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Wikipedia

Chris Huhne

Christopher Murray Paul Huhne (born 2 July 1954) is a British energy and climate change consultant, and former journalist, business economist and politician who was the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Eastleigh from 2005 to 2013 and the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change from 2010 to 2012.[2][3][4] He is currently chair of the UK green gas association – the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association – and senior adviser to the World Biogas Association. He also advises companies on his particular interest in renewable technologies that can provide back up for intermittent energy sources like wind and solar.

Chris Huhne
Huhne in 2011
Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change
In office
12 May 2010 – 3 February 2012
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byEd Miliband
Succeeded byEd Davey
Liberal Democrat Home Affairs spokesperson
In office
20 December 2007 – 12 May 2010
LeaderNick Clegg
Preceded byNick Clegg
Succeeded byLynne Featherstone (2015)
Liberal Democrat Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Spokesman
In office
3 March 2006 – 19 December 2007
LeaderMenzies Campbell
Vince Cable (Acting)
Preceded byNorman Baker
Succeeded bySteve Webb
Liberal Democrat Deputy Treasury Spokesman
In office
16 May 2005 – 3 March 2006
LeaderCharles Kennedy
Preceded byDavid Laws
Succeeded byJulia Goldsworthy
Member of Parliament
for Eastleigh
In office
5 May 2005 – 5 February 2013
Preceded byDavid Chidgey
Succeeded byMike Thornton
Member of the European Parliament
for South East England
In office
10 June 1999 – 12 May 2005
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded bySharon Bowles
Personal details
Born
Christopher Murray Paul-Huhne

(1954-07-02) 2 July 1954 (age 69)
London, England
Political partyLabour Party (before 1981)
Social Democratic Party (1981–1988)
Liberal Democrats (1988–2013)[1]
Independent (since 2013)
Spouse
(m. 1984; div. 2011)
Domestic partnerCarina Trimingham (2010–present)
Children3
Alma materMagdalen College, Oxford

He formerly wrote weekly columns for The Guardian, Independent on Sunday and Evening Standard. From 1994 to 1999, he built up a business advising on the creditworthiness of countries which is now the sovereign ratings division of one of the three large global ratings agencies, Fitch Ratings.

Huhne had twice stood unsuccessfully for election as Leader of the Liberal Democrats; in 2006 he came second to Sir Menzies Campbell and in 2007 he narrowly lost to Nick Clegg.[5][6] His political career ended with resignation in February 2013, when he was (alongside his ex-wife) convicted of perverting the course of justice in relation to speeding offences. He ultimately pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to eight months in prison, serving nine weeks before being released in May 2013.

Huhne was reported in December 2023 to have settled with News Corporation (Rupert Murdoch's newspaper holding company that owned the main newspapers responsible for bringing him down, the Sun, News of the World and Sunday Times) over illegal information-gathering including phone-hacking. Huhne received six-figure damages and his legal costs. Huhne said that News targeted him because he had called for a reopening of the police investigation into phone-hacking (that led to the conviction of Andy Coulson, editor of the News of the World) and a judicial inquiry (eventually the Leveson Inquiry).[7]

Huhne was joined by other former Liberal Democrat ministers including Vince Cable and Norman Lamb, and claimed that News had not hacked him just for tabloid titillation but as an attempt to remove him as a critic and to spy on the Government in its intentions on whether to refer Murdoch's Sky bid to the competition authorities.

Early life edit

Education and upbringing edit

Huhne was born in west London to businessman Peter Paul-Huhne and actress Ann Murray.[8] He was educated at Westminster School.[9]

He attended Magdalen College, Oxford, where he was a Demy and editor of Isis.[10] He also attended the Sorbonne, Paris.[11][12] At Oxford, Huhne edited the student magazine Isis, served on the executive of the Oxford University Labour Club, and achieved a first-class degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE).[11][13] He was active in student politics, supporting the Labour Party.[11]

Career before Parliament edit

Huhne was Brussels correspondent of The Economist from 1977 to 1980, and then economics editor, leader writer and columnist for The Guardian,[14] and economics editor, assistant editor and columnist for The Independent on Sunday. He was the business editor of The Independent and The Independent on Sunday during its investigations into Robert Maxwell's fraud on the Mirror group pension fund. He started as an undercover freelance reporter in India during Indira Gandhi's emergency when western journalists had been expelled. He also worked for the Liverpool Echo and The Economist as its Brussels correspondent between 1977 and 1980. He won both the junior and senior Wincott awards for financial journalist of the year in 1980 and 1989 respectively.[15] Along with his work in newspapers and magazines he co-wrote the book Debt & Danger: The World Financial Crisis (Penguin, 1985) with Harold Lever, and wrote Real World Economics (Penguin 1990).[14]

Before embarking on his political career, he started a company in the City. He told The Independent in 2008: "I don't claim that I'm in other than a very happy position compared with most people, because, having spent a bit of time in the City before I was elected, being able to make a bit of money while I was there, I have a cushion."[16] He started a company called IBCA Sovereign Ratings in 1994 that tried to "measure the risks of investing in different countries".[16] In 1997 he became group managing director of Fitch IBCA, and from 1999 to 2003 was vice-chairman of Fitch Ratings.[16]

Parliamentary candidate edit

Huhne contested the 1983 general election as a Parliamentary candidate for the SDP–Liberal Alliance in Reading East coming second,[17] and in the 1987 general election he was the SDP–Liberal Alliance candidate in the Oxford West and Abingdon seat,[17] a seat that would be won ten years later by Liberal Democrat candidate Evan Harris.[18]

Member of European Parliament (1999–2005) edit

In June 1999 Huhne was elected as a member of the European Parliament for South East England.[19] The Liberal Democrats came third with a total of 228,136 votes behind the Conservatives and Labour.[19] The proportion of votes received meant that the party was able to send the top two list candidates to the European Parliament, Emma Nicholson the top list candidate and Chris Huhne, second on the list.[19] During the 2004 European Parliament elections Huhne was re-elected along with Emma Nicholson with the party having received 338,342 votes, 15% of the total vote.[20] In 2005 Huhne stood for election to the United Kingdom parliament representing the seat of Eastleigh in Hampshire. After he was elected as a Member of the House of Commons on 5 May 2005,[21] Sharon Bowles, the candidate third on the Liberal Democrat list, replaced Huhne as representative for the South East of England.[22]

During his time in the European Parliament, Huhne was the only Liberal Democrat MEP in a ranking by The Economist of the three highest-profile UK MEPs (the others being Glenys Kinnock and Caroline Lucas). He was a member of the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee, concerned with economic and financial policy including regulation of the financial sector. He was economic spokesman for the pan-European Liberal group in the European Parliament and was responsible for introducing "sunset clauses" – time limits on powers – into European Union law for the first time, for radically amending Commission proposals on financial services, and for opening up the European Central Bank to greater scrutiny.

In addition to his European Parliament responsibilities, he was also active in the development of Liberal Democrat policy as chairman of four policy groups: broadcasting and the media, globalisation, the introduction of the euro, and the reform of public services. On public services, he argued that money was a necessary condition of improvement, but that the key was decentralisation and democratic control; local voters needed to be able to hold local decision-takers to account.

Member of Parliament edit

Huhne was first elected to represent Eastleigh at the general election on 5 May 2005,[21] a constituency within the area for which he was previously the Member of the European Parliament. David Chidgey, the previous MP for the constituency, was also a Liberal Democrat who won his seat in what was historically a Conservative area in a by-election in 1994 following the death of Stephen Milligan.[23] The result in 2005 was close, with Huhne winning with a majority of 568 over Conservative rival Conor Burns.[21] In the 2010 general election Huhne retained his seat with an increased majority of 3,864 over Conservative Maria Hutchings.[21] He was appointed as Steward and Bailiff of the Chiltern Hundreds on 5 February 2013, which vacated his seat and thus ended his tenure as Member of Parliament for Eastleigh. In accepting this office, he became the first official Liberal or Liberal Democrat MP to resign a parliamentary seat since 1941.

Treasury spokesman edit

Following his election to the House of Commons then Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy made Huhne the party's shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury.[17] In this role Huhne led the party's debate on the 2005 Finance Bill, suggesting that amendments should be made to stop a pensions loophole which would have allowed a 40% discount on property and other investments. In the pre-budget report for 2006, the Chancellor conceded the change.[17]

2006 leadership contest edit

Huhne stood against Sir Menzies Campbell and Simon Hughes for the Liberal Democrat leadership following Charles Kennedy's resignation, formally launching his campaign on 13 January 2006.

Huhne was able to carve out a distinctive position on the issue of green taxation . He argued for a radical expansion of taxes on pollution, allowing for reductions in the income tax rate on the lowest paid.[24] This theme endeared Huhne to environmentalists and market liberals alike, allowing him to pick up supporters as the campaign went on. He also argued for a repeal of elements of the Labour government's anti-terrorism legislation, which many felt had undermined British civil liberties, and for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq within a year. He described himself as a 'social liberal'.[25]

Although the majority of Liberal Democrat MPs declared their support for Menzies Campbell, Huhne did receive endorsements from some party notables including Lord Maclennan and William Rodgers. Amongst the media, The Economist and The Independent supported his leadership bid. He was backed from early on by a number of bloggers, and gained much momentum from an internet campaign.[26]

In the final vote, Huhne finished runner-up, tallying 21,628 votes to Menzies Campbell's 29,697.[27] Campbell appointed him as the Liberal Democrat's environment spokesman in the subsequent frontbench reshuffle, in order for Huhne to develop a viable programme to expand on his green campaign themes.[28]

During the election campaign, a news story in The Independent on 27 February 2006,[29] reported that an unsigned document entitled "Chris Huhne's Hypocritical Personal Share Portfolio" was being circulated at Lib Dem leadership election meetings. The document alleged that Huhne had invested in companies that the document described as "unethical".[29] The document stated: "Chris Huhne is campaigning for the Lib Dem leadership on a green, carbon-neutral platform, and further advocates increasing tax for the wealthy, which would include himself. However, his shareholdings include, or have included, mining companies, oil companies and tax shelters."[29]

Environment spokesman edit

The intellectual energy surrounding Huhne's leadership campaign did much to inform the Liberal Democrats' recent political agenda. His proposals for realigning green taxes and income tax – the green tax switch – were at the heart of the fiscal package endorsed at the party's September 2006 conference.[30]

Huhne was involved in developing his party's thoughts on climate change and the environment, including a consideration of the challenges and opportunities they create for British businesses.[31] He also drew attention to what he said was the divergence between the Conservative Party's environmental rhetoric and its policies.[32]

Huhne was one of fourteen MPs forming an all-party parliamentary inquiry into antisemitism in the UK. Their report criticised boycotts of Israeli academics as "an assault on academic freedom and intellectual exchange" and accused "some left-wing activists and Muslim extremists [...] of using criticism of Israel as 'a pretext' for spreading hatred against British Jews".[33] Huhne is, however, a critic of Israeli government policy in the Middle East, and strongly supports the creation of a separate Palestinian state. He described the Israeli response in Lebanon to Hezbollah's rocket attacks as disproportionate and counter-productive, arguing that a strong Lebanese state is in Israel's long-term interest.

