Chris Marshall (British Politician)

From Themarshallwiki

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|'''Image'''
|'''Image'''
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|<center>http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/7/7a/James_Hacker.jpg/200px-James_Hacker.jpg</center>
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|<center>http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ae/Robert_Menzies_1930s.jpg/225px-Robert_Menzies_1930s.jpg</center>
|-
|-
|-
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|'''Current Title'''
|'''Current Title'''
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|<center>The Right Honourable Chris Marshall MP</center>
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|<center>The Right Honourable Chris Marshall MP, PC, LL B.</center>
|-
|-
|'''Current Positions:'''
|'''Current Positions:'''
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|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (2001- present)<br>Member of Parliament for Birmingham East (1987-present)
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|
 +
*Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (2005- present)
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*Member of Parliament for Guildford (1994-present)
|-
|-
|'''Previous Positions:'''
|'''Previous Positions:'''
|
|
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*Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State of Transport (1990-1992)
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*Leader of the Opposition (2003-5)
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*Economic Secretary to the Treasury (1992-3)
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*Attorney General for England and Wales (1998-2001)
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*Secretary of State for Industry (1994-5)
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*Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs (1996-1998)
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*Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs (1995-7)
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*Member of Parliament for Guildford (1994-present)
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*Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer (1997-2000)
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*Leader of the Opposition (2000-1)
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|-
|-
|'''Term of Office:'''
|'''Term of Office:'''
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|7 June 2001 to present
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|5 May 2005
|-
|-
|'''Predecessor:'''
|'''Predecessor:'''
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|-
|-
|'''Birthdate:'''
|'''Birthdate:'''
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|18 June, 1952
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|20 December 1960
|-
|-
|'''Place of Birth:'''
|'''Place of Birth:'''
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|London, England, [[United Kingdom]]
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|Jeparit, Victoria, Australia
|-
|-
|'''Marital Status'''
|'''Marital Status'''
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|Married to Anne Hacker
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|Married to Patricia Marshall
 +
|-
 +
|'''Offspring'''
 +
*Kenneth (1988)
 +
*Ian (1989)
 +
*Heather (1994)
 +
*(unnamed died during birth)
|-
|-
|'''Profession'''
|'''Profession'''
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| Politician, Army Officer
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| Politician
|-
|-
|'''Political party'''
|'''Political party'''
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|-
|-
| '''Languages spoken'''
| '''Languages spoken'''
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| English<br>German<br>French<br>Hindi<br>Spanish (intermediate)
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| English<br>French
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|-
| '''Degrees'''
| '''Degrees'''
|
|
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*None (RMA Sandhurst Graduate)
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*Bachelor of Law, Oxford University (1982)
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|-
|}
|}
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'''Christopher William Marshall''' (born 18 June, 1952) is the fifty second Prime Minister of the [[United Kingdom|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]]. He took office on 7 June 2001 after winning the 2001 General Election in a landslide against the Labour government of Tony Blair. Prior to entering Number 10, Marshall had been Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs.
+
'''Christopher William Marshall''' (born 20 December 1960) is the fifty second Prime Minister of the [[United Kingdom|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]]. He took office on 7 June 2001 after winning the 2001 General Election in a landslide against the Labour government of Tony Blair. Prior to entering Number 10, Marshall had been Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs.
As Prime Minister, Marshall holds the positions of First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for the Civil Service.
As Prime Minister, Marshall holds the positions of First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for the Civil Service.
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=Early Life=
=Early Life=
-
Chris Marshall was born on 18 June, 1952 in Manchester. His father was an architect, and Marshall was educated in a Grammar School. Marshall managed to gain entry to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in 1970. Marshall was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Queen's Lancashire Regiment in 1971.
+
Marshall was born in Australia, specifically in Jeparit, Victoria. His family were middle-class shopkeepers. He went to Britain for tertiary education and completed a Law degree at Oxford University. While in Oxford, he met a Canadian student, Patricia. In 1986 they married. Marshall funded his studies with a Royal Air Force scholarship. He served in the Oxford University Air Squadron, and as a legal officer in the RAF until 1988. Marshall then moved into private practice. He did well, but wanted to enter politics. He ran for the Surrey seat of Guildford in a 1994 by-election for the Tories and won.
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=Military Career=
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=In Government=
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In 1973, as a Lieutenant, he transferred to the Parachute Regiment, and remained there for five years including two tours in Northern Ireland. Marshall did a tour in the SAS from 1979-1980. Marshall was promoted to Major in 1981, and assigned to 3 PARA. With 3 PARA, Marshall fought in the Falklands War. After the war, Marshall transferred to the Gurkhas (7th Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles), and remained there until 1987, when he left the Army (having reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel) to persue a political career, gaining the seat of Birmingham East in the Commons in 1987.
+
