Tim Yeo

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Tim Yeo MP
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Shadow Environment and Transport Secretary
In office
2004 – 2005
Constituency South Suffolk
Majority 6,606 (13.6%)

Born 20 March 1945 (1945-03-20) (age 64)
Political party Conservative

Timothy Stephen Kenneth Yeo (born March 20, 1945) is a British Conservative politician, Member of Parliament for South Suffolk.

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[edit] Personal

He was educated at Charterhouse School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Yeo is also a paid director of Univent PLC and Genus PLC, and writes articles for Golf Weekly and Country Life magazines, and occasionally the Financial Times. He is chairman of Univent PLC, which operates care homes for the elderly.

[edit] Parliamentary career

He has been MP for South Suffolk since 1983, and became PPS to Douglas Hurd in 1988. In 1992, he was appointed Minister for the Environment and Countyside in John Major's government, but was forced to resign after a scandal involving his so-called 'love child' with a Tory councillor, Julia Stent, who was born on 8th July 1993 — in the midst of the Government's 'Back to Basics' campaign and Yeo's own public support for the institution of marriage.[citation needed] The story broke on Boxing Day during a quiet news period and intense coverage was given to the scandal. Yeo resigned on 5 January 1994.

[edit] In Opposition

After the Conservative landslide defeat in the 1997 General Election, new leader William Hague appointed him spokesman on Environment, Transport and the Regions. Yeo was a member of the shadow cabinet under Iain Duncan Smith as shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, and in 2003 was made Michael Howard's shadow Education and Health Secretary, holding two positions with responsibility for both schools and hospitals. In 2004 he moved to Environment and Transport. During this period, his Chief of Staff was Nick Hurd, son of Douglas Hurd and since the 2005 general election the MP for Ruislip-Northwood.

He resigned from the shadow cabinet shortly after the 2005 election, saying he wished to be free to play a role in rethinking the Conservative party's future. On 27 August Yeo ruled himself out of the ensuing Conservative leadership election following Howard's resignation as party leader, announcing his backing for former Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke. The contest was won by the Shadow Secretary of State for Education and Skills, David Cameron).

[edit] External links

[edit] Offices held

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Constituency Created
Member of Parliament for South Suffolk
1983 – present
Incumbent
sv:Tim Yeo
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