In March 2007 it was falsely reported that he had written to executives at Channel 4 to try and stop their showing The Great Global Warming Swindle.[34] In an e-mail exchange with Iain Dale, Huhne stated that he only wrote to ask for the channel's comments,[35] and The Daily Telegraph later ran a correction and apologised for the misunderstanding, saying it was happy to accept that "Mr Huhne's letter was not an attempt to prevent the film being shown or suppress debate on the issue".[36]

After Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg announced his intention, during the 2007 party conference, to stand for the leadership should Menzies Campbell retire, Chris Huhne, when asked about his leadership ambitions, said that there was: "no vacancy, and it would be premature to even talk about the position of there being a vacancy".[37]

2007 leadership contest edit

Following Sir Menzies Campbell's resignation on 15 October 2007, Huhne was considered to be one of the strongest contenders for the leadership of the Liberal Democrats.[38] On 17 October, he became the first member of the party to announce his candidacy, saying "I've decided to give it a go" and declaring his vision of a "fairer and greener society".[38] Huhne said that he wanted the party to be committed to the idea that "everybody's individual worth and chance is given its full possibility."[38]

On 28 October 2007, Huhne announced that he had secured the support of 10 of his 62 parliamentary colleagues for his formal nomination. His rival Nick Clegg announced the support of 33 MPs.[39] Huhne also claimed backing from at least twelve peers, four MSPs, and three Welsh Assembly members. After former Lib Dem leader Lord Ashdown announced his support for Clegg, a previous Liberal leader Lord Steel declared his support for Huhne, based in part on Huhne's position on the Trident nuclear programme.[40]

In the last week of campaigning, his team were bullish about his chances, predicting a win.[41] In the final count, the party membership chose his rival Nick Clegg by a narrow margin of 511 votes out of more than 41,000 counted.[42][43]

About 1,300 postal votes were caught up in the Christmas post and missed the election deadline. An unofficial check of the late papers showed Huhne had enough votes among them to hand him victory. Huhne stood by the result, saying: "Nick Clegg won fair and square on the rules counting the ballot papers that arrived in by the deadline. There is no question of any re-run."[6] Following the leadership election, Clegg chose Huhne to be the party's Home Affairs Spokesman.[44]

Election conduct edit

During the leadership election, Nick Clegg registered a formal complaint about Huhne's conduct to Chris Rennard, the party's Chief Whip and returning officer.[45] Clegg stated that his rival was indulging in: "the politics of innuendo, mounting false challenges and running a campaign that is handing political ammunition to the party's political opponents."[46] Huhne and Clegg were debating on live television on BBC's The Politics Show on Sunday 18 November 2007, when presenter Jon Sopel produced a briefing document that had been specially delivered to the show's production team by the Huhne campaign team on the preceding Friday.[47] The document excoriated Clegg on a number of policy and political issues and was titled "Calamity Clegg".[48] When challenged about the document, Huhne claimed that he had no knowledge of it and said he did not agree with the document title but agreed with the points within it.[49] Asked how it was possible that he had no knowledge of such a major document sent to the producer of the show he was due to appear on, Huhne replied: "It's quite impossible to check everything that goes out of the office... But I can assure you that's not had my authorization."[50] After Clegg complained about what he called "dirty tricks" and other senior party members condemned the Huhne campaign attack, Huhne's campaign manager Anna Werrin claimed that the title of the memo was just the product of an "over-zealous researcher" and had not been seen or approved by Huhne or any senior campaign officials prior to release. "The document title had not been approved before the document was sent out and neither Chris nor I were aware of it."[51]

Speaking to the Independent on 21 November 2007, Huhne claimed: "Unfortunately it was a mixture of responsibilities. It was an over-zealous young researcher who was responsible for drawing up the document." The researcher was not on his staff, he said, denying that, as a former journalist, he might have been expected to read what was put out in his name before it was issued.[52]

Home Affairs spokesman edit

 
David Cameron and Nick Clegg outside the Houses of Parliament, with Huhne in the background

In October 2008, as Liberal Democrat Home Affairs spokesperson, Huhne led the Liberal Democrat response to the government's announcement of plans to expand the capacity to collect records of people using electronic communications. The Home Secretary's announcement was in response to warnings by police and the security services that the growing fragmentation and complexity of communications was hindering their tackling of terrorism and organised criminality. But Huhne disagreed with the government's response to the police and security services, saying: "The Government's Orwellian plans for a vast database of our private communications are deeply worrying. I hope that this consultation is not just a sham exercise to soft-soap an unsuspecting public."[53]

In January 2009, Huhne was credited with uncovering an instance of data loss of government information caused by a courier company losing a computer disc containing bank details of up to 2,000 public servants working for the British Council. Huhne blamed the Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, and the government for the courier company's loss and said that the incident was an example of why the UK should not have identity cards: "This is another instance in a long line of slapdash data protection by government departments. If Whitehall cannot look after its own data records it should not be trusted with the personal information of every citizen as it wants with the identity card scheme."[54]

On 6 November 2007, Huhne made remarks about the Speaker of the House of Commons on the BBC television programme Newsnight in which he claimed that the Speaker, Michael Martin, had fallen asleep during a speech by the Prime Minister Gordon Brown. "The Speaker unfortunately fell asleep during Gordon Brown's speech ... I'm not sure I'm allowed to say that, but he reacted in an entirely understandable way to what was not the most riveting of parliamentary occasions."[55] After the remarks were repeated in several publications, Huhne made a public apology to the Speaker in the House of Commons on 8 November in which he withdrew his prior comments. "It was wrong of me to draw the Chair into a matter of political dispute. I hope you will accept I intended no personal offence and fully withdraw my comments."[56]

Support for scientific advisor edit

Huhne was an avid supporter of Professor David Nutt after he was dismissed by Home Secretary Alan Johnson as chairman of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) in November 2009. Nutt had criticised the government's decision to reclassify cannabis as a Class B drug rather than keeping it as a class C.[57] Huhne said the decision to sack Nutt was "disgraceful" and commented: "what is the point of having independent scientific advice if as soon as you get some advice that you don't like, you sack the person who has given it to you?". Attacking the government, he said that if they did not want to take expert scientific advice they might as well have a "committee of tabloid newspaper editors to advise on drugs policy".[58] Cannabis had been re-classified as a class C drug in 2004 by then Home Secretary David Blunkett, only for Jacqui Smith to reverse the ruling in 2008, a decision taken despite official advisers recommending against it.[58]

Expenses claims edit

As part of The Daily Telegraph investigation into expense claims by MPs, Huhne was reported to have claimed for various items including groceries, fluffy dusters and a trouser press. In 2006, he claimed £5,066 for painting work on his garden fences and chairs.[59] He collected £119 for a Corby trouser press from John Lewis but later said he would repay the cost in order "to avoid controversy". He later claimed on a live Channel 4 news programme that he needed the trouser press to "look smart" for work.[60] Huhne's office running costs during the 2007/2008 financial year were the 206th highest out of 645, his second home claims were 580th highest (or 65th cheapest) out of 645, and his total expense claims were below average, ranking 418th most expensive.[61]

Huhne was one of sixteen ministers whose assets were held in a blind trust.[62]

Coalition Government (2010–2012) edit

Following the 2010 general election, Huhne became a member of the Liberal Democrats' key negotiating team alongside Danny Alexander, David Laws and Andrew Stunell that brokered the agreement to go into a governing coalition with the Conservatives.[63] Following the negotiations and the formation of a full coalition Huhne was appointed Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, the tenth most senior minister in the new government.[4] There had been some speculation that Huhne might be appointed as Home Secretary, as he had been the Liberal Democrat spokesman for Home Affairs in the preceding three years, although this post went to the Conservative Theresa May. He was appointed as a Privy Counsellor on 13 May 2010.[64]

Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change edit

A vocal environmentalist, Huhne accepted the role of Secretary of State with the stated intention of making the nation more ecologically conscious. Among his first actions was launching National Wind Week by speaking at an event in London's Leicester Square on 15 June 2010.[65][66] Underscoring his personal commitment to wind power, Huhne erected an 8-foot wind turbine at his constituency home in Eastleigh.[67]

Position on nuclear energy edit

In government, Huhne maintained a flexible approach on the subject of nuclear energy, advocating the three-pronged portfolio approach to energy: a commitment to nuclear energy; the development of more renewable energy, such as wind and sea power; and new carbon-capture technology to mitigate the damaging environmental effects of fossil fuel-fired power plants and industrial facilities. In an interview with The Observer in March 2011, following the Fukushima disaster in Japan, Huhne stated that: "there are a lot of issues outside of the realm of nuclear safety, which we will have to assess. One is what the economics of nuclear power post-Fukushima will be, if there is an increase in the cost in capital to nuclear operators."[68] This represents an evolution of his approach to the nuclear issue.[68] In 2007, Huhne was quoted as saying: "Nuclear is a tried, tested and failed technology and the government must stop putting time, effort and subsidies into this outdated industry."[68]

Cancellation of Sheffield Forgemasters loan edit

In June 2010, Huhne supported the cancellation by the Business Department of an £80 million loan to Sheffield Forgemasters which had been pledged by the preceding Labour government to build power plant components. He was criticised by Labour Shadow energy secretary Ed Miliband who said that the money for the loan had been set aside and would have resulted in at least £110 million returning to the Exchequer. On 1 July 2010, Huhne replied to Miliband saying: "The loan to Sheffield Forgemasters was not a commercial loan. If it was a commercial loan it would have been arranged through the banks and not by the government. It was precisely because of the public subsidy element, and the fact that the public subsidy element was not affordable, that the government decided not to proceed with it."[69] The cancellation of the loan was one of a number of projects agreed by the previous Labour government cancelled in an announcement to the House of Commons on 17 June 2010.[70][71][72]

Cancun climate change conference edit

On 9 December 2010, Huhne represented the United Kingdom at the 2010 United Nations Climate Change Conference. The gathering, at which over 190 countries were represented, announced a deal to curb climate change which Prime Minister David Cameron described as a "very significant step forward."[73] The agreement struck in Mexico included a recognition that deeper cuts in carbon emissions were needed and that a fund should be set up to help developing countries reduce their carbon emissions.[73] Huhne described the deal as a "serious package" of measures but acknowledged that there was still more work to do prior to the next climate change meeting in Durban, South Africa, the following year.[73] Following the conference, David Cameron said that his government would be the "greenest ever" and that Britain would meet its international obligations regarding climate change.[73]

Support for AV referendum campaign edit

Huhne was an enthusiastic supporter of the AV campaign (Alternative Vote Referendum) and attacked anti-AV campaigners such as his cabinet colleague, Conservative Party chairman Baroness Warsi.