Marshall spent less than two years on the back bench. In 1996, he was appointed Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs. He spent two years at the DAA, and was able to achieve several important reforms to the civil service. He frequently got the better of his Permanent Under Secretary, Humphrey Appleby. After this brief stint in what some took to be a lower-level department, Marshall was flung into the spotlight as Attorney-General. In this position, Marshall shared with the Home Secretary the duty of keeping innocent Britons safe, and ensuring that the guilty were prosecuted. Marshall believed that this job was right for him, as it was more in keeping with his classical liberal views than the DAA (which Marshall has described as "bureaucracy run amok). While in the job, he was under great pressure to prosecute cases he would rather not prosecute. He managed to assert his independence, and the Crown Prosecutor became somewhat lax on firearms offenses which were unconnected with other criminal activity. Marshall was accused of letting people who owned illegal guns get away from the scrutiny of the law, while making maximum use of gun laws against violent offenders, even if their violence didn't involve firearms. As Attorney General, Marshall started the process of liberalisation of Britain's gun laws.  
-
=Politics and Government=
+
Despite the successes Marshall enjoyed as Attorney General, his tenure there was shortened. This time, by a General Election defeat.
-
After two years in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Thatcher appointed Marshall Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State of Transport. During 1991, he was rumoured to have been important in ensuring that the Ministry of Transport did ''not'' get the responsibility for developing an Integrated National Transport Policy. After the political ramifications of the policy became clear, Marshall was rewarded by being appointed Economic Secretary to the Treasury. In this post, Marshall pushed for further free-trade, and deregulation of the British economy, and was partially successful. Marshall became popular with the party, however he was not favoured by the new Prime Minister, John Major. Marshall did not aid matters by writing articles criticising Major's policy of negotiating with the Provisional IRA. Marshall however had a good following in the party, and was appointed Secretary of State for Industry (to appease his supporters, who felt that Marshall should have a Cabinet post). This appointment is an irony as Marshall had advocated the abolition of this department before entering Parliament. Marshall as Secretary of State for Industry set about reducing the Department's activities. The Daily Mail called him "Mr. Cuts" as both of the budget submissions he made for his Department were smaller than the previous (the trend in all other departments was for increasing requests to the Exchequer). Major, in another attempt to marginalise Marshall shunted him off to a lesser Ministry, and another one that Marshall wanted abolished, the Department of Administrative Affairs. In the DAA, Marshall met the two civil servants who he would come to value highly, Sir Humphrey Appleby, and Bernard Woolley.
+
=In Opposition=
-
=Opposition=
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After the 2001, election defeat, John Major left Parliament, and the opposition was left in the hands of Kenneth Clarke. Kenneth Clarke was a One Nation Tory. Marshall however was a Libertarian Conservative, and closely allied to the Thatcherites. Clarke believed that Britain had moved to the left, and that to regain government, the Tories must also move to the left. It was a polling disaster, and the Tories lost every by-election in which they stood. This happened even in South-East England.
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The defeat of the Major Government by the Labour Party (lead by Tony Blair) in 1997 put Marshall on to the Opposition benches. A month after losing the Premiership, Major resigned the leadership in favour of William Hague. Hague, a Thatcherite appointed Marshall has his deputy and Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer. In that position, Marshall did his best to highlight the fact that government spending was growning more quickly than the economy and the "the situation could not long continue".
+
Relegated to the back bench, Marshall decided to rebuild by talking straight to the people. While letting his normally fastidious parliamentary attendance, Marshall decided to rebuild the classical liberalism of the Tories. Taking a lesson from Tony Blair, he spoke directly to the people. He managed to get a spot on a radio station, and proceeded to talk to the people about freedom, and what was to come with Tony Blair. He touched upon all aspects of policy and principle, and often referred to the "ancient freedoms of Britain". He was also keen to address the issues of the moment, and what he believed to be the issues of the future. He was careful to have as little partisanship in the show as possible. After two years on the backbench, Clarke attempted to bring Marshall into the shadow cabinet, telling the Daily Mail that "all's forgiven". Marshall refused to serve under him, knowing full well that Clarke believed in Lyndon B. Johnson's dictum "It's probably better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside the tent pissing in.".
-
Marshall also spoke out often on the issue of terrorism in Northern Ireland, from both Nationalists and Unionists. Hague was viewed as unprepared to lead the Opposition, and not fit to go into Number 10. In 2000, fearing attack, Hague reshuffled the Shadow Cabinet, bringing in Michael Portillo as Shadow Chancellor. Michael Portillo was further to the left than most Tories, and his elevation was seen as an attempt to drive the Conservatives to the left to attract Labour voters (who, according to Marshall "wouldn't vote Tory if we put up Karl Marx, and Ho Chi Minh"). Marshall was to be relegated to the Opposition Back Bench. Marshall responded by challenging Hague for the leadership, promising a shift back to real classical liberal-conservativism, and most importantly, victory in the 2001 General Election. Marshall was successful in the leadership challenge, and in 2001, Marshall led the Tories to victory in the General Election, with a majority government of 379 seats.
+
Marshall continued his broadcasts. Controversially, other Tories were not exempted from attack. Marshall reasoned that the people would ultimately make the decision, even on the party leadership. He knew the Tories were not stupid enough to elect an unelectable leader. He also knew that a sacked minister or sacked shadow minister doesn't have to show much overt loyalty to the Party Leadership.
-
=Number 10=
+
Two weeks after Clarke asked Marshall to join the Shadow Cabinet, Marshall moved a spill on the Tory leadership. His popularity with the Thatcherites, and the Traditional Conservatives, combined with his high public profile got him the leadership.
-
When Marshall entered Number 10, he found Sir Humphrey waiting for him as Cabinet Secretary. Marshall also brought Bernard Woolley in as his Principal Private Secretary. Marshall kept the same Chief Political Advisor he had as Opposition Leader, Dorothy Wainwright (who was also William Hague's Chief Political Advisor).
+
As Opposition Leader, he added the Parliament to the list of venues in which he attacked Labour and promoted his ideas. The 2005 General Election campaign was difficult for Marshall, since Blair was very popular, and had a lot of the media behind him. Marshall managed to overcome Blair's image by pointing to the future that Labour were directing Britain into, and the bungling of the Blair government in the War on Terror.
 +
 
