Philip Hammond

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Person.png Philip Hammond  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Philip Hammond, Secretary of State for Defence.jpg
BornPhilip Anthony Hammond
4 December 1955
Epping, Essex
Alma materUniversity College, Oxford
ReligionChurch of England
Children3
SpouseSusan Williams-Walker
PartyConservative

Employment.png Secretary of State for Defence

In office
14 October 2011 - 15 July 2014
Preceded byLiam Fox
Succeeded byMichael Fallon

Employment.png Secretary of State for Transport Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
11 May 2010 - 14 October 2011
Preceded byAndrew Adonis
Succeeded byJustine Greening

Employment.png Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
2 July 2007 - 11 May 2010
Preceded byTheresa Villiers
Succeeded byLiam Byrne

Employment.png Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions

In office
6 December 2005 - 2 July 2007
Preceded byMalcolm Rifkind
Succeeded byChris Grayling

Employment.png Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
10 May 2005 - 6 December 2005
Succeeded byTheresa Villiers

Philip Hammond (born 4 December 1955)[1] is a British Conservative politician who has been the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs since 15 July 2014.[2]

Hammond first entered Parliament following his election in 1997 as Member of Parliament for Runnymede and Weybridge.

He was promoted to the Shadow Cabinet by David Cameron in 2005 as Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, remaining in this position until a 2007 reshuffle, when he became Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury.

After the formation of the Coalition Government in May 2010, he was appointed Secretary of State for Transport and was sworn of the Privy Council. Upon the resignation of Liam Fox over the Adam Werritty scandal in October 2011, Hammond was promoted to Secretary of State for Defence and, in July 2014, he became Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.[3]

Early life

Hammond was born in Epping, Essex the son of a civil engineer. He was educated at Brookfield Junior School, and Shenfield School (now Shenfield High School) in Brentwood, Essex. He studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics at University College, University of Oxford, and graduated with a first class honours Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree.

Hammond joined the medical equipment manufacturers Speywood Laboratories Ltd in 1977, becoming a director of Speywood Medical Limited in 1981.[4] In 1982, an automatic electrocardiograph electrode manufacturing plant figured among his notable achievements. He left in 1983 and, from 1984, served as a director in Castlemead Ltd. From 1993 to 1995, he was a partner in CMA Consultants and, from 1994, a director in Castlemead Homes.[5] He had many business interests including house building and property, manufacturing, healthcare, and oil and gas. He undertook various consulting assignments in Latin America for the World Bank in Washington, D.C., and was a consultant to the Government of Malawi from 1995 until his election to Parliament.

Member of Parliament (1997–)

Hammond was the chairman of the Lewisham East Conservative Association for seven years from 1989 and contested the 1994 Newham North East by-election following the death of sitting Labour MP Ron Leighton, losing to Labour's Stephen Timms by 11,818 votes. He was elected to the House of Commons at the 1997 General Election for the newly created Surrey seat of Runnymede and Weybridge. He won the seat with a majority of 9,875 and has remained its MP since. He made his maiden speech on 17 June 1997.

In 2009 it emerged that Hammond had claimed just £8 short of the maximum allowance for a second home in London from 2007 to 2008 even though he lived in the commuter belt town of Woking. As a result of this criticism, Hammond said he would pay back any profit on the future sale of his second home to the public purse.[6]

Shadow Cabinet (2005–2010)

In Parliament he served on the Environment, Transport and the Regions Select Committee from 1997 until he was promoted by William Hague as front bench Spokesman for Health. He was moved to become Spokesman for Trade and Industry by Iain Duncan Smith in 2001, and later transferred to Shadow Office of the Deputy Prime Minister responsibilities by Michael Howard in 2003. Howard promoted Hammond to the Shadow Cabinet following the 2005 General Election as Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury. Following the election of David Cameron later in 2005, he became the Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. He was moved back to the role of Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury in David Cameron's reshuffle following Gordon Brown's accession to the premiership.