If Baroness Warsi thinks that AV will benefit fascism she has to explain why the BNP wants to stick with what we have and Operation Black Vote supports AV. The BNP know the present system is their only chance of election. This is another example of the increasingly Goebbels-like campaign from the anti-AV people, for whom no lie is too idiotic given the truth is so unpalatable to them. AV makes lazy MPs work harder and reach out beyond their tribe. It is what Britain needs to clean up politics.[74]

Resignation edit

On 3 February 2012, Huhne resigned from the Cabinet when he was charged with perverting the course of justice over a 2003 speeding case. His wife at the time, Vicky Pryce, had falsely claimed that she was driving the car, and accepted the licence penalty points on his behalf so that he could avoid being banned from driving. Huhne denied the charge until the trial began on 4 February 2013 when he changed his plea to guilty, resigned as a member of Parliament, and left the Privy Council.[75][76][77] He and Pryce were sentenced at Southwark Crown Court on 11 March to eight months in prison for perverting the course of justice.[78] He served nine weeks[79] of this sentence at HMP Leyhill in Gloucestershire before he was released.[80]

On 5 February 2013 Huhne resigned as an MP following his plea of guilty to perverting the course of justice. In a subsequent article for the Guardian during his second period of writing a weekly column for the paper, he said that he believed he was targeted by Rupert Murdoch's News Group newspapers because of the support he had given, while Shadow Home Secretary, for the re-opening of the police investigation into phone-hacking.[77][81][82] The subsequent police investigation led to the prosecution and conviction of Andy Coulson, formerly editor of the News of the World.

Career since Parliament edit

Chris Huhne has been an adviser and consultant on energy and climate change since his resignation from parliament. In August 2013, Huhne was appointed European Chairman of Zilkha Biomass Energy.[83] The firm makes wood chip pellets in the United States. Huhne was also a consultant for Nationwide Energy Services, an energy saving company. Until 2014 Huhne was a weekly columnist for The Guardian.[84] He has also provided consultancy services for start-ups in his particular specialism of despatchable renewables (like biogas and biomass). From 2014 to 2018, Huhne was the senior adviser for the trade body that represents renewable natural gas (biogas) plants in the UK, the Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association (ADBA). He became chair of ADBA in June 2022, and is also senior adviser to the World Biogas Association.[85][86]

Depictions edit

In February 2010 Huhne was played by Alan Parnaby in the television film On Expenses and in 2015 by Rob Vowles in television film Coalition.

Personal life edit

Huhne married Greek-born economist Vicky Pryce (formerly Chief Economist in the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform) in 1984 shortly after she divorced her first husband, with whom she had two daughters.[87][88] Huhne and Pryce have three children together.[89] In a video statement made during the 2007 Liberal Democrats' leadership election campaign, Huhne described his philosophy about family life: "Relationships, including particularly family relationships, are actually the most important things in making people happy and fulfilled".[90] Talking about his wife to The Independent in 2008 he stated: "I also have a very hard-working and extremely intelligent wife, who manages to earn far more than I do."[16]

In June 2010, Huhne admitted that he had been involved in a relationship with Carina Trimingham and stated that he had decided to leave his wife[91] to be with her. Huhne's wife and children were unaware of his behaviour and plans. Within one week of Huhne's declaration, Pryce filed for divorce on the grounds of Huhne's "admitted adultery". Trimingham had worked on Huhne's campaigns for the Liberal Democrat leadership in 2006 and 2007 and was a paid staff member on his 2010 general-election campaign. She was press officer for Brian Paddick during the 2008 Mayor of London election, and was campaigns director at the Electoral Reform Society. Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude said: "What goes on in people's private lives is a subject that fascinates the tabloid press but is irrelevant to the job they are trying to do."[92] Huhne and Pryce divorced in January 2011.[93]

Personal interests edit

Apart from climate change, "Electoral reform" is among the personal interests that Huhne cites on his biography on the official Liberal Democrats website. He describes his other interests as "European single currency, economics, Third World debt and development, Europe".[94]

Huhne is or was a member of the European Movement, Green Lib Dems, Association of Liberal Democrat Trade Unionists and the National Union of Journalists.

Publications and writing interests edit

Prior to his careers as a financial journalist, analyst and politician, Huhne wrote four books that are mainly on the themes of either Third-World debt and development, or European integration. His latest book is entitled Both Sides of the Coin (1999, with James Forder), in which he argues the case for British membership in the euro. His first was Debt and Danger (Penguin Special, 1985), an analysis of the 1984 Third World debt crisis co-written with Lord Lever of Manchester, the former Labour cabinet minister.

He was a contributor to The Orange Book (2004), in which he advocates reforms to the United Nations and international governance. Huhne was critical of the most controversial article in the Orange Book, in which David Laws proposed an insurance-based National Health Service. He did not take part in the successor volume, Britain after Blair and has voiced dismay at the way its predecessor was presented as a break with the party's social liberal traditions. More recently, he contributed to the book The City in Europe and the World (2005) and two articles to Reinventing the State (2007) edited by Duncan Brack, Richard Grayson and David Howarth. These cover the case for localism in which Huhne argues that there is no contradiction between localism and equality, and the need for environmental policy to tackle climate change.

Huhne has also written articles for Financial Times, The Guardian, The Independent and New Statesman.[95] While an MEP, he wrote a weekly column for the London Evening Standard on European matters.

Criminal conviction edit

In May 2011 Huhne's estranged wife Vicky Pryce approached a reporter for The Mail on Sunday with a claim that Huhne had "pressurised people to take his driving licence penalty points" on his behalf in 2003. Huhne denied the allegations of perverting the course of justice. Essex Police said: "We take allegations such as this one extremely seriously and will take action where necessary."[96]

Essex Police sent initial papers to the Crown Prosecution Service regarding the allegations and Huhne exercised his right to remain silent in response to police questions in May. On 25 June 2011, Essex Police said that a judge at the Crown Court at Chelmsford had granted them a court order to take possession of a recording from The Sunday Times in which the ex-couple apparently discussed the case.[97] It then emerged that Huhne had again been interviewed by police concerning the allegations, and on 28 July the police handed the file to prosecutors.[98][99][100] On 17 August 2011, the Crown Prosecution Service remitted the matter to Essex Police with a direction to investigate the matter further.[101] On 25 August 2011, Essex Police re-submitted the case to the CPS. A decision on whether criminal proceedings would be instituted for the alleged offence was expected to be made by the end of September 2011.[102][103]

On 28 October 2011, the Crown Prosecution Service again referred the matter to Essex Police for further investigation, having completed a "full review" of the allegations.[104] At a private hearing in October 2011, a judge in the Crown Court at Chelmsford ordered The Sunday Times to produce email messages between Pryce and the newspaper's political editor in relation to the police investigation. On 22 November, the Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer announced that the CPS was "very close" to deciding whether to prosecute.[105] The reason for the delay was that The Sunday Times was seeking judicial review of the court order the CPS had obtained. Starmer stated "we do not shy away from prosecuting politicians".[106] The judicial review hearing was scheduled for 20 January 2012. On that date The Sunday Times dropped its application for judicial review and said that it would comply with the court order for delivery of the documents.[107]

The emails were delivered to Essex Police, who said there was no need to conduct further interviews.[108]

Starmer created some controversy about the prospect of a fair trial by personally announcing on television on 3 February 2012 that both Huhne and Pryce had been charged with perverting the course of justice. Huhne thereupon resigned from the Cabinet.[109] As a result of his resignation, and in accordance with the rules governing severance payments to resigning ministers, Huhne received a tax-free payment of £17,000.[110] Huhne and Pryce appeared before Mr Justice Saunders in the Crown Court at Southwark on 2 March 2012. A trial was timetabled for early October 2012, with the possibility that the case might start earlier. Neither defendant entered a plea and both were granted unconditional bail.[111] At a plea and case management hearing on 1 June 2012, Huhne announced his intention to apply to the court to have the charge dismissed. Pryce entered a plea of not guilty, and indicated a defence at trial of marital coercion: that is, that her then husband coerced her into taking his penalty points and that she committed the crime in his presence. On 5 October 2012, the trial was adjourned until 14 January 2013 for "legal reasons" which were not disclosed. On 28 January 2013, Huhne was arraigned and pleaded "not guilty" to the indictment. A new trial date was set for 4 February 2013.[112]

On 4 February Huhne pleaded guilty on re-arraignment, and was appointed to the Chiltern Hundreds, the formal means of resigning his seat in Parliament. This triggered a by-election. He was remanded on unconditional bail until sentencing at a date to be notified.[113]

In February 2013, at the trial of Vicky Pryce it was revealed that Constance Briscoe had been arrested in relation to statements she had made to police that she had not had any involvement with the leaking of the driving licence points-swapping story. Briscoe was arrested on 6 October 2012. She was later convicted, sentenced to 16 months in prison and disbarred.[114][115][116] Prosecutor Andrew Edis told the jury that Briscoe and Pryce had "started it together by approaching a man called Andrew Alderson (a journalist working for the Mail on Sunday)", falsely claiming that one of Huhne's aides, Jo White, took points for him in 2003. Edis stated that Briscoe was a neighbour and friend of Pryce and that the "two of them appear to have cooked up a plan" to bring about Huhne's downfall.[115][116]

On 11 March 2013, Huhne and Pryce were each sentenced to eight months' imprisonment.[78] Huhne started serving his sentence in HM Prison Wandsworth but was reportedly transferred to HM Prison Leyhill in Gloucestershire.[117] On the day after sentencing, David Burrowes MP wrote to the Attorney-General Dominic Grieve, asking him to exercise his power of referral to the Court of Appeal, as in Burrowes's view the sentences were too lenient. Grieve had until 8 April – 28 days after the original sentence – to decide whether to refer the case to the Court of Appeal, which has the power to increase sentences.[118]

Huhne and his ex-wife were released on 13 May 2013, having both served two months of their eight-month sentences.[119] Following their release, both were subject to electronic tagging.[120] Huhne was required to stay in his home between 7 pm and 7 am.[121] Huhne described prison as "a humbling and sobering experience".[122]

Writings edit

Books edit

  • Harold Lever and Christopher Huhne, Debt and Danger: The World Financial Crisis (Penguin, London, 1986).
  • Christopher Huhne, Real World Economics: Essays on Imperfect Markets And Fallible Governments (Penguin, London, 1991).
  • Michael Emerson and Christopher Huhne (with a foreword by Jacques Delors), The ECU Report: The Single European Currency, and What it Means for You (Pan Books, London, 1991).
  • James Forder and Christopher Huhne, Both Sides of the Coin: The Arguments For and Against the Euro and European Monetary Union (Profile Books, London, 1998).