 +
=Number 10=
While in office, Marshall has achieved the following:
While in office, Marshall has achieved the following:
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**Income tax rates as follows:
**Income tax rates as follows:
***£0-£6999: 0%
***£0-£6999: 0%
-
***£7000-£13,000: 3/- per Pound over £7,000
+
***£7000-£12,999: 3/- per Pound over £7,000
***£13,000- : 4/6 per Pound over £13,000
***£13,000- : 4/6 per Pound over £13,000
**Dividend income made the same as other forms of income (i.e. the amounts above refer to all income including wages, salaries, interest, rent (charged), and dividends)
**Dividend income made the same as other forms of income (i.e. the amounts above refer to all income including wages, salaries, interest, rent (charged), and dividends)
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*Pickets forbidden to block access in any way (i.e. they are required to leave a gap in a picket line which is to be no less than 20 feet wide and which must be adjacent to an entrance/exit of a work site. Any deviation will result in an injunction against the strike, and fines to the union. Pickets may assemble only on public space, and not on the property of an employer unless the union has the employer's consent.
*Pickets forbidden to block access in any way (i.e. they are required to leave a gap in a picket line which is to be no less than 20 feet wide and which must be adjacent to an entrance/exit of a work site. Any deviation will result in an injunction against the strike, and fines to the union. Pickets may assemble only on public space, and not on the property of an employer unless the union has the employer's consent.
*A new Data Protection Act, with real safeguards, and an active Data Protection Commission.
*A new Data Protection Act, with real safeguards, and an active Data Protection Commission.
-
*The beginning of a program to replace Trident, and Red Thunder
+
*The beginning of a program to replace Trident, and the UK's other nuclear weapons
*An extensive upgrade of the SA80 weapon system
*An extensive upgrade of the SA80 weapon system
*A major rebuild of the CVR(T) series of vehicles
*A major rebuild of the CVR(T) series of vehicles
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=Private Life=
=Private Life=
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Marshall has been married to Annie since 1975. Annie was born and raised in Aldershot (home of the Parachute Regiment). They have a daughter Lucy who was born in 1986. Lucy Marshall is an honours student at Oxford University. She has on occasion been politically active, taking positions contrary to those of her father. Politics aside, Lucy and Chris Marshall are extremely close.
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Marshall is married with three children. He is a private pilot, and flies whenever he can. He is still a member of an RAF Flying Club, and for security reasons can fly only with the RAF. Marshall is also a shooter and photographer.
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+
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Marshall is a keen shooter. He is mainly a target shooter, but occasionally hunts. He collects military firearms, and still appears at Bisley.
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[[Category:United Kingdom|Marshall, Chris]]
[[Category:United Kingdom|Marshall, Chris]]

