Quick links: Background | Elections and constituency | Active parliamentarian since 1983 | Party | Author and ambassador | Recreations and interests
Simon has had the privileg to have been the Member of Parliament for Bermondsey and Old Southwark for the past 29 years. He is also the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Commons. In December 2010 he was asked by the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister to act as the Government's Advocate for Access to Education. Simon was delighted to accept this role and he submitted his final report to government in July 2011.
Over the years Simon has had a number of parliamentary responsibilities. He is currently a member of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, the Ecclesiastical Committee as well as a member of several All Party Parliamentary Groups.
Simon was born in Cheshire, moving to Wales when he was eight and then to Herefordshire when he was eighteen.
He read law at Selwyn College, Cambridge (1970-73), joining the Union of Liberal Students and becoming President of the College Student Union.
Simon was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple in 1974. He then took the opportunity to study in Europe - spending a year at the College of Europe in Bruges, studying for the postgraduate certification in European Studies.
He moved to Southwark in 1977 and have lived here ever since. Before I entered local politics I was a youth leader with the Greenhouse Trust until 1982. During that time I was also the founding Chairman of the Burgess Park Residents' Association and for nearly ten years I was a member of Southwark Area Youth Committee.
Simon was elected to Parliament as the youngest opposition MP in the 1983 Bermondsey by-election which set a still unbeaten record for swing between two parties in any British parliamentary election (50.9%).
He was re-elected for the enlarged Southwark and Bermondsey constituency in 1983, 1987 and 1992. At the 1997 election the seat was enlarged again by the addition of a further ward - Newington - and renamed North Southwark and Bermondsey. I was again elected to represent the seat in 2001 with a significantly increased majority, and was re-elected in the 2005 general election. Simon was re-elected in 2010 to the renamed seat of Bermondsey and Old Southwark, this time with the largest number of votes I have ever received.
Simon is very grateful to have been given the opportunity to represent the people of Southwark and Bermondsey for such a long time.
The constituency has always been a vibrant and exciting place to represent and Simon hugely enjoys living and working here. Since 1983 the local area has seen a large amount of regeneration and renewal. The traditional factories and industry have been largely replaced by new shops and communities and the constituency is now a thriving area for businesses as well as residents.
Between 2005 and April 2010 there was still no shortage of work for me as the local MP and I spent over 70 hours per week helping constituents and representing their issues in parliament.
At the General Election in Bermondsey & Old Southwark on 6th May 2010, 44651 votes were cast (approximately 58% of the total number of eligible voters) with the following result:
On 5 May 2005, 37959 votes were cast in the constituency (approximately 48% of the total number of eligible voters), with the following results:
As an MP since 1983 Simon has had the privilege to be one of the longest serving frontbench MPs in parliament. He has served the Liberal Democrats across many of the major portfolio areas.
Since June 2010 Simon has been Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Commons. He has been a member of the Accommodation and Works Committee and the Modernisation Committee of the House of Commons, the Cross-Party Group on Lords Reform, and is currently a member of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, the Ecclesiastical Committee as well as a member of several All Party Parliamentary Groups.
Before that his responsibilities included:
Liberal Spokesman for:
Liberal Democrat Spokesperson or Shadow Secretary of State for:
I have also had the privilege of representing the Liberal Democrats as the person responsible for the following portfolios:
I have introduced several bills in parliament seeking to amend the law:
Simon joined the Liberal Party in 1971 inspired by the campaigns for international justice in places such as South Africa and Palestine. Since his election in 1983 he has been very proud to serve and represent the Liberal Democrats in a number of party roles in addition to those in parliament. These roles have included:
In the summer of 1999 Simon was runner up to Charles Kennedy (with 43% of the vote) in the party's leadership election. Following Charles' resignation as party leader in January 2006, he again offered himself as a candidate for the leadership, but did not win.
In 2004 Simon was elected Party President, a post he held until the end of 2008.
In June 2010 he succeeded Dr Vince Cable as Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Commons.
Despite the demands that parliament makes on an MP's time, Simon has always kept up his interests in supporting good causes and in writing. He has authored and jointly authored a number of booklets on human rights, the law, defence, and political realignment including:
Additionally, Simon was honoured to have been asked to be involved in the work of a number of groups and organisations that operate in and serve the community. He is the patron, chair or trustee of the following schools and organisations:
In Simon's spare time his interests are music (everything from Church music to Eurovision), the theatre, history, sport (including supporting Wales at Rugby, Glamorgan at Cricket and Millwall and Hereford at football), the countryside and open air, travel and spending time with his family and friends. His frequent ambition is to have more time to sleep.