Book chapters edit

  • "Brussels and the European Economy" in Graham Watson and Joanna Hazelwood (eds), To the Power of Ten: Essays by the UK Liberal Democrats in Parliament (Centre for Reform, London, 2000).
  • "Progressive Economics: Trust the People" in Neal Lawson and Neil Sherlock (eds), The Progressive Century: The Future of the Centre-Left in Britain (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2001).
  • "Global Governance, Legitimacy and Renewal" in Paul Marshall and David Laws (eds), The Orange Book (Profile Books, London, 2004).
  • "Globalisation" in Stephen Barber (ed.), The City in Europe and the World (European Research Forum at London Metropolitan University, London, 2006).
  • "The Economy and Climate Change" in Duncan Brack, Richard Grayson and David Howarth (eds), Reinventing the State: Social Liberalism for the 21st Century (Politico's, London, 2007).
  • "The Case for Localism: The Liberal Narrative" in Duncan Brack, Richard Grayson and David Howarth (eds), Reinventing the State: Social Liberalism for the 21st Century (Politico's, London, 2007).
  • "Green Growth" in Duncan Brack, Paul Burall, Neil Stockley and Mike Tuffrey (eds), The Green Book: New Directions for Liberals in Government (Politico's, London, 2013).
  • "Going Green Has to Be Fair" in Duncan Brack, Paul Burall, Neil Stockley and Mike Tuffrey (eds), The Green Book: New Directions for Liberals in Government (Politico's, London, 2013).

Pamphlets edit

Further reading edit

  • Adam Boulton and Joey Jones, Hung Together: The 2010 Election and the Coalition Government (Simon and Schuster, London, 2010).
  • Chris Bowers, Nick Clegg: The Biography (Biteback, London, 2011).
  • Matthew d'Ancona, In It Together: The Inside Story of the Coalition Government (Viking, London, 2013).
  • Jasper Gerard, The Clegg Coup: Britain's First Coalition Government Since Lloyd George (Gibson Square, London, 2011).
  • Robert Hazell and Ben Yong, Politics of Coalition: How the Conservative-Liberal Democrat Government Works (Hart, London, 2012).
  • Greg Hurst, Charles Kennedy: A Tragic Flaw (Politico's, London, 2006).
  • David Laws, 22 Days in May (Biteback, London, 2010).
  • ______________, Coalition: The Inside Story of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition Government (Biteback, London, 2016).
  • ______________, Coalition Diaries, 2012-2015 (Biteback, London, 2017).
  • Simon Lee and Matt Beech (eds), The Cameron-Clegg Government: Coalition Politics in the Age of Austerity (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2011).
  • Anthony Seldon and Mike Finn (eds), The Coalition Effect, 2010-2015 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2015).
  • Ann Treneman, Dave & Nick: The Year of the Honeymoon (Robson, London, 2011).
  • Rob Wilson, 5 Days to Power: The Journey to Coalition Britain (Biteback, London, 2010).
  • __________, The Eye of the Storm: The View from the Centre of a Political Scandal (Biteback, London, 2014).

See also edit

  • Jonathan Aitken – Conservative politician imprisoned for perjury
  • Jeffrey Archer – Conservative politician also imprisoned for perjury
  • Marcus Einfeld - Australian judge also convicted of perverting the course of justice over a speeding case

References edit

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External links edit

European Parliament
New constituency Member of the European Parliament
for South East England

1999–2005
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Eastleigh

20052013
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change
2010–2012
Succeeded by

