Difference between revisions of "Iain Wright"
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'''Iain Wright''' is a British Labour politician who was elected MP for Hartlepool in the by-election of September 2004, succeeding [[Peter Mandelson]] when he left Parliament to become a European Commissioner. | '''Iain Wright''' is a British Labour politician who was elected MP for Hartlepool in the by-election of September 2004, succeeding [[Peter Mandelson]] when he left Parliament to become a European Commissioner. | ||
− | In October 2011 Wright was appointed Shadow Minister for Competitiveness and Enterprise. <ref> [http://www.iainwrightmp.org.uk/categories/2-Press%20Releases Iain Wright MP promoted in reshuffle, 11 October 2011, acc 2 December 2011 </ref> | + | In October 2011 Wright was appointed Shadow Minister for Competitiveness and Enterprise. <ref> [http://www.iainwrightmp.org.uk/categories/2-Press%20Releases Iain Wright MP promoted in reshuffle], 11 October 2011, acc 2 December 2011 </ref> |
==Affiliations== | ==Affiliations== |
Revision as of 10:08, 2 December 2011
Iain Wright is a British Labour politician who was elected MP for Hartlepool in the by-election of September 2004, succeeding Peter Mandelson when he left Parliament to become a European Commissioner.
In October 2011 Wright was appointed Shadow Minister for Competitiveness and Enterprise. [1]
Affiliations
- Labour Friends of Israel, former director[2]
- Associate Parliamentary Group on Business, Finance and Accountancy
- British-Belize All-Party Parliamentary Group
- All-Party Parliamentary British-Latin America Group
- Coastal and Marine All-Party Parliamentary Group
- All-Party Parliamentary Group on Freight Transport
- All-Party Parliamentary Group on Peak Oil and Gas
- All-Party Parliamentary Rail Group
Notes
- ↑ Iain Wright MP promoted in reshuffle, 11 October 2011, acc 2 December 2011
- ↑ Blair to set goals for Brown PM to consult MPs on Lebanon as advisers insist Labour's future must be agreed before he goes Ned Temko, chief political correspondent, The Observer, Sunday August 27 2006
- ↑ House of Commons, Register of All-Party Groups (As at 28 October 2011)