Tony McNulty
Anthony James McNulty (born 3 November 1958), known as Tony McNulty, is a Labour politician and MP. He was Home Office Minister of State for Security, Counter-Terrorism, Crime and Policing from 2005-2008. He resigned from the government on 5 June 2009 after he was implicated in an expenses scandal.[1]
Contents
Career
- principal lecturer The Business School, University of North London 1983-97[2]
- London Borough of Harrow: councillor 1986-97, deputy leader (Labour group) 1990-96, leader (Labour group) 1996-97.[3]
- MP (Labour) Harrow East 1997-
- Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Department for Education and Employment 1997-99
- assistant Government whip 1999-2001, Government whip 2001-02
- Office of the Deputy Prime Minister 2002-03
- Department for Transport 2003-05
- Minister of state Home Office 2005-2008
- Minister for Employment and Minister for London 2008-
Affiliations
- Socialist Educational Association, Fabian Society, member and co-founder
- Labour Friends of India, 1999-
- Labour Friends of Israel, Member
Conference engagements
McNulty spoke on terrorism at CSTPV's International Terrorism Conference 2008 and at the British Bankers' Association 5th Annual Financial Crime Conference on 27 November 2007. [6]
External Resources
- They Work For You.com: Tony McNulty
Contact, Notes
Contact
- Address: 18 Byron Road, Wealdstone HA3 7ST
- Phone: 020 8427 2100
Notes
- ↑ Tony McNulty resigns following expenses shame, The Telegraph, 5 June 2009, accessed 7 July 2009
- ↑ 'McNULTY, Anthony James (Tony)' Debrett's People of Today (Debrett's Peerage Ltd, November 2007);Chadwyck-Healey Weekly Updates, (ProQuest-CSA LLC)
- ↑ Clayton Hirst, Tony McNulty: All aboard the transport express: 'Don't give me brick walls - tell me how to do it', Independent, 20 March 2005.
- ↑ 'McNULTY, Anthony James (Tony)' Debrett's People of Today (Debrett's Peerage Ltd, November 2007);Chadwyck-Healey Weekly Updates, (ProQuest-CSA LLC)
- ↑ House of Commons Biographies, (Dods, September 2008)
- ↑ BBA press release, Financial crime must be police priority, says BBA (accessed 24 October 2008)