In Government (2010-)

Transport Secretary

Hammond was appointed Secretary of State for Transport following the formation of the Coalition Government on 12 May 2010, a position he held until 14 October 2011. On 28 September 2011, he announced that the Government was to initiate a consultation later that year on raising the speed limit on motorways from 70 mph to 80 mph, with a view to introducing the new limit in 2013.[7]

Defence Secretary

File:Philip Hammond & Leon Panetta.jpg
Hammond meeting with US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta

Hammond became Secretary of State for Defence on 14 October 2011 when Liam Fox resigned.[8] As Secretary of State for Defence, Hammond became a member of the UK National Security Council.

In December 2011, he announced that women were to be allowed to serve on Royal Navy submarines. The first women officers began serving on Vanguard class submarines in late 2013. They will be followed by female ratings in 2015, when women should also begin serving on the new Astute class submarine.[9] It was also confirmed that the cost of the 'Operation Ellamy' (NATO bombing of Libya) was £212 million – less than was estimated – including £67 million for replacing spent munitions, all of which was expected to be met from HM Treasury's reserve.[10] At the start of Britain's military intervention in Libya, Chancellor George Osborne told MPs it was likely to cost tens of millions of pounds, raised to £260 million by the MoD as the action continued over the Summer.

In January 2012, the Ministry of Defence announced 4,200 job cuts in a second round of armed forces redundancies. The Army will see up to 2,900 job cuts, including 400 Gurkhas, while the RAF will lose up to 1,000 members and the Royal Navy up to 300. The job losses will account for some of the cuts announced under the Defence Review – intended to help plug the £38 billion hole in the defence budget left by the previous government. Hammond said the Government had "no choice but to reduce the size of the Armed Forces – while reconfiguring them to ensure they remain agile, adaptable and effective". Hammond said: "As we continue with the redundancy process we will ensure we retain the capabilities that our Armed Forces will require to meet the challenges of the future."[11]

The £38 billion "black hole" in MoD finances has been "dealt with" and the Department's "hand to mouth existence will come to an end", Hammond stated in February 2012. Ministers had even found £2.1 billion to be allocated to several major spending projects to be announced in the coming weeks. The money was to come from a combination of draconian cuts over the previous two years, tough bargaining with industry and a one per cent increase in the equipment budget. All three Services will benefit from the new-found cash that will be announced in the next wave of spending proposals – known as Planning Round 12 – by early next month. "New equipment and support contracts amounting to billions of pounds are likely to be unveiled," said a senior MoD official. "PR12 is expected to signal a change in culture at the MoD".[12]

In February 2012 Hammond said that the Falkland Islands do not face a "current credible military threat" from Argentina. He added that Britain had "no desire or intention to increase the heat" surrounding their sovereignty. Speaking in the House of Commons he said "despite media speculation to the contrary, there has been no recent change to force levels", adding "there is no evidence of any current credible military threat to the security of the Falkland Islands and therefore no current plan for significant changes to force deployments. However, Her Majesty's Government is committed to defending the right of the Falkland Islanders to self-determination and plans exist for rapid reinforcement of the land, sea and air forces in and around the islands, should any such threat appear."[13]

File:Hammond meeting troops helmand.jpg
Hammond meeting British troops in Helmand Province, Afghanistan

In August 2012 Hammond announced that senior positions within the "top-heavy" military would be cut by a quarter. Around 26 civilian and military head office posts will go and a new senior structure will come in from April 2013. The move was expected to save the Ministry of Defence around £3.8 million a year. Hammond said one in four posts from the ranks of Commodore, Brigadier, Air Commodore and above will go. Hammond said: "at a time when we are making difficult decisions about defence spending and have had to accept reductions across the board, we cannot ignore the volume of posts at the top. For too long the MoD has been top-heavy, with too many senior civilians and military. Not only does this new structure reduce senior staff posts by up to a quarter in the next two years, but it allows clear strategic priorities to be set for the Armed Forces".[14]

