| Know Your Member of Parliament - David Cameron |
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He became the leader of the Conservative Party on Tuesday December 6th 2005 when he won 134,446 of the 198.844 (67.6%) valid votes cast by Tory party members. He was a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee and has already spoken in Parliament on a wide range of Home Office and other issues. He has previously held the positions of Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Commons (2003), Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party (2003), front bench spokesman on Local Government Finance (2004) and Head of Policy Co-ordination up until May 2005. After the General Election in 2005, David held the position of Shadow Secretary of State for Education and Skills. Some Facts About David Cameron
Former representatives of this area at Westminster since 1918:
In Parliament, David has also served on the Modernisation Committee that looks at operation and reform of the House of Commons. He is a Vice-Chairman of the All Party Committee on Drugs and the All Party Media Committee. David was recently elected to the Executive of the British American Parliamentary Group and the Council of the Royal Institute for International Affairs. In West Oxfordshire, David supports a range of local groups and charities. He is a Patron of St Mary's Church in Witney, the Carterton Educational Trust, the Oxfordshire Victoria County History Trust and the Mulberry Bush School in Standlake. In the last three years he has completed three sponsored bicycle rides raising around ?8000 for a range of local charities, including Oxfordshire Association for the Blind, the Lawrence Home Nursing Team, SCCWID and Springfield School in Witney. Outside work, David's interests include playing tennis, riding, country sports and watching television. He is a keen cook. Since becoming a separate constituency in 1983 the highest Conservative turnout and majority were achieved by Douglas Hurd in 1992 (36,256 and 22,568), whilst the lowest were reached by Shaun Woodward in 1997 (24,282 and 7,028). David Cameron's majority in 2001 was 7973, an increase of 1.9% over his predecessor. |
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