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Conservative Party Board

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Conservative Party Board
Founded1834
Headquarters
4 Matthew Parker Street, Westminster, England
,
Key people
Richard Fuller, Board Chairman
Graham Edwards, Treasurer
Roger Pratt, Secretary
Websiteconservatives.com

The Conservative Party Board is the national governing body of the Conservative Party of the United Kingdom. It is responsible for operational matters such as fundraising, membership, candidates, and internal elections.[1] It is made up of members from each section of the party: voluntary, political and professional. The board meets once a month and works closely with Conservative Campaign Headquarters elected representatives and the voluntary membership mainly through a number of management sub-committees.[1]

Members

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Board[1]
Office Incumbent
Chairman of the board
Chairman of the Conservative Party
Richard Fuller
Chairman of the National Conservative Convention
Deputy chairman of the board
Julian Ellacott
Deputy chairman of the party Nickie Aiken
Treasurer of the Conservative Party Graham Edwards
President of the National Conservative Convention Michael Winstanley
Vice president of the National Conservative Convention Fleur Butler
Vice president of the National Conservative Convention John Belsey
Vice president of the National Conservative Convention Stewart Harper
Senior member of the professional staff of the party Alan Mabbutt
Chairman of the Conservative Councillors’ Association Phil Broadhead
Chairman of the Scottish Conservative Party Craig Hoy
Chairman of the Welsh Conservative Party Tomos Davies
Nominated by the leader with endorsement by the board Matt Wright
Board appointment with approval of the leader Katy Bourne
Chairman of the Association of Conservative Peers Michael Forsyth, Baron Forsyth of Drumlean
Chairman of the 1922 Committee Bob Blackman
Elected by the 1922 Committee John Whittingdale
Elected by the 1922 Committee Alicia Kearns
Elected by the 1922 Committee Mark Garnier
Secretary to the board Roger Pratt

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Party Structure and Organisation". conservatives.com. Retrieved 27 May 2024.
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