Sneha Girap (Editor)

Robert Key (politician)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Prime Minister
  
John Major

Succeeded by
  
John Glen

Preceded by
  
Robert Atkins

Nationality
  
British

Party
  
Conservative Party

Succeeded by
  
Iain Sproat

Name
  
Robert Key

Books
  
Reforming Our Schools

Preceded by
  
Michael Hamilton

Role
  
Politician


Robert Key (politician) Robert Key resigns as trustee of former prime minister Sir Edward

Born
  
22 April 1945 (age 78) Plymouth, Devon, England (
1945-04-22
)

Education
  
Clare College, Cambridge

Simon Robert Key (born 22 April 1945), known as Robert Key, is a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom. He is the former Member of Parliament (MP) for Salisbury, Wiltshire. He is also Chair of Governors at Salisbury Cathedral School.

Contents

Early life

Key was born in Plymouth, the son of Maurice Key, afterwards Bishop of Truro. At the age of 10 he was part of a school walk on Swanage Beach in Dorset where he and six friends discovered an old wartime mine which detonated; only Key and one other boy survived. He went to Salisbury Cathedral School, then independent Sherborne School. He studied economics at Clare College at the University of Cambridge, receiving an MA and CertEd. He taught at the Loretto School in Edinburgh from 1967–9, then taught economics at Harrow School from 1969–83.

Political career

He contested the Holborn and St Pancras South seat in 1979. He was the Member of Parliament for Salisbury between 1983 and 2010, and was Minister for Local Government and Inner Cities in the Department of the Environment (now DEFRA) from 1990–2, setting up the Inner Cities Religious Council in 1991, and was Minister for Sport at the Department of National Heritage (now Culture, Media and Sport) from 1992–3. He was Minister for Roads and Traffic from 1993–4.

In opposition, Key served as a front-bench spokesman during the leaderships of William Hague and Iain Duncan Smith: in 2001, he was the shadow minister for Science and Energy, and in July 2002 the shadow minister for International Development. He stood down from this position in June 2003, returning to the backbenches, but retaining his membership of the Defence Select Committee.

In 2005, he won re-election with an increased majority. From 1994 until 2001, he was a Director of Hortichem (now Certis UK since 2001) in Amesbury.

On 2 December 2009, Key announced his decision to stand down at the next general election.

Robert Key is a member of the General Synod of the Church of England.

Personal life

He is the son of John Maurice Key who was the 10th Bishop of Truro from 1960 to 1973, as well as the Bishop of Sherborne from 1947 until 1960. He married Susan Irvine in 1968 in Perth. They have one son and two daughters and live in Harnham. He is a committed choral singer and member of the Church of England.

News items

  • Rebelling on gay adoption in 2003
  • His lack of fondness for Muzak
  • Comments during the early stages of the Embryo Bill in The Daily Telegraph in March 2008
  • Salisbury MP will not stand again – BBC News article from 2 December 2009
  • References

    Robert Key (politician) Wikipedia