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Stephen Pound

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Leader
  
Ed Miliband

Nationality
  
British

Spouse
  
Maggie Pound (m. 1976)

Majority
  
9,301 (19.5%)

Role
  
British Politician


Preceded by
  
Harry Greenway

Name
  
Stephen Pound

Preceded by
  
Eric Joyce

Political party
  
Labour

Party
  
Labour Party



Born
  
3 July 1948 (age 75) Hammersmith, London (
1948-07-03
)

Education
  
London School of Economics and Political Science

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Stephen Pelham Pound (born 3 July 1948) is a British Labour Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ealing North since 1997.

Contents

Stephen Pound Stephen Pound Wikipedia

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Background

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His father, Pelham Pound, was a journalist and literary agent whose clients included the osteopath Stephen Ward. When Ward was arrested for his role in the Profumo affair it was at Pound's home and Pound claims he had a minor role in the events leading to Ward's suicide.

Stephen Pound Steve Pound MP Member of Parliament for Ealing North

Pound went to Hertford Grammar School (now called Richard Hale School) on Hale Road in Hertford. He was educated, as a mature student from 1979–84, at the London School of Economics where he gained a Diploma in Industrial Relations and a BSc in Economics. He was General Secretary of the student union from 1981–2.

He was a boxer in the Merchant Navy, when at sea from 1964–66, leading Private Eye magazine to refer to him as "Ealing North's tattooed bruiser". He also played football for Hanwell Town. He also worked as a bus conductor for London Transport, from 1966–68. He was a hospital porter from 1969–79. Prior to becoming an MP he worked for Paddington Churches Housing Association as a housing manager from 1984 until he became an MP. He was based at their office in Willesden.

Political career

Pound served as a councillor in Ealing from 1982 to 1998; in 1982 Pound won Elthorne ward and in 1986 he was re-elected in his home ward of Hobbayne.

Pound has been the MP Ealing North since 1997.

He served as the Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to Hazel Blears until he resigned in protest at the decision to replace Trident on 14 March 2007. He supported Blears in the 2007 Labour Party deputy leadership election.

He held the position of PPS to Minister Stephen Timms at the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform from October 2008 until May 2010. In April 2009 he was reported to have announced his resignation from this position, in order to vote against the government's policy of restricting the right of former Gurkhas to settle in the UK.

After the election of Ed Miliband as Labour leader in October 2010, he became an assistant whip. In November of that year he became shadow minister for Northern Ireland. He had served on the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee between 1997 and 2010. In 2012, despite his republican views, Pound criticised protests arranged during Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubillee stating "You can hold republican views but you respect the current monarch – particularly in this year of all years. There is no need to lose your manners, and this is deliberately provocative."

Voting record

How Stephen Pound voted on key issues since 2001 (They Work For You):

  • Voted against introducing a smoking ban.
  • Voted for introducing ID cards.
  • Voted for introducing foundation hospitals.
  • Voted for introducing student top-up fees.
  • Voted for Labour's anti-terrorism laws.
  • Voted for the Iraq war.
  • Voted against investigating the Iraq war.
  • Voted against replacing Trident missile system.
  • Voted for the hunting ban.
  • Voted for and against same-sex marriage.
  • Voted for laws to stop climate change.
  • Voted against the Brexit Bill.
  • MP's expenses scandal

    In May 2009 it was discovered Pound had claimed a mileage allowance of £4,251, equating to 11,004 miles of travel between his constituency and Parliament 11 miles away. He explained this by saying he made the trip 'two or three times a day'. Pound later claimed to have abandoned his ageing car altogether in favour of public transport.

    Media involvement

    In 2003 BBC’s Today Programme asked its listeners to suggest a law that they would like to see put onto the statute books. The BBC received 10,000 nominations and five were short-listed, from which listeners then voted to select their preferred choice. Stephen Pound agreed to sponsor in Parliament whichever idea eventually won the final vote.

    On 1 January 2004 it was announced on air that first place with 37 percent of the vote had gone to the proposal to authorise homeowners to use any means to defend their home from intruders. (The controversial farmer Tony Martin was still very much in the news.) Stephen Pound’s on-air reaction to the result was that, "The people have spoken — the bastards".

    In May 2005, Pound appeared on British TV quiz show Have I Got News For You and in December of that year in a special edition of University Challenge.

    In April 2015, a video circulated on social media where Stephen Pound asked Cameron whether he was willing to disassociate himself from the "snobbish and disdainful" bingo and beer advertisement tweeted by the Conservative Party Chairman Grant Shapps. The Prime Minister thanked him for advertising the Conservative's strong economic policy, and ended his reply concerning Pound by saying: "I am sure that the honourable gentleman enjoys a game of bingo – it's the only time he'll ever get close to Number 10". After going viral it picked up more than 3.6 million views in less than 24 hours.

    Personal life

    He married Maggie in 1976. They have a son and daughter. He is a Roman Catholic. In January 2005 he discovered that he fathered a daughter when he was eighteen years old.

    References

    Stephen Pound Wikipedia