the uncertainty over his succession. [11]. The Government Chief Whip, Jacqui Smith, told Watson that evening that he must either withdraw his signature to the letter, or resign his post. On 6 September 2006, he resigned his ministerial position and released a further statement calling on Tony Blair to resign.[12]

It is with the greatest sadness that I have to say that I no longer believe that your remaining in office is in the interest of either the party or the country … How and why this situation has arisen no longer matters. I share the view of the overwhelming majority of the party and the country that the only way the party and the government can renew itself in office is urgently to renew its leadership.

Tony Blair was quoted by the BBC as saying that the statement and letter from Watson was "disloyal, discourteous and wrong" and that he would be seeing Watson later in the day. He said that he had planned to dismiss Watson from Government for having signed the letter urging him to resign. Within days of the incident suggestions appeared that Watson had been to Chancellor Gordon Brown's residence in Scotland only the day before the memo was sent to Tony Blair. Watson claimed he was dropping off a present for Brown's new baby Fraser and that neither the issue of the note, nor "any politics" were discussed.[citation needed]

As Watson recounted on his weblog, his reception at Labour Party Conference a few weeks after his resignation got a mixed reaction from Labour Party colleagues. Some sought him out to congratulate him, whilst others sought him out to be sarcastic or to be abusive. One such encounter was with Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, who asked Watson, whilst he was waiting to be interviewed by Channel 4 News, if he was "going to resign again?"

Watson's actions, by his own admission on his weblog and elsewhere, angered many of his colleagues within the Labour Party, but also pleased many. He returned to government following Brown's appointment as Prime Minister in June 2007, in apparent contradiction of a promise made in 2006 never to do so.[13]

Smeargate scandal

In April 2009 it was alledged that he knew about the smear e-mail exchanges by colleague Damian McBride, the public exposure of which prompted McBride's exit from Downing Street, though he has strongly denied this [14]. The apology issued by Prime Minister Gordon Brown relating to the smears was described by one of the victims as being "more about saving Tom Watson"[15]. Watson later took legal action against specific claims that he was copied into the e-mails sent by Mr McBride, and was awarded damages and legal costs from the Mail on Sunday, which carried the story [16].

Expenses scandal

On 10 May 2009 it was revealed that since being re-elected as MP in 2005 Mr Watson spent the maximum of his £4,800 MPs allowance in a single year on food, and had his expenses cut after buying a set of dining room chairs that exceeded the limit set by the fees office. It is claimed he and Iain Wright MP used their parliamentary allowances to 'lavish' more than £100,000 on a shared central London apartment since the 2005 election [17]. It was later revealed that there was some dissatisfaction with Watson's expenses within government departments where he had been extolling the virtues of efficiency [18]. Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) spokesman Frank Tudor alluded to a comment from Watson, in which the minister claimed it was necessary to know how "green" a department is before trying to improve things. He said, "We could spend an awful lot of money trying to find out what our green baseline is but to quote cabinet office minister Tom Watson - 'He is fat, he knows he is fat, he needs to go on a diet but doesn't need to know exactly how much he needs to lose'."

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