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Peter Temple-Morris

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The Lord Temple-Morris
Member of Parliament
for Leominster
In office
28 February 1974 – 7 June 2001
Preceded bySir Clive Bossom
Succeeded byBill Wiggin
Personal details
Born (1938-02-12) 12 February 1938 (age 86)
Cardiff
NationalityBritish
Political partyConservative until 1998
Labour since 1998
SpouseTaheré Khozeimé-Alam
Alma materSt Catharine's College, Cambridge

Peter Temple-Morris, Baron Temple-Morris (born 12 February 1938) is a British politician. He was elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Leominster in 1974. He now sits in the House of Lords as a Labour peer.

Early life

Born in Cardiff, Temple-Morris attended Llandaff Cathedral School and Hillstone School (Malvern College's preparatory school) in Malvern, then Malvern College. He went to St Catharine's College, Cambridge gaining a BA in Law in 1958. He became a barrister, like his father, from 1962 at the Inner Temple, practising until 1989. His family home was in Cardiff, as his father Sir Owen Temple-Morris was MP for Cardiff East.

Parliamentary career

Temple-Morris was selected as the Conservative candidate for Newport (Monmouthshire) in 1964 and 1966 and Norwood in 1970. In February 1974, he was elected for Leominster, having been selected for the seat in March 1973. That same year, he was appointed vice-chairman, Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (UK Branch). In 1979, he was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of Transport, Norman Fowler, Executive Member, Inter-Parliamentary Union (British Group) and Founding Co-Chairman, British-Irish Inter-Parliamentary Body. He was a member of the Select Committees on Agriculture (1982–83) and on Foreign Affairs (1987–90). He stayed an MP until 2001, although he defected from Conservative to Labour on 20 June 1998.

Temple-Morris was a strong supporter of Michael Heseltine.

Suspension

Temple-Morris was suspended from the party in 1997 because he had "repeatedly and publicly questioned his continued commitment to the Conservative Party".[1] He then resigned from the party.

Defection

From 1997 to 1998, Temple-Morris sat on the government Labour benches, but did not take the whip, instead sitting as a one-man 'Independent One-Nation Conservative' group. However, in 1998 he joined the Labour party but stood down as an MP in the 2001 general election.

House of Lords

Temple-Morris was made a life peer on 22 June 2001 as Baron Temple-Morris, of Llandaff in the County of South Glamorgan and of Leominster in the County of Herefordshire.[2] He sits in the House of Lords as a Labour peer.

Outside politics, Temple-Morris was appointed Chairman of the Macleod Group, an association of left-of-centre Conservative MPs, in 1979. Since 1995, he has been President of the British-Iranian Business Association Society.

Temple-Morris contributed to the book What next for Labour? Ideas for a new generation in September 2011, his piece was entitled Labour: Progressive Politics.[3]

Personal life

Temple-Morris's father, Owen Temple-Morris, was also a Conservative MP.[4] His son, Eddy Temple-Morris, is a DJ, XFM presenter, record producer and former MTV presenter.[5][6]

Temple-Morris married Taheré Khozeimé-Alam (the daughter of Amir-Hossein Khozeimé Alam of Dezashib who fled to London from Iran in 1979)[7] in 1964 in London.[8] They have two sons and two daughters.[4]

When he was an MP, Temple-Morris was known for his love of shooting, wine and food.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Pro-European quits Tories". BBC News online. 22 November 1997. Retrieved 15 August 2006.
  2. ^ "No. 56257". The London Gazette. 27 June 2001.
  3. ^ www.whatnextforlabour.com/contributors/
  4. ^ a b Dod's Parliamentary Companion, Charles Roger Dod, Vacher Dod Publishing, Limited, Robert Phipps Dod, Dod's Parliamentary Companion, Limited, 2004, page 737
  5. ^ Why Boris Johnson Playing the Hitler Card Was So, So Wrong, The Huffington Post UK, 15 May 2016
  6. ^ Our Ambassador, British Tinnitus Association
  7. ^ Obituary: Amir Hossein Khozeimé-Alam, Daily Telegraph, 25 May 2002
  8. ^ a b End of uneasy Tory marriage of beliefs, BBC News, June 20, 1998
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Leominster
February 19742001
Succeeded by