Colin Burgon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Colin Burgon MP
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Member of Parliament
for Elmet |
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| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office 1 May 1997 |
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| Preceded by | Spencer Batiste |
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| Majority | 4,528 (9.6%) |
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| Born | 22 April 1948 Leeds |
| Nationality | British |
| Political party | Labour |
| Alma mater | Huddersfield Polytechnic Carnegie College, Leeds |
Colin Burgon (born 22 April 1948) is a British politician. He is the Labour member of Parliament for Elmet in Yorkshire.
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[edit] Early life
Colin Burgon was born in Leeds to life-long Labour supporting parents. He was educated at St Charles RC Junior School (closed in 1988); passing the eleven plus to attend the St Michael's Catholic College on St John's Road in Woodhouse; Carnegie College, Leeds where he trained as a teacher; and Huddersfield Polytechnic. He was a History teacher and member of the NUT at Foxwood High School (became East Leeds Family Learning Centre and is now to be demolished) in east Leeds before 1987, when he left teaching and the NUT to work for Wakefield borough council as a local government policy and research officer. He was also a research officer with the General, Municipal, Boilermakers and Allied Trade Union. He was elected to Westminster. He was the Labour Party Agent at Elmet for the 1983 General Election.
[edit] Parliamentary career
He unsuccessfully contested Elmet at the 1987 General Election where he was defeated by the sitting Conservative MP Spencer Batiste by 5,356 votes. In 1989 he was the election agent for the Leeds East European elections. He again contested Elmet at the 1992 General Election when he was again defeated by Batiste by 3,261 votes.
At the 1997 General Election, Colin Burgon contested Elmet for a third consecutive time, and this time he was successful, ousting Batiste with an 8,779 majority, and he has remained the MP since. He made his maiden speech on 22 July 1997 at which he amusingly talked about welfare reform and said he was the Member for Elmet and that 'Elmet - it's not what you put on your 'ead.[1]. He does not talk in the the Chamber very often. He was placed on the Northern Ireland Select Committee in 2000, and has served on the Home Affairs Select Committee since the 2005 General Election.
Burgon has also taken interest in socialism in South America, particularly in Venezuela. In May 2007, he wrote an article in The Guardian in defence of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and his government's controversial refusal to renew the broadcasting license of a television station that had been critical of him. Other commentators have condemned Chavez' move as an attack on media freedom.
[edit] Personal life
Burgon is divorced and has a daughter named Maria. He has taken a keen interest in opencast mining which is a big issue in Elmet. He lived in Swillington Common, Thorner then Allerton Bywater with his partner Kathryn.
[edit] External links
- His website
- Guardian Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: Colin Burgon MP
- TheyWorkForYou.com - Colin Burgon MP
- BBC Politics

