David Laws

David Laws
Laws in 2014
Minister Assisting the Deputy Prime Minister[a]
In office
4 September 2012 – 8 May 2015
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byDavid Miliband (2005)
Succeeded byThe Lord True (2020)
Minister of State for Schools
In office
4 September 2012 – 8 May 2015
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byNick Gibb
Succeeded byNick Gibb
Chief Secretary to the Treasury
In office
12 May 2010 – 29 May 2010
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byLiam Byrne
Succeeded byDanny Alexander
Member of Parliament
for Yeovil
In office
7 June 2001 – 30 March 2015
Preceded byPaddy Ashdown
Succeeded byMarcus Fysh
Personal details
Born
David Anthony Laws

(1965-11-30) 30 November 1965 (age 59)
Farnham, England
Political partyLiberal Democrats
Domestic partnerJames Lundie (2001–present)
Alma materKing's College, Cambridge

David Anthony Laws (born 30 November 1965) is a British politician who served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Yeovil from 2001 to 2015. A member of the Liberal Democrats, in his third parliament he served at the outset as a Cabinet Minister, in 2010, as Chief Secretary to the Treasury; as well as later concurrently as Minister of State for Schools and Minister Assisting the Deputy Prime Minister – an office where he worked cross-departmentally on implementing the coalition agreement in policies - from 2012 to 2015.

After a career in investment banking, Laws became an economic adviser and later Director of Policy and Research for his party. In 2001, he was elected as MP for Yeovil, succeeding former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown. In 2004, he co-edited The Orange Book: Reclaiming Liberalism, followed by Britain After Blair in 2006. After the 2010 general election, Laws was a senior party negotiator in the coalition agreement which underpinned the party's parliamentary five-year coalition government with the Conservative Party.

He held the office of Chief Secretary to the Treasury for 17 days before resigning owing to the disclosure of his parliamentary expenses claims, described by the Parliamentary Standards and Privileges Committee as "a series of serious breaches of the rules, over a considerable period of time", albeit unintended; the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards found "no evidence that [he] made his claims with the intention of benefiting himself or his partner in conscious breach of the rules."[1] His was among the six cabinet resignations during the expenses scandal; he was suspended from Parliament for seven days by vote of the House of Commons. In the 2012 cabinet reshuffle, he attended cabinet as Minister of State for School Standards and Minister Assisting the Deputy Prime Minister. He was unseated by Conservative nominee Marcus Fysh in the 2015 general election.


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