Current revision as of 02:39, 11 March 2010

Chris Marshall
Image
225px-Robert_Menzies_1930s.jpg
Current Title
The Right Honourable Chris Marshall MP, PC, LL B.
Current Positions:
  • Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (2005- present)
  • Member of Parliament for Guildford (1994-present)
Previous Positions:
  • Leader of the Opposition (2003-5)
  • Attorney General for England and Wales (1998-2001)
  • Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs (1996-1998)
  • Member of Parliament for Guildford (1994-present)
Term of Office: 5 May 2005
Predecessor: Tony Blair
Successor: Incumbent
Birthdate: 20 December 1960
Place of Birth: Jeparit, Victoria, Australia
Marital Status Married to Patricia Marshall
Offspring
  • Kenneth (1988)
  • Ian (1989)
  • Heather (1994)
  • (unnamed died during birth)
Profession Politician
Political party Conservative Party
Languages spoken English
French
Degrees
  • Bachelor of Law, Oxford University (1982)

Christopher William Marshall (born 20 December 1960) is the fifty second Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. He took office on 7 June 2001 after winning the 2001 General Election in a landslide against the Labour government of Tony Blair. Prior to entering Number 10, Marshall had been Leader of the Opposition, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs.

As Prime Minister, Marshall holds the positions of First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for the Civil Service.

Contents

Early Life

Marshall was born in Australia, specifically in Jeparit, Victoria. His family were middle-class shopkeepers. He went to Britain for tertiary education and completed a Law degree at Oxford University. While in Oxford, he met a Canadian student, Patricia. In 1986 they married. Marshall funded his studies with a Royal Air Force scholarship. He served in the Oxford University Air Squadron, and as a legal officer in the RAF until 1988. Marshall then moved into private practice. He did well, but wanted to enter politics. He ran for the Surrey seat of Guildford in a 1994 by-election for the Tories and won.

In Government

Marshall spent less than two years on the back bench. In 1996, he was appointed Secretary of State for Administrative Affairs. He spent two years at the DAA, and was able to achieve several important reforms to the civil service. He frequently got the better of his Permanent Under Secretary, Humphrey Appleby. After this brief stint in what some took to be a lower-level department, Marshall was flung into the spotlight as Attorney-General. In this position, Marshall shared with the Home Secretary the duty of keeping innocent Britons safe, and ensuring that the guilty were prosecuted. Marshall believed that this job was right for him, as it was more in keeping with his classical liberal views than the DAA (which Marshall has described as "bureaucracy run amok). While in the job, he was under great pressure to prosecute cases he would rather not prosecute. He managed to assert his independence, and the Crown Prosecutor became somewhat lax on firearms offenses which were unconnected with other criminal activity. Marshall was accused of letting people who owned illegal guns get away from the scrutiny of the law, while making maximum use of gun laws against violent offenders, even if their violence didn't involve firearms. As Attorney General, Marshall started the process of liberalisation of Britain's gun laws.

Despite the successes Marshall enjoyed as Attorney General, his tenure there was shortened. This time, by a General Election defeat.

In Opposition

After the 2001, election defeat, John Major left Parliament, and the opposition was left in the hands of Kenneth Clarke. Kenneth Clarke was a One Nation Tory. Marshall however was a Libertarian Conservative, and closely allied to the Thatcherites. Clarke believed that Britain had moved to the left, and that to regain government, the Tories must also move to the left. It was a polling disaster, and the Tories lost every by-election in which they stood. This happened even in South-East England.