chris, huhne, christopher, murray, paul, huhne, born, july, 1954, british, energy, climate, change, consultant, former, journalist, business, economist, politician, liberal, democrat, member, parliament, eastleigh, from, 2005, 2013, secretary, state, energy, c. Christopher Murray Paul Huhne born 2 July 1954 is a British energy and climate change consultant and former journalist business economist and politician who was the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Eastleigh from 2005 to 2013 and the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change from 2010 to 2012 2 3 4 He is currently chair of the UK green gas association the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association and senior adviser to the World Biogas Association He also advises companies on his particular interest in renewable technologies that can provide back up for intermittent energy sources like wind and solar Chris HuhneHuhne in 2011Secretary of State for Energy and Climate ChangeIn office 12 May 2010 3 February 2012Prime MinisterDavid CameronPreceded byEd MilibandSucceeded byEd DaveyLiberal Democrat frontbench positionsLiberal Democrat Home Affairs spokespersonIn office 20 December 2007 12 May 2010LeaderNick CleggPreceded byNick CleggSucceeded byLynne Featherstone 2015 Liberal Democrat Environment Food and Rural Affairs SpokesmanIn office 3 March 2006 19 December 2007LeaderMenzies CampbellVince Cable Acting Preceded byNorman BakerSucceeded bySteve WebbLiberal Democrat Deputy Treasury SpokesmanIn office 16 May 2005 3 March 2006LeaderCharles KennedyPreceded byDavid LawsSucceeded byJulia GoldsworthyMember of Parliamentfor EastleighIn office 5 May 2005 5 February 2013Preceded byDavid ChidgeySucceeded byMike ThorntonMember of the European Parliamentfor South East EnglandIn office 10 June 1999 12 May 2005Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded bySharon BowlesPersonal detailsBornChristopher Murray Paul Huhne 1954 07 02 2 July 1954 age 69 London EnglandPolitical partyLabour Party before 1981 Social Democratic Party 1981 1988 Liberal Democrats 1988 2013 1 Independent since 2013 SpouseVicky Pryce m 1984 div 2011 wbr Domestic partnerCarina Trimingham 2010 present Children3Alma materMagdalen College Oxford He formerly wrote weekly columns for The Guardian Independent on Sunday and Evening Standard From 1994 to 1999 he built up a business advising on the creditworthiness of countries which is now the sovereign ratings division of one of the three large global ratings agencies Fitch Ratings Huhne had twice stood unsuccessfully for election as Leader of the Liberal Democrats in 2006 he came second to Sir Menzies Campbell and in 2007 he narrowly lost to Nick Clegg 5 6 His political career ended with resignation in February 2013 when he was alongside his ex wife convicted of perverting the course of justice in relation to speeding offences He ultimately pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight months in prison serving nine weeks before being released in May 2013 Huhne was reported in December 2023 to have settled with News Corporation Rupert Murdoch s newspaper holding company that owned the main newspapers responsible for bringing him down the Sun News of the World and Sunday Times over illegal information gathering including phone hacking Huhne received six figure damages and his legal costs Huhne said that News targeted him because he had called for a reopening of the police investigation into phone hacking that led to the conviction of Andy Coulson editor of the News of the World and a judicial inquiry eventually the Leveson Inquiry 7 Huhne was joined by other former Liberal Democrat ministers including Vince Cable and Norman Lamb and claimed that News had not hacked him just for tabloid titillation but as an attempt to remove him as a critic and to spy on the Government in its intentions on whether to refer Murdoch s Sky bid to the competition authorities Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education and upbringing 1 2 Career before Parliament 1 3 Parliamentary candidate 2 Member of European Parliament 1999 2005 3 Member of Parliament 3 1 Treasury spokesman 3 2 2006 leadership contest 3 3 Environment spokesman 3 4 2007 leadership contest 3 4 1 Election conduct 3 5 Home Affairs spokesman 3 5 1 Support for scientific advisor 3 5 2 Expenses claims 4 Coalition Government 2010 2012 4 1 Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change 4 1 1 Position on nuclear energy 4 1 2 Cancellation of Sheffield Forgemasters loan 4 1 3 Cancun climate change conference 4 1 4 Support for AV referendum campaign 4 1 5 Resignation 5 Career since Parliament 6 Depictions 7 Personal life 7 1 Personal interests 7 2 Publications and writing interests 8 Criminal conviction 9 Writings 9 1 Books 9 2 Book chapters 9 3 Pamphlets 10 Further reading 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEarly life editEducation and upbringing edit Huhne was born in west London to businessman Peter Paul Huhne and actress Ann Murray 8 He was educated at Westminster School 9 He attended Magdalen College Oxford where he was a Demy and editor of Isis 10 He also attended the Sorbonne Paris 11 12 At Oxford Huhne edited the student magazine Isis served on the executive of the Oxford University Labour Club and achieved a first class degree in Philosophy Politics and Economics PPE 11 13 He was active in student politics supporting the Labour Party 11 Career before Parliament edit Huhne was Brussels correspondent of The Economist from 1977 to 1980 and then economics editor leader writer and columnist for The Guardian 14 and economics editor assistant editor and columnist for The Independent on Sunday He was the business editor of The Independent and The Independent on Sunday during its investigations into Robert Maxwell s fraud on the Mirror group pension fund He started as an undercover freelance reporter in India during Indira Gandhi s emergency when western journalists had been expelled He also worked for the Liverpool Echo and The Economist as its Brussels correspondent between 1977 and 1980 He won both the junior and senior Wincott awards for financial journalist of the year in 1980 and 1989 respectively 15 Along with his work in newspapers and magazines he co wrote the book Debt amp Danger The World Financial Crisis Penguin 1985 with Harold Lever and wrote Real World Economics Penguin 1990 14 Before embarking on his political career he started a company in the City He told The Independent in 2008 I don t claim that I m in other than a very happy position compared with most people because having spent a bit of time in the City before I was elected being able to make a bit of money while I was there I have a cushion 16 He started a company called IBCA Sovereign Ratings in 1994 that tried to measure the risks of investing in different countries 16 In 1997 he became group managing director of Fitch IBCA and from 1999 to 2003 was vice chairman of Fitch Ratings 16 Parliamentary candidate edit Huhne contested the 1983 general election as a Parliamentary candidate for the SDP Liberal Alliance in Reading East coming second 17 and in the 1987 general election he was the SDP Liberal Alliance candidate in the Oxford West and Abingdon seat 17 a seat that would be won ten years later by Liberal Democrat candidate Evan Harris 18 Member of European Parliament 1999 2005 editIn June 1999 Huhne was elected as a member of the European Parliament for South East England 19 The Liberal Democrats came third with a total of 228 136 votes behind the Conservatives and Labour 19 The proportion of votes received meant that the party was able to send the top two list candidates to the European Parliament Emma Nicholson the top list candidate and Chris Huhne second on the list 19 During the 2004 European Parliament elections Huhne was re elected along with Emma Nicholson with the party having received 338 342 votes 15 of the total vote 20 In 2005 Huhne stood for election to the United Kingdom parliament representing the seat of Eastleigh in Hampshire After he was elected as a Member of the House of Commons on 5 May 2005 21 Sharon Bowles the candidate third on the Liberal Democrat list replaced Huhne as representative for the South East of England 22 During his time in the European Parliament Huhne was the only Liberal Democrat MEP in a ranking by The Economist of the three highest profile UK MEPs the others being Glenys Kinnock and Caroline Lucas He was a member of the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee concerned with economic and financial policy including regulation of the financial sector He was economic spokesman for the pan European Liberal group in the European Parliament and was responsible for introducing sunset clauses time limits on powers into European Union law for the first time for radically amending Commission proposals on financial services and for opening up the European Central Bank to greater scrutiny In addition to his European Parliament responsibilities he was also active in the development of Liberal Democrat policy as chairman of four policy groups broadcasting and the media globalisation the introduction of the euro and the reform of public services On public services he argued that money was a necessary condition of improvement but that the key was decentralisation and democratic control local voters needed to be able to hold local decision takers to account Member of Parliament editHuhne was first elected to represent Eastleigh at the general election on 5 May 2005 21 a constituency within the area for which he was previously the Member of the European Parliament David Chidgey the previous MP for the constituency was also a Liberal Democrat who won his seat in what was historically a Conservative area in a by election in 1994 following the death of Stephen Milligan 23 The result in 2005 was close with Huhne winning with a majority of 568 over Conservative rival Conor Burns 21 In the 2010 general election Huhne retained his seat with an increased majority of 3 864 over Conservative Maria Hutchings 21 He was appointed as Steward and Bailiff of the Chiltern Hundreds on 5 February 2013 which vacated his seat and thus ended his tenure as Member of Parliament for Eastleigh In accepting this office he became the first official Liberal or Liberal Democrat MP to resign a parliamentary seat since 1941 Treasury spokesman edit Following his election to the House of Commons then Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy made Huhne the party s shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury 17 In this role Huhne led the party s debate on the 2005 Finance Bill suggesting that amendments should be made to stop a pensions loophole which would have allowed a 40 discount on property and other investments In the pre budget report for 2006 the Chancellor conceded the change 17 2006 leadership contest edit Main article 2006 Liberal Democrats leadership election Huhne stood against Sir Menzies Campbell and Simon Hughes for the Liberal Democrat leadership following Charles Kennedy s resignation formally launching his campaign on 13 January 2006 Huhne was able to carve out a distinctive position on the issue of green taxation He argued for a radical expansion of taxes on pollution allowing for reductions in the income tax rate on the lowest paid 24 This theme endeared Huhne to environmentalists and market liberals alike allowing him to pick up supporters as the campaign went on He also argued for a repeal of elements of the Labour government s anti terrorism legislation which many felt had undermined British civil liberties and for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq within a year He described himself as a social liberal 25 Although the majority of Liberal Democrat MPs declared their support for Menzies Campbell Huhne did receive endorsements from some party notables including Lord Maclennan and William Rodgers Amongst the media The Economist and The Independent supported his leadership bid He was backed from early on by a number of bloggers and gained much momentum from an internet campaign 26 In the final vote Huhne finished runner up tallying 21 628 votes to Menzies Campbell s 29 697 27 Campbell appointed him as the Liberal Democrat s environment spokesman in the subsequent frontbench reshuffle in order for Huhne to develop a viable programme to expand on his green campaign themes 28 During the election campaign a news story in The Independent on 27 February 2006 29 reported that an unsigned document entitled Chris Huhne s Hypocritical Personal Share Portfolio was being circulated at Lib Dem leadership election meetings The document alleged that Huhne had invested in companies that the document described as unethical 29 The document stated Chris Huhne is campaigning for the Lib Dem leadership on a green carbon neutral platform and further advocates increasing tax for the wealthy which would include himself However his shareholdings include or have included mining companies oil companies and tax shelters 29 Environment spokesman edit The intellectual energy surrounding Huhne s leadership campaign did much to inform the Liberal Democrats recent political agenda His proposals for realigning green taxes and income tax the green tax switch were at the heart of the fiscal package endorsed at the party s September 2006 conference 30 Huhne was involved in developing his party s thoughts on climate change and the environment including a consideration of the challenges and opportunities they create for British businesses 31 He also drew attention to what he said was the divergence between the Conservative Party s environmental rhetoric and its policies 32 Huhne was one of fourteen MPs forming an all party parliamentary inquiry into antisemitism in the UK Their report criticised boycotts of Israeli academics as an assault on academic freedom and intellectual exchange and accused some left wing activists and Muslim extremists of using criticism of Israel as a pretext for spreading hatred against British Jews 33 Huhne is however a critic of Israeli government policy in the Middle East and strongly supports the creation of a separate Palestinian state He described the Israeli response in Lebanon to Hezbollah s rocket attacks as disproportionate and counter productive arguing that a strong Lebanese state is in Israel s long term interest In March 2007 it was falsely reported that he had written to executives at Channel 4 to try and stop their showing The Great Global Warming Swindle 34 In an e mail exchange with Iain Dale Huhne stated that he only wrote to ask for the channel s comments 35 and The Daily Telegraph later ran a correction and apologised for the misunderstanding saying it was happy to accept that Mr Huhne s letter was not an attempt to prevent the film being shown or suppress debate on the issue 36 After Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg announced his intention during the 2007 party conference to stand for the leadership should Menzies Campbell retire Chris Huhne when asked about his leadership ambitions said