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Dan Norris

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Preceded by
  
Jack Aspinwall

Alma mater
  
University of Sussex

Religion
  
Quaker

Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Dan Norris

Political party
  
Labour


Dan Norris

Born
  
28 January 1960 (age 64) London, UK, UK (
1960-01-28
)

Succeeded by
  
Constituency Abolished

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Dan Norris (born 28 January 1960) is a British Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Wansdyke from 1997 until 2010. He was also a Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

Contents

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Early life

Norris was educated at Chipping Sodbury Comprehensive School and the University of Sussex, where he read a Master's in Social Work (MSW). He is a former teacher and child protection officer having trained with the NSPCC.

Before Parliament

Norris was a councillor on Bristol City Council from 1989-92 / 1995-97 and Avon County Council from 1994–96, and he is a member of the GMB Union.

Parliamentary career

Norris first stood for parliament in the constituency of Northavon in 1987, losing against the Conservative incumbent, Sir John Cope. In 1992, he was the Labour candidate for Wansdyke, leapfrogging the Liberal Democrats to take Labour from third to second place against the Conservative incumbent, Jack Aspinwall.

He contested the Wansdyke seat once more in the 1997 election, and this time succeeded in taking a traditionally safe Conservative seat by 4,799 votes, overturning a majority of 11,770 votes. Whilst Norris went on to increase his majority to 5,613 in the 2001 election, the 2005 election saw his lead over the Conservatives fall to 1,839. Due to changes made by the Boundary Commission for England, the Wansdyke constituency was abolished at the 2010 election. Norris stood instead for North East Somerset, but was defeated by Jacob Rees-Mogg (C).

During his time in Parliament, Norris was an assistant whip from 2001 to 2003. In July 2007 he was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, a role he had previously performed for Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Peter Hain. In the reshuffle of June 2009 Norris entered the Government as a minister for the first time, becoming Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

As a backbencher, prior to taking on a PPS role in June 2006, Norris had the highest voting record of any MP - attending 97% of all votes Norris' voting records show that he is in favour of: crime reduction measures; a tougher line being taken against child sexual abuse; the smoking ban; the introduction of ID cards, rather than a UK Border police force; introducing additional GP hours to allow patient access during evenings and at weekends, patient choice of hospital, and cutting NHS waiting list times; introducing foundation hospitals; student top-up fees; anti-terrorism laws and migration controls; the Iraq war; not having an investigation into the Iraq war; replacing trident; the hunting ban and animal welfare measures; and gay rights.

Norris was one of just 25 out of the 121 MPs who voted on Freedom of Information laws supporting its application to MPs' allowances at the Third Reading vote on 18 May 2007. Norris has a particular interest in child safety and regularly campaigns against child sexual abuse, having co-written a free booklet on its prevention. He also co-wrote, produced and distributed a booklet aimed at giving practical advice to children across the UK about dealing with bullying entitled Don't Bully Me.

Norris was on the speaker list for the New Labour pressure group Progress.

Later career

Following his defeat at the 2010 general election, Norris turned his attention to working for former Foreign Secretary David Miliband in his ultimately unsuccessful bid for the Labour leadership. In 2012 Norris was short-listed to be the Labour Party candidate for Mayor of Bristol, but did not win the selection.

Norris is an ambassador for the children's charity Kidscape. In 2014 Norris was appointed to the board of the Snowdon Trust, a charity that supports students with physical disabilities

References

Dan Norris Wikipedia