Relegated to the back bench, Marshall decided to rebuild by talking straight to the people. While letting his normally fastidious parliamentary attendance, Marshall decided to rebuild the classical liberalism of the Tories. Taking a lesson from Tony Blair, he spoke directly to the people. He managed to get a spot on a radio station, and proceeded to talk to the people about freedom, and what was to come with Tony Blair. He touched upon all aspects of policy and principle, and often referred to the "ancient freedoms of Britain". He was also keen to address the issues of the moment, and what he believed to be the issues of the future. He was careful to have as little partisanship in the show as possible. After two years on the backbench, Clarke attempted to bring Marshall into the shadow cabinet, telling the Daily Mail that "all's forgiven". Marshall refused to serve under him, knowing full well that Clarke believed in Lyndon B. Johnson's dictum "It's probably better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside the tent pissing in.".

Marshall continued his broadcasts. Controversially, other Tories were not exempted from attack. Marshall reasoned that the people would ultimately make the decision, even on the party leadership. He knew the Tories were not stupid enough to elect an unelectable leader. He also knew that a sacked minister or sacked shadow minister doesn't have to show much overt loyalty to the Party Leadership.

Two weeks after Clarke asked Marshall to join the Shadow Cabinet, Marshall moved a spill on the Tory leadership. His popularity with the Thatcherites, and the Traditional Conservatives, combined with his high public profile got him the leadership.

As Opposition Leader, he added the Parliament to the list of venues in which he attacked Labour and promoted his ideas. The 2005 General Election campaign was difficult for Marshall, since Blair was very popular, and had a lot of the media behind him. Marshall managed to overcome Blair's image by pointing to the future that Labour were directing Britain into, and the bungling of the Blair government in the War on Terror.

Number 10

While in office, Marshall has achieved the following:

  • Liberalisation of gun laws including:
    • Legalisation of semi-automatic rifles, and shotguns
    • Massive increases in penalties for using a firearm (or airgun or imitation firearm) in the commission of a crime)
    • Concealed carry permits in England, Wales, and Scotland
    • Firearms licensing changed to a 'shall issue', meaning the Crown must show grounds to deny an application including:
      • Severe mental illness
      • Conviction of a felony
      • Drug use convictions
  • Tax reforms as follows
    • Income tax rates as follows:
      • £0-£6999: 0%
      • £7000-£12,999: 3/- per Pound over £7,000
      • £13,000- : 4/6 per Pound over £13,000
    • Dividend income made the same as other forms of income (i.e. the amounts above refer to all income including wages, salaries, interest, rent (charged), and dividends)
    • Company tax reduced to 25% on all profits not reinvested or paid as dividends
    • Death tax abolished
    • Capital gains tax computed in constant pounds
  • Immigration conditions tightened
  • Removal of economic protections
  • Repeal of the Race Relations Act
  • Removal of tax-deductible status for unions that engage in political donations
  • Pickets forbidden to block access in any way (i.e. they are required to leave a gap in a picket line which is to be no less than 20 feet wide and which must be adjacent to an entrance/exit of a work site. Any deviation will result in an injunction against the strike, and fines to the union. Pickets may assemble only on public space, and not on the property of an employer unless the union has the employer's consent.
  • A new Data Protection Act, with real safeguards, and an active Data Protection Commission.
  • The beginning of a program to replace Trident, and the UK's other nuclear weapons
  • An extensive upgrade of the SA80 weapon system
  • A major rebuild of the CVR(T) series of vehicles
  • The strengthening on Habeus Corpus (repealing Blair government legislation undermining it)
  • Total ban on unwarranted search, warrants to be signed by a judge (not a clerk)
  • Jury trial for all indictable offences
  • Abolition (in which the organisation is dissolved, all staff made redundant, all property sold, and all records destroyed) of a series of QUANGOs including
    • All self-financing regulating agencies
    • The Commission for Racial Equality
    • The Equal Opportunities Commission
    • Arts Council (and all related bodies)
    • All Regional Development Agencies
  • Introduction of paid advertising to the BBC, with reductions in the license fee (finally abolished in 2008)
  • University grants changed to a government scholarship scheme in which government departments fund certain scholarships in exchange for a term in the Civil Service
  • Schooling control returned to Local Education Authorities, Whitehall funding moved to a model in which the amount of funding is determined by the number of students

Private Life

Marshall is married with three children. He is a private pilot, and flies whenever he can. He is still a member of an RAF Flying Club, and for security reasons can fly only with the RAF. Marshall is also a shooter and photographer.

Personal tools