that there was no vacancy and it would be premature to even talk about the position of there being a vacancy 37 2007 leadership contest edit Main article 2007 Liberal Democrats leadership election Following Sir Menzies Campbell s resignation on 15 October 2007 Huhne was considered to be one of the strongest contenders for the leadership of the Liberal Democrats 38 On 17 October he became the first member of the party to announce his candidacy saying I ve decided to give it a go and declaring his vision of a fairer and greener society 38 Huhne said that he wanted the party to be committed to the idea that everybody s individual worth and chance is given its full possibility 38 On 28 October 2007 Huhne announced that he had secured the support of 10 of his 62 parliamentary colleagues for his formal nomination His rival Nick Clegg announced the support of 33 MPs 39 Huhne also claimed backing from at least twelve peers four MSPs and three Welsh Assembly members After former Lib Dem leader Lord Ashdown announced his support for Clegg a previous Liberal leader Lord Steel declared his support for Huhne based in part on Huhne s position on the Trident nuclear programme 40 In the last week of campaigning his team were bullish about his chances predicting a win 41 In the final count the party membership chose his rival Nick Clegg by a narrow margin of 511 votes out of more than 41 000 counted 42 43 About 1 300 postal votes were caught up in the Christmas post and missed the election deadline An unofficial check of the late papers showed Huhne had enough votes among them to hand him victory Huhne stood by the result saying Nick Clegg won fair and square on the rules counting the ballot papers that arrived in by the deadline There is no question of any re run 6 Following the leadership election Clegg chose Huhne to be the party s Home Affairs Spokesman 44 Election conduct edit During the leadership election Nick Clegg registered a formal complaint about Huhne s conduct to Chris Rennard the party s Chief Whip and returning officer 45 Clegg stated that his rival was indulging in the politics of innuendo mounting false challenges and running a campaign that is handing political ammunition to the party s political opponents 46 Huhne and Clegg were debating on live television on BBC s The Politics Show on Sunday 18 November 2007 when presenter Jon Sopel produced a briefing document that had been specially delivered to the show s production team by the Huhne campaign team on the preceding Friday 47 The document excoriated Clegg on a number of policy and political issues and was titled Calamity Clegg 48 When challenged about the document Huhne claimed that he had no knowledge of it and said he did not agree with the document title but agreed with the points within it 49 Asked how it was possible that he had no knowledge of such a major document sent to the producer of the show he was due to appear on Huhne replied It s quite impossible to check everything that goes out of the office But I can assure you that s not had my authorization 50 After Clegg complained about what he called dirty tricks and other senior party members condemned the Huhne campaign attack Huhne s campaign manager Anna Werrin claimed that the title of the memo was just the product of an over zealous researcher and had not been seen or approved by Huhne or any senior campaign officials prior to release The document title had not been approved before the document was sent out and neither Chris nor I were aware of it 51 Speaking to the Independent on 21 November 2007 Huhne claimed Unfortunately it was a mixture of responsibilities It was an over zealous young researcher who was responsible for drawing up the document The researcher was not on his staff he said denying that as a former journalist he might have been expected to read what was put out in his name before it was issued 52 Home Affairs spokesman edit nbsp David Cameron and Nick Clegg outside the Houses of Parliament with Huhne in the background In October 2008 as Liberal Democrat Home Affairs spokesperson Huhne led the Liberal Democrat response to the government s announcement of plans to expand the capacity to collect records of people using electronic communications The Home Secretary s announcement was in response to warnings by police and the security services that the growing fragmentation and complexity of communications was hindering their tackling of terrorism and organised criminality But Huhne disagreed with the government s response to the police and security services saying The Government s Orwellian plans for a vast database of our private communications are deeply worrying I hope that this consultation is not just a sham exercise to soft soap an unsuspecting public 53 In January 2009 Huhne was credited with uncovering an instance of data loss of government information caused by a courier company losing a computer disc containing bank details of up to 2 000 public servants working for the British Council Huhne blamed the Foreign Secretary David Miliband and the government for the courier company s loss and said that the incident was an example of why the UK should not have identity cards This is another instance in a long line of slapdash data protection by government departments If Whitehall cannot look after its own data records it should not be trusted with the personal information of every citizen as it wants with the identity card scheme 54 On 6 November 2007 Huhne made remarks about the Speaker of the House of Commons on the BBC television programme Newsnight in which he claimed that the Speaker Michael Martin had fallen asleep during a speech by the Prime Minister Gordon Brown The Speaker unfortunately fell asleep during Gordon Brown s speech I m not sure I m allowed to say that but he reacted in an entirely understandable way to what was not the most riveting of parliamentary occasions 55 After the remarks were repeated in several publications Huhne made a public apology to the Speaker in the House of Commons on 8 November in which he withdrew his prior comments It was wrong of me to draw the Chair into a matter of political dispute I hope you will accept I intended no personal offence and fully withdraw my comments 56 Support for scientific advisor edit Huhne was an avid supporter of Professor David Nutt after he was dismissed by Home Secretary Alan Johnson as chairman of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs ACMD in November 2009 Nutt had criticised the government s decision to reclassify cannabis as a Class B drug rather than keeping it as a class C 57 Huhne said the decision to sack Nutt was disgraceful and commented what is the point of having independent scientific advice if as soon as you get some advice that you don t like you sack the person who has given it to you Attacking the government he said that if they did not want to take expert scientific advice they might as well have a committee of tabloid newspaper editors to advise on drugs policy 58 Cannabis had been re classified as a class C drug in 2004 by then Home Secretary David Blunkett only for Jacqui Smith to reverse the ruling in 2008 a decision taken despite official advisers recommending against it 58 Expenses claims edit As part of The Daily Telegraph investigation into expense claims by MPs Huhne was reported to have claimed for various items including groceries fluffy dusters and a trouser press In 2006 he claimed 5 066 for painting work on his garden fences and chairs 59 He collected 119 for a Corby trouser press from John Lewis but later said he would repay the cost in order to avoid controversy He later claimed on a live Channel 4 news programme that he needed the trouser press to look smart for work 60 Huhne s office running costs during the 2007 2008 financial year were the 206th highest out of 645 his second home claims were 580th highest or 65th cheapest out of 645 and his total expense claims were below average ranking 418th most expensive 61 Huhne was one of sixteen ministers whose assets were held in a blind trust 62 Coalition Government 2010 2012 editFollowing the 2010 general election Huhne became a member of the Liberal Democrats key negotiating team alongside Danny Alexander David Laws and Andrew Stunell that brokered the agreement to go into a governing coalition with the Conservatives 63 Following the negotiations and the formation of a full coalition Huhne was appointed Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change the tenth most senior minister in the new government 4 There had been some speculation that Huhne might be appointed as Home Secretary as he had been the Liberal Democrat spokesman for Home Affairs in the preceding three years although this post went to the Conservative Theresa May He was appointed as a Privy Counsellor on 13 May 2010 64 Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change edit A vocal environmentalist Huhne accepted the role of Secretary of State with the stated intention of making the nation more ecologically conscious Among his first actions was launching National Wind Week by speaking at an event in London s Leicester Square on 15 June 2010 65 66 Underscoring his personal commitment to wind power Huhne erected an 8 foot wind turbine at his constituency home in Eastleigh 67 Position on nuclear energy edit In government Huhne maintained a flexible approach on the subject of nuclear energy advocating the three pronged portfolio approach to energy a commitment to nuclear energy the development of more renewable energy such as wind and sea power and new carbon capture technology to mitigate the damaging environmental effects of fossil fuel fired power plants and industrial facilities In an interview with The Observer in March 2011 following the Fukushima disaster in Japan Huhne stated that there are a lot of issues outside of the realm of nuclear safety which we will have to assess One is what the economics of nuclear power post Fukushima will be if there is an increase in the cost in capital to nuclear operators 68 This represents an evolution of his approach to the nuclear issue 68 In 2007 Huhne was quoted as saying Nuclear is a tried tested and failed technology and the government must stop putting time effort and subsidies into this outdated industry 68 Cancellation of Sheffield Forgemasters loan edit In June 2010 Huhne supported the cancellation by the Business Department of an 80 million loan to Sheffield Forgemasters which had been pledged by the preceding Labour government to build power plant components He was criticised by Labour Shadow energy secretary Ed Miliband who said that the money for the loan had been set aside and would have resulted in at least 110 million returning to the Exchequer On 1 July 2010 Huhne replied to Miliband saying The loan to Sheffield Forgemasters was not a commercial loan If it was a commercial loan it would have been arranged through the banks and not by the government It was precisely because of the public subsidy element and the fact that the public subsidy element was not affordable that the government decided not to proceed with it 69 The cancellation of the loan was one of a number of projects agreed by the previous Labour government cancelled in an announcement to the House of Commons on 17 June 2010 70 71 72 Cancun climate change conference edit On 9 December 2010 Huhne represented the United Kingdom at the 2010 United Nations Climate Change Conference The gathering at which over 190 countries were represented announced a deal to curb climate change which Prime Minister David Cameron described as a very significant step forward 73 The agreement struck in Mexico included a recognition that deeper cuts in carbon emissions were needed and that a fund should be set up to help developing countries reduce their carbon emissions 73 Huhne described the deal as a serious package of measures but acknowledged that there was still more work to do prior to the next climate change meeting in Durban South Africa the following year 73 Following the conference David Cameron said that his government would be the greenest ever and that Britain would meet its international obligations regarding climate change 73 Support for AV referendum campaign editHuhne was an enthusiastic supporter of the AV campaign Alternative Vote Referendum and attacked anti AV campaigners such as his cabinet colleague Conservative Party chairman Baroness Warsi If Baroness Warsi thinks that AV will benefit fascism she has to explain why the BNP wants to stick with what we have and Operation Black Vote supports AV The BNP know the present system is their only chance of election This is another example of the increasingly Goebbels like campaign from the anti AV people for whom no lie is too idiotic given the truth is so unpalatable to them AV makes lazy MPs work harder and reach out beyond their tribe It is what Britain needs to clean up politics 74 Resignation edit On 3 February 2012 Huhne resigned from the Cabinet when he was charged with perverting the course of justice over a 2003 speeding case His wife at the time Vicky Pryce had falsely claimed that she was driving the car and accepted the licence penalty points on his behalf so that he could avoid being banned from driving Huhne denied the charge until the trial began on 4 February 2013 when he changed his plea to guilty resigned as a member of Parliament and left the Privy Council 75 76 77 He and Pryce were sentenced at Southwark Crown Court on 11 March to eight months in prison for perverting the course of justice 78 He served nine weeks 79 of this sentence at HMP Leyhill in Gloucestershire before he was released 80 On 5 February 2013 Huhne resigned as an MP following his plea of guilty to perverting the course of justice In a subsequent article for the Guardian during his second period of writing a weekly column for the paper he said that he believed he was targeted by Rupert Murdoch s News Group newspapers because of the support he had given while Shadow Home Secretary for the re opening of the police investigation into phone hacking 77 81 82 The subsequent police investigation led to the prosecution and conviction of Andy Coulson formerly editor of the News of the World Career since Parliament editChris Huhne has been an adviser and consultant on energy and climate change since his resignation from parliament In August 2013 Huhne was appointed European Chairman of Zilkha Biomass Energy 83 The firm makes wood chip pellets in the United States Huhne was also a consultant for Nationwide Energy Services an energy saving company Until 2014 Huhne was a weekly columnist for The Guardian 84 He has also provided consultancy services for start ups in his particular specialism of despatchable renewables like biogas and biomass From 2014 to 2018 Huhne was the senior adviser for the trade body that represents renewable natural gas biogas plants in the UK the Anaerobic Digestion amp Bioresources Association ADBA He became chair of ADBA in June 2022 and is also senior adviser to the World Biogas Association 85 86 Depictions editIn February 2010 