Ian Wrigglesworth

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Sir Ian William Wrigglesworth (born 8 December 1939) is Deputy Chairman of the Government's Regional Growth Fund Advisory Panel which is Chaired by Lord Heseltine and appointed by the Government to consider bids. His comments on the relationship between Newcastle & Sunderland City Councils were dismissed as "ill informed" by the leaders of both councils[1].He is Chief Executive of a Gateshead based commercial property investment company and is Chairman of the Port of Tyne. From 1995 to January 2009 he was the Executive Chairman of UK Land Estates and prior to that was Executive Deputy Chairman of the Teesside-based Livingston Group and an executive Director of its associate company Fairfield Industries. From 1996 until 2000 he was Chairman of the public policy company, Prima Europe and then chairman of its successor, GPC, after Prima was acquired by Omnicom. He has also been a non-executive director of a number of other private and public companies.

He was founder Chairman of the NewcastleGateshead Initiative, the private/public sector partnership responsible for the destination marketing of Newcastle and Gateshead and its bid for European Capital of Culture 2008, which was won by Liverpool. He was also the second Chairman of the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead until 2009 where his role was criticised for appointing controversial director Peter Doroshenko and stating that staff unrest against the director was a "storm in a teacup"[2]. During his time as Chairman, Baltic's finances had to be restructured, catering areas were left untenanted for many months, discussions with the University of Northumbria were begun, leading to the current partnership between the two institutions, and the exhibition programme was heavily criticised, especially for the decision to exhibit works by Beryl Cook[3].

Between 1974 and 1981 Sir Ian was Labour Member of Parliament for Teesside Thornaby. He was then SDP Member for Stockton South until 1987 when he lost his seat. In 1988 he became the first President of the Liberal Democrats and remains Chairman of the Liberal Democrat Trustees. Prior to becoming a Member of Parliament he worked in the City at National Giro Bank and began his working life in Middlesbrough at the Midland Bank. He is a former Chairman of the Northern Region CBI and was founder Chairman of the Northern Business Forum. Until 2002 he was Deputy Chairman of the Governors of the University of Teesside (formerly Middlesbrough Technical College).

Sir Ian was born in Stockton-on-Tees and educated at Stockton Grammar School, Stockton-Billingham Technical College and the College of St. Mark and St. John, Chelsea. He has homes in Northumberland and London. He is a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Founders and a Freeman of the City of London. He is also a Deputy Lieutenant of Tyne & Wear. He is married to Tricia, who is a Health Visitor, and has two sons and a daughter.

Shortly after he was elected to Parliament, Wrigglesworth was a founder member of the Manifesto Group and with John Cartwright helped found the Campaign for Labour Victory under the leadership of Bill Rodgers. From 1974 to 1979 he was Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Home Secretary, the Rt Hon Roy Jenkins, and when Labour returned to Opposition in 1979 he was appointed Shadow Minister for the Civil Service by the Rt Hon James Callaghan. However, Wrigglesworth became increasingly disillusioned by the Leftward direction the Labour Party was taking and became part of the nucleus of Labour MPs who contemplated leaving the party in 1979 and 1980. In 1981, Wrigglesworth became one of the founding members of the SDP and with Mike Thomas organised the launch of the new party in March, 1981.

Wrigglesworth was one of only six SDP Members of Parliament to be returned to the House of Commons in the 1983 general election when he narrowly won the newly created constituency of Stockton South by 102 votes after it was revealed that his Conservative opponent had twice stood as a candidate for the National Front. In the 1987 general election he was narrowly defeated by the Conservative candidate, Tim Devlin, by 774 votes.

After the merger of SDP and the Liberals, Wrigglesworth was elected the first President of the new Social and Liberal Democrats in 1988 and served a tumultuous two year term as President where he helped to guide the new party through a financial crisis, its disastrous showing in the 1989 European Parliamentary election and its change in name to the Liberal Democrats. Wrigglesworth was knighted in 1991 and although he has been active in the business community in the North East since that time he has retained his involvement with the Liberal Democrats.

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
New constituency Member of Parliament for Thornaby
Feb 19741983
Constituency abolished
Member of Parliament for Stockton South
19831987
Succeeded by
Tim Devlin
Party political offices
Preceded by
Adrian Slade
President of the Liberal Party
John Cartwright
President of the Social Democratic Party
President of the Liberal Democrats
1988–1990
Succeeded by
Charles Kennedy
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