Huhne was played by Alan Parnaby in the television film On Expenses and in 2015 by Rob Vowles in television film Coalition Personal life editHuhne married Greek born economist Vicky Pryce formerly Chief Economist in the Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform in 1984 shortly after she divorced her first husband with whom she had two daughters 87 88 Huhne and Pryce have three children together 89 In a video statement made during the 2007 Liberal Democrats leadership election campaign Huhne described his philosophy about family life Relationships including particularly family relationships are actually the most important things in making people happy and fulfilled 90 Talking about his wife to The Independent in 2008 he stated I also have a very hard working and extremely intelligent wife who manages to earn far more than I do 16 In June 2010 Huhne admitted that he had been involved in a relationship with Carina Trimingham and stated that he had decided to leave his wife 91 to be with her Huhne s wife and children were unaware of his behaviour and plans Within one week of Huhne s declaration Pryce filed for divorce on the grounds of Huhne s admitted adultery Trimingham had worked on Huhne s campaigns for the Liberal Democrat leadership in 2006 and 2007 and was a paid staff member on his 2010 general election campaign She was press officer for Brian Paddick during the 2008 Mayor of London election and was campaigns director at the Electoral Reform Society Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude said What goes on in people s private lives is a subject that fascinates the tabloid press but is irrelevant to the job they are trying to do 92 Huhne and Pryce divorced in January 2011 93 Personal interests edit Apart from climate change Electoral reform is among the personal interests that Huhne cites on his biography on the official Liberal Democrats website He describes his other interests as European single currency economics Third World debt and development Europe 94 Huhne is or was a member of the European Movement Green Lib Dems Association of Liberal Democrat Trade Unionists and the National Union of Journalists Publications and writing interests edit Prior to his careers as a financial journalist analyst and politician Huhne wrote four books that are mainly on the themes of either Third World debt and development or European integration His latest book is entitled Both Sides of the Coin 1999 with James Forder in which he argues the case for British membership in the euro His first was Debt and Danger Penguin Special 1985 an analysis of the 1984 Third World debt crisis co written with Lord Lever of Manchester the former Labour cabinet minister He was a contributor to The Orange Book 2004 in which he advocates reforms to the United Nations and international governance Huhne was critical of the most controversial article in the Orange Book in which David Laws proposed an insurance based National Health Service He did not take part in the successor volume Britain after Blair and has voiced dismay at the way its predecessor was presented as a break with the party s social liberal traditions More recently he contributed to the book The City in Europe and the World 2005 and two articles to Reinventing the State 2007 edited by Duncan Brack Richard Grayson and David Howarth These cover the case for localism in which Huhne argues that there is no contradiction between localism and equality and the need for environmental policy to tackle climate change Huhne has also written articles for Financial Times The Guardian The Independent and New Statesman 95 While an MEP he wrote a weekly column for the London Evening Standard on European matters Criminal conviction editMain article R v Huhne In May 2011 Huhne s estranged wife Vicky Pryce approached a reporter for The Mail on Sunday with a claim that Huhne had pressurised people to take his driving licence penalty points on his behalf in 2003 Huhne denied the allegations of perverting the course of justice Essex Police said We take allegations such as this one extremely seriously and will take action where necessary 96 Essex Police sent initial papers to the Crown Prosecution Service regarding the allegations and Huhne exercised his right to remain silent in response to police questions in May On 25 June 2011 Essex Police said that a judge at the Crown Court at Chelmsford had granted them a court order to take possession of a recording from The Sunday Times in which the ex couple apparently discussed the case 97 It then emerged that Huhne had again been interviewed by police concerning the allegations and on 28 July the police handed the file to prosecutors 98 99 100 On 17 August 2011 the Crown Prosecution Service remitted the matter to Essex Police with a direction to investigate the matter further 101 On 25 August 2011 Essex Police re submitted the case to the CPS A decision on whether criminal proceedings would be instituted for the alleged offence was expected to be made by the end of September 2011 102 103 On 28 October 2011 the Crown Prosecution Service again referred the matter to Essex Police for further investigation having completed a full review of the allegations 104 At a private hearing in October 2011 a judge in the Crown Court at Chelmsford ordered The Sunday Times to produce email messages between Pryce and the newspaper s political editor in relation to the police investigation On 22 November the Director of Public Prosecutions Keir Starmer announced that the CPS was very close to deciding whether to prosecute 105 The reason for the delay was that The Sunday Times was seeking judicial review of the court order the CPS had obtained Starmer stated we do not shy away from prosecuting politicians 106 The judicial review hearing was scheduled for 20 January 2012 On that date The Sunday Times dropped its application for judicial review and said that it would comply with the court order for delivery of the documents 107 The emails were delivered to Essex Police who said there was no need to conduct further interviews 108 Starmer created some controversy about the prospect of a fair trial by personally announcing on television on 3 February 2012 that both Huhne and Pryce had been charged with perverting the course of justice Huhne thereupon resigned from the Cabinet 109 As a result of his resignation and in accordance with the rules governing severance payments to resigning ministers Huhne received a tax free payment of 17 000 110 Huhne and Pryce appeared before Mr Justice Saunders in the Crown Court at Southwark on 2 March 2012 A trial was timetabled for early October 2012 with the possibility that the case might start earlier Neither defendant entered a plea and both were granted unconditional bail 111 At a plea and case management hearing on 1 June 2012 Huhne announced his intention to apply to the court to have the charge dismissed Pryce entered a plea of not guilty and indicated a defence at trial of marital coercion that is that her then husband coerced her into taking his penalty points and that she committed the crime in his presence On 5 October 2012 the trial was adjourned until 14 January 2013 for legal reasons which were not disclosed On 28 January 2013 Huhne was arraigned and pleaded not guilty to the indictment A new trial date was set for 4 February 2013 112 On 4 February Huhne pleaded guilty on re arraignment and was appointed to the Chiltern Hundreds the formal means of resigning his seat in Parliament This triggered a by election He was remanded on unconditional bail until sentencing at a date to be notified 113 In February 2013 at the trial of Vicky Pryce it was revealed that Constance Briscoe had been arrested in relation to statements she had made to police that she had not had any involvement with the leaking of the driving licence points swapping story Briscoe was arrested on 6 October 2012 She was later convicted sentenced to 16 months in prison and disbarred 114 115 116 Prosecutor Andrew Edis told the jury that Briscoe and Pryce had started it together by approaching a man called Andrew Alderson a journalist working for the Mail on Sunday falsely claiming that one of Huhne s aides Jo White took points for him in 2003 Edis stated that Briscoe was a neighbour and friend of Pryce and that the two of them appear to have cooked up a plan to bring about Huhne s downfall 115 116 On 11 March 2013 Huhne and Pryce were each sentenced to eight months imprisonment 78 Huhne started serving his sentence in HM Prison Wandsworth but was reportedly transferred to HM Prison Leyhill in Gloucestershire 117 On the day after sentencing David Burrowes MP wrote to the Attorney General Dominic Grieve asking him to exercise his power of referral to the Court of Appeal as in Burrowes s view the sentences were too lenient Grieve had until 8 April 28 days after the original sentence to decide whether to refer the case to the Court of Appeal which has the power to increase sentences 118 Huhne and his ex wife were released on 13 May 2013 having both served two months of their eight month sentences 119 Following their release both were subject to electronic tagging 120 Huhne was required to stay in his home between 7 pm and 7 am 121 Huhne described prison as a humbling and sobering experience 122 Writings editBooks edit Harold Lever and Christopher Huhne Debt and Danger The World Financial Crisis Penguin London 1986 Christopher Huhne Real World Economics Essays on Imperfect Markets And Fallible Governments Penguin London 1991 Michael Emerson and Christopher Huhne with a foreword by Jacques Delors The ECU Report The Single European Currency and What it Means for You Pan Books London 1991 James Forder and Christopher Huhne Both Sides of the Coin The Arguments For and Against the Euro and European Monetary Union Profile Books London 1998 Book chapters edit Brussels and the European Economy in Graham Watson and Joanna Hazelwood eds To the Power of Ten Essays by the UK Liberal Democrats in Parliament Centre for Reform London 2000 Progressive Economics Trust the People in Neal Lawson and Neil Sherlock eds The Progressive Century The Future of the Centre Left in Britain Palgrave Macmillan Basingstoke 2001 Global Governance Legitimacy and Renewal in Paul Marshall and David Laws eds The Orange Book Profile Books London 2004 Globalisation in Stephen Barber ed The City in Europe and the World European Research Forum at London Metropolitan University London 2006 The Economy and Climate Change in Duncan Brack Richard Grayson and David Howarth eds Reinventing the State Social Liberalism for the 21st Century Politico s London 2007 The Case for Localism The Liberal Narrative in Duncan Brack Richard Grayson and David Howarth eds Reinventing the State Social Liberalism for the 21st Century Politico s London 2007 Green Growth in Duncan Brack Paul Burall Neil Stockley and Mike Tuffrey eds The Green Book New Directions for Liberals in Government Politico s London 2013 Going Green Has to Be Fair in Duncan Brack Paul Burall Neil Stockley and Mike Tuffrey eds The Green Book New Directions for Liberals in Government Politico s London 2013 Pamphlets edit Paddy Ashdown Alan Beith Frances Cairncross Mark Goyder Dieter Helm Christopher Huhne Robert Hutchison David Marquand Nancy Seear Christopher Smallwood and Hilary Wainwright People Prosperity and Politics A LINk Conference LINk Publications Hebden Bridge 1989 Richard Layard Willem Buiter David Currie Christopher Huhne Will Hutton Peter Kenen Robert Mundell and Adair Turner The Case For The Euro Britain in Europe London 2000 Richard Layard Willem Buiter Christopher Huhne Will Hutton Peter B Kenen and Adair Turner Why Britain Should Join the Euro Britain in Europe London 2002 Charles Kennedy Edward Davey Chris Huhne Charles Secrett and Adair Turner with a foreword by Ralf Dahrendorf Funding Society Can Taxation Be Fun and Popular Report of the Liberal Summer School Guildford 2001 Centre for Reform London May 2002 Tony Robinson Theresa May Chris Huhne and Matt Carter The Future of Political Parties Tony Robinson Theresa May Chris Huhne Matt Carter in Conversation New Politics Network London 2007 Chris Huhne Climate Change The Science the Geopolitics and the Economics CentreForum London 2011 Further reading editAdam Boulton and Joey Jones Hung Together The 2010 Election and the Coalition Government Simon and Schuster London 2010 Chris Bowers Nick Clegg The Biography Biteback London 2011 Matthew d Ancona In It Together The Inside Story of the Coalition Government Viking London 2013 Jasper Gerard The Clegg Coup Britain s First Coalition Government Since Lloyd George Gibson Square London 2011 Robert Hazell and Ben Yong Politics of Coalition How the Conservative Liberal Democrat Government Works Hart London 2012 Greg Hurst Charles Kennedy A Tragic Flaw Politico s London 2006 David Laws 22 Days in May Biteback London 2010 Coalition The Inside Story of the Conservative Liberal Democrat Coalition Government Biteback London 2016 Coalition Diaries 2012 2015 Biteback London 2017 Simon Lee and Matt Beech eds The Cameron Clegg Government Coalition Politics in the Age of Austerity Palgrave Macmillan Basingstoke 2011 Anthony Seldon and Mike Finn eds The Coalition Effect 2010 2015 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2015 Ann Treneman Dave amp Nick The Year of the Honeymoon Robson London 2011 Rob Wilson 5 Days to Power The Journey to Coalition Britain Biteback London 2010 The Eye of the Storm The View from the Centre of a Political Scandal Biteback London 2014 See also edit nbsp Politics portal Jonathan Aitken Conservative politician imprisoned for perjury Jeffrey Archer Conservative politician also imprisoned for perjury Marcus Einfeld Australian judge also convicted of perverting the course of justice over a speeding caseReferences edit Chris Huhne resigns from Liberal Democrats ITV 10 March 2013 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Rayner Gordon Evans Martin 4 February 2013 Chris Huhne quits as he faces jail after pleading guilty to perverting course of justice The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 5 February 2013 subscription required Three Hundreds of Chiltern Press release Cabinet Office 5 February 2013 Archived from the original on 23 April 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2013 a b Huhne appointed as Energy and Climate Change Secretary Politics Recharge Retrieved 2 September 2010 Sir Menzies wins Lib Dem contest BBC News 2 March 2006 Retrieved 19 December 2007 a b MP Huhne stands by Lib Dem leadership election results Southern Daily Echo 7 April 2008 Boffey Daniel reporter Daniel Boffey Chief 28 October 2023 Three former senior Lib Dems sue Sun and NoW publisher over phone hacking The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 18 November 2023 Steel Peta 15 December 2010 Obituary of Ann Murray Actress and broadcaster whose credits encompass The Archers and Star Wars The Independent London Retrieved 3 February 2012 Profile Chris Huhne BBC News 2 March 2006 Retrieved 12 April 2019 Doble Anna 8 May 2010 Hung parliament who are the dealmakers Channel 4 News Retrieved 17 September 2020 a b c Cheston Paul 4 February 2013 Chris Huhne kept buying property as he awaited trial London Evening Standard Retrieved 12 April 2019 Delingpole James 3 February 2012 Huhne you d need a heart of stone not to laugh The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 5 February 2012 Profile Chris Huhne BBC News 12 March 2013 Retrieved 12 April 2019 a b Huhne C Real World Economics Penguin 1990 Main page The Wincott Foundation Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 19 June 2010 a b c d Chris Huhne Smart ruthless and very very ambitious Profiles The Independent London 14 September 2008 Retrieved 2 September 2010 a b c d New Statesman Your Democracy Chris Huhne New Statesman n d Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Evan Harris Electoral history The Guardian London n d Retrieved 3 February 2012 a b c Euros 99 South East BBC News 19 January 1999 Retrieved 3 February 2012 European Election Results 2004 BBC News 14 June 2004 Retrieved 3 February 2012 a b c d Eastleigh constituency profile The Guardian London 18 November 2011 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Sharon Bowles profile page Liberal Democrats n d Retrieved 3 February 2012 BBC Politics 97 Review of the year BBC 1997 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Matthew Tempest 13 January 2006 Huhne stands on green platform The Guardian London Retrieved 21 November 2007 You ask the questions Chris Huhne Liberal Democrat leadership contender The Independent London 22 October 2007 Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 20 December 2007 Branigan Tania 25 February 2006 Survey boosts Huhne s hopes The Guardian London Retrieved 20 December 2007 Rosenstiel Colin All member ballot results Archived from the original on 20 February 2006 Retrieved 24 April 2006 Campbell fills top Lib Dem posts BBC News 6 March 2006 Retrieved 19 November 2007 a b c Adams Guy 27 February 2006 Pandora It gets dirtier Huhne s private interests targeted The Independent London Archived from the original on 6 September 2008 Retrieved 19 November 2007 Huhne Chris 19 September 2006 Summation speech from Tax Debate Archived from the original on 12 November 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Huhne Chris 9 May 2006 Climate Change and the Challenge for Business Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Huhne Chris 27 April 2007 Blue won t be green The Guardian London Retrieved 19 November 2007 Temko Ned 3 September 2006 Critics of Israel fuelling hatred of British Jews The Observer London Retrieved 21 November 2007 Daley Janet 12 March 2007 Green lobby must not stifle the debate The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 20 March 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2007 subscription required Dale Iain 12 March 2007 Chris Huhne The Mary Whitehouse of the Climate Change debate Retrieved 21 November 2007 Chris Huhne MP a clarification The Daily Telegraph London 26 March 2007 Archived from the original on 14 October 2007 Retrieved 6 April 2007 subscription required Summers Deborah Taylor Ros 19 September 2007 Clegg admits leadership ambitions The Guardian London Retrieved 19 November 2007 a b c Huhne launches leadership battle BBC News 17 October 2007 Retrieved 19 November 2007 Branigan Tania 1 November 2007 Huhne woos the left as Lib Dem leadership nominations close The Guardian London Retrieved 19 December 2007 Clegg MPs favourite for Lib Dem leadership Wales Online 28 October 2007 Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2007 Prince Rosa 17 December 2007 Chris Huhne prepares for a surprise win The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 19 December 2007 dead link subscription required Prince Rosa 19 December 2007 Nick Clegg narrowly wins Lib Dem leadership The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 22 December 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2007 subscription required Merrick Jane 6 April 2008 Meet the real leader of the Liberal Democrats The Independent on Sunday London Clegg reveals his frontbench team BBC News 20 December 2007 Retrieved 20 December 2007 Shaikh Thair 19 November 2007 Clegg complains as Lib Dem leadership race turns ugly UK Politics UK The Independent London Retrieved 2 September 2010 Wintour Patrick 18 November 2007 Lib Dem leadership contest turns nasty in TV studio clash The Guardian London Retrieved 22 September 2010 Lib Dem sorry for calamity slur BBC News 18 November 2007 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Politics Show Huhne and Clegg interview transcript BBC 18 November 2007 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Grice Andrew 20 November 2007 Clegg accuses Huhne of testing voters patience The Independent London Retrieved 2 September 2010 Calamity Clegg YouTube 19 November 2007 Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Truscott Claire 19 November 2007 Lib Dems considering action against Huhne over Calamity Clegg claims The Guardian London Retrieved 2 September 2010 Brown Colin 21 November 2007 Huhne denies he was responsible for Calamity Clegg campaign document The Independent London Retrieved 2 September 2010 Ahmed Murad Ford Richard 15 October 2008 Government plans massive expansion in tracking calls e mail and internet visits The Times London Retrieved 12 September 2010 subscription required Haynes Deborah 25 January 2009 Loss of British Council staff data disk stings David Miliband The Times London Retrieved 12 September 2010 subscription required Walden Celia 9 November 2007 Spy The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 13 September 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2007 Rifkind Hugo 9 November 2007 People The Times London Archived from the original on 5 December 2022 Retrieved 10 January 2024 subscription required Fallout from sacking the scientist The Daily Politics BBC 2 November 2009 Retrieved 2 September 2010 a b Cannabis row drug advisor sacked BBC News 30 October 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Rayner Gordon 13 May 2009 Chris Huhne a multi millionaire but you buy his chocolate HobNobs MPs expenses The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 4 February 2012 subscription required British politics stares into the abyss Channel 4 News 14 May 2009 Retrieved 19 June 2010 Christopher Huhne Former Lib Dem MP for Eastleigh TheyWorkForYou Retrieved 11 March 2021 Curtis Polly 1 February 2011 More ministers benefiting from blind trusts The Guardian London Retrieved 18 October 2010 Haroon Siddique Profiles The Liberal Democrat Conservative and Labour negotiators The Guardian 11 May 2010 Privy Council appointments 13 May 2010 Privy Council Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 26 July 2010 Video Chris Huhne says UK can be net energy exporter Recharge Retrieved 2 September 2010 Chris Huhne at Wind Week in Leicester Square YouTube Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Semple Chris 21 October 2007 Is this the man to save our planet Southern Daily Echo Southampton Retrieved 2 September 2010 a b c Helm Toby 19 March 2011 Chris Huhne Nuclear power might not be an option for UK The Guardian London Huhne faces criticism for cancelling nuclear power loan BBC News 1 July 2010 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Coalition government axes 2bn of projects BBC News 17 June 2010 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Porter Andrew 17 June 2010 Transport and health projects halted as Government backs down on 10bn commitments The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 20 June 2010 Retrieved 3 February 2012 subscription required Government axes Labour s breathtakingly cynical 80m loan to Sheffield Forgemasters Yorkshire Post Leeds 17 June 2010 Retrieved 3 February 2012 a b c d David Cameron praises new climate deal BBC News 11 December 2010 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Wintour Patrick 30 March 2011 Chris Huhne accuses cabinet colleague of Nazi tactics over AV referendum The Guardian London Chris Huhne quits cabinet over speeding claims charge BBC News 3 February 2012 Lib Dems Chris Huhne to voluntarily remove himself from the Privy Council after pleading guilty to perverting the course of justice PA breakingnews com 4 February 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2013 a b Chris Huhne officially no longer an MP BBC News 5 February 2013 Retrieved 7 February 2013 a b Chris Huhne and Vicky Pryce jailed for eight months BBC News 11 March 2013 Retrieved 11 March 2013 Mason Rowena 14 October 2013 Vicky Pryce says she has no regrets about being jailed over speeding points The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 11 October 2017 10 O Clock Live Channel 4 UK Retrieved 9 December 2013 dead YouTube link Huhne Speeding story was payback for criticism of Murdoch press BBC News 9 September 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Chris Huhne The Guardian Retrieved 9 September 2013 Clark Emma 10 August 2013 Disgraced former MP Chris Huhne lands new job The Independent Retrieved 10 April 2020 Chris Huhne The Guardian 9 September 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2016 World Biogas Summit 2023 Speaker Chris Huhne ADBA The World Biogas Summit 2023 Retrieved 28 August 2023 Dennis Peter 26 September 2022 Biomethane can help boost Northern Ireland s economy says Chris Huhne at ADBA event Circular Online Retrieved 28 August 2023 Temko Ned 12 February 2006 The woman who backs Chris Huhne The Observer London Retrieved 19 November 2007 Yeoman Fran 20 October 2007 Lib Dem wives Can you spot the difference The Times London Retrieved 19 November 2007 subscription required Profile Chris Huhne BBC News 2 March 2006 Retrieved 19 November 2007 Chris Huhne Involvement of fathers YouTube 30 November 2007 Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 8 August 2010 About Chris Chris Huhne Archived from the original on 13 August 2010 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Edwards Richard 21 June 2010 Chris Huhne avoids TV appearance after admitting affair The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 25 June 2010 Retrieved 2 September 2010 subscription required Sunday Times drops Chris Huhne emails legal challenge BBC News 20 January 2012 Our MPs in Detail The Liberal Democrats Archived from the original on 23 September 2012 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Register of Members Interests Christopher Huhne MP Eastleigh TheyWorkForYou com Retrieved 19 November 2007 Police to decide whether to probe Huhne speeding claim BBC News 15 May 2011 Police demand Huhne speeding tape The Daily Telegraph London 25 June 2011 subscription required Chris Huhne questioned again by police over speeding allegation The Guardian London 22 July 2011 Chris Huhne and Vicky Pryce in second police interviews BBC News 22 July 2011 Morris Nigel 28 July 2011 Police hand Chris Huhne speeding file to prosecutors The Independent London Watt Holly Hughes Mark 17 August 2011 Police asked to reinvestigate Chris Huhne The Daily Telegraph London subscription required Essex Police send Chris Huhne speeding case file to CPS BBC News 30 August 2011 Retrieved 4 February 2012 Hughes Mark 6 September 2011 Huhne to learn speeding points fate this month The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 4 February 2012 subscription required Hughes Mark 28 October 2011 Police demand emails in Chris Huhne speeding points case The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 4 February 2012 subscription required Chris Huhne speeding claim case decision very close BBC News 22 November 2011 Retrieved 4 February 2012 Starmer Keir 23 November 2011 Letter to the Daily Mail from CPS about the Chris Huhne case Archived 3 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Crown Prosecution Service blog Sunday Times drops Chris Huhne emails legal challenge BBC News 20 January 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Hughes Mark 25 January 2012 Chris Huhne speeding ticket emails received by Essex Police The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 4 February 2012 subscription required Chris Huhne quits cabinet over speeding points charge BBC News 3 February 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Ex minister Chris Huhne getting 17 000 cabinet pay off BBC News 29 February 2012 Chris Huhne trial set for October BBC News 2 March 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Chris Huhne speeding trial date set BBC News 28 January 2013 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Chris Huhne admits perverting the course of justice over speeding points The Guardian London 4 February 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2013 Branagh Ellen 26 February 2013 Top female barrister Constance Briscoe investigated over leaking Chris Huhne case court told The Independent London Retrieved 26 February 2013 a b Marsden Sam Rayner Gordon Philipson Alice 26 February 2013 Judge Constance Briscoe arrested for lying to police about role in exposing Chris Huhne The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 26 February 2013 subscription required a b Davies Caroline 26 February 2013 Vicky Pryce trial judge arrested on suspicion of lying to police The Guardian London Liam O Brien 23 March 2013 Chris Huhne moved to open prison after a week in Wandsworth The Independent Retrieved 31 July 2016 David Burrowes s letter to the Attorney General The Daily Telegraph London 13 March 2013 Retrieved 13 March 2013 subscription required Vicky Pryce and Chris Huhne released from prison BBC News 13 May 2013 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Grice Andrew 13 May 2013 Nine weeks is a long time in politics Vicky Pryce and Chris Huhne released from prison but what does the future hold for them The Independent London Street Porter Janet 19 May 2013 Eight weeks in prison does not make Chris Huhne and Vicky Pryce instant experts The Independent on Sunday London Chris Huhne calls prison humbling and sobering experience after early release The GuardianExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chris Huhne Official website Appearances on C SPAN Column archive at The Guardian Profile at Parliament of the United Kingdom Contributions in Parliament at Hansard Contributions in Parliament at Hansard 1803 2005 Voting record at Public Whip Record in Parliament at TheyWorkForYou Profile at BBC News Collected news and commentary at Bloomberg European Parliament New constituency Member of the European Parliamentfor South East England1999 2005 Succeeded bySharon Bowles Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded byDavid Chidgey Member of Parliamentfor Eastleigh2005 2013 Succeeded byMike Thornton Political offices Preceded byEd Miliband Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change2010 2012 Succeeded byEd Davey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chris Huhne amp oldid 1216142409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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