Four weeks before the London Olympic Games of 2012 the security company G4S announced it could not provide the number of security staff it had originally undertaken to deploy for the Games. Hammond solved the problem by calling up 5,000 members of the Armed Forces making good the shortfall. Their performance attracted widespread praise. Afterwards Hammond told The Independent the issue had taught him an important lesson: "I came into the MoD with a prejudice that we have to look at the way the private sector does things to know how we should do things in Government", he said. "But the story of G4S and the military rescue is quite informative. I'm learning that the application of the lean commercial model does have relevance in areas of the MoD but, equally, you can't look at a warship and say, 'How can I bring a lean management model to this?' – because it's doing different things with different levels of resilience that are not generally required in the private sector."[15]

Foreign Secretary

On 15 July 2014, Hammond was appointed Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary. Newspapers highlighted his "Eurosceptic" credentials, and his confidence that Britain could "get a deal" on reforming the European Union. He has said he would vote in a putative referendum for a British exit from the European Union unless there were changes in the relationship.[16]

In August 2014, Hammond said he was surprised at the sudden resignation of Baroness Warsi, who wrote of "great unease" under his leadership of the Foreign office.[17]

In March 2015, speaking as the minister responsible for the spy agencies, he suggested that terror "apologists" must share blame in terrorist acts, saying "But a huge burden of responsibility also lies with those who act as apologists for them."[18]

In May 2015 he introduced the European Union Referendum Bill 2015–16 into the House of Commons.

On 8 July 2015, Hammond condemned the defeat by Russia at the UN Security Council of his four-page draft resolution S/2015/508,[19] that was inter alia to apply the genocide label to the Srebrenica massacre of Moslem Bosniaks in 1995.[20] Angola, China, Nigeria and Venezuela abstained,[21] while the draft had been proposed by Jordan, Lithuania, Malaysia, New Zealand, the UK and the US. The Russian ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, criticised the British wording as "confrontational and politically-motivated", arguing that it unfairly singled out Bosnian Serbs for committing war crimes in a conflict in which all three ethnic groups were the victims of atrocities. Hammond stated: "We are disappointed that our Resolution to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Srebrenica was vetoed today."[22]

On 14 July 2015, after several years of on-again-off-again negotiations, the P5+1 reached agreement in Vienna with Iran over its nuclear programme.[23] Hammond presented the deal in Commons the next day,[24] and was in Jerusalem the following day to placate Benjamin Netanyahu in a press conference labelled as "tense". Netanyahu took issue with the statement of Hammond that[25]

The question you have to ask yourself is what kind of a deal would have been welcomed in Tel Aviv? The answer, of course, is that Israel doesn’t want any deal with Iran. Israel wants a permanent state of stand-off and I don’t believe that’s in the interests of the region.

The Israelis wondered why Britain had not condemned Iran for the previous week's Qods Day rally at which Iranian demonstrators chanted: "Death to Israel." Hammond responded that ""We will judge Iran not by the chants on the streets of Tehran, but by the actions of its government." In his Commons statement, Hammond said that he planned to reopen the embassy in Tehran, which was stormed by protesters in 2011:

I very much hope that we will be in a position to reopen our respective embassies before the end of this year, and I look forward to going to Tehran to do so.

Hammond wants to reduce migration from Poland and other European Union countries, especially from the former Eastern Bloc.[26]

Other political positions

2008 financial crisis

In May 2012, Hammond said that banks were not solely responsible for the 2008 financial crisis as "they had to lend to someone". Hammond, part of the team which played a key role in drawing up David Cameron's economic strategy in Opposition, also claimed that people who took out loans were "consenting adults" who, in some cases, were now seeking to blame others for their actions. Speaking in Germany, he went on to say, "People say to me, 'it was the banks'. I say, 'hang on, the banks had to lend to someone'. People feel in a sense that someone else is responsible for the decisions they made. Of course, if banks don't offer credit, people can't take it, [But] there were two consenting adults in all these transactions, a borrower and a lender, and they may both have made wrong calls. Some people are unwilling to accept responsibility for the consequences of their own choices". He added that individuals, companies and governments were all guilty of excessive borrowing: "we allowed our expectations to run away with us," Hammond said. "We started living a lifestyle both in private consumption and in public consumption that we could not afford. We borrowed to top it up … now the day of reckoning has come and we are adjusting."[27]

Same-sex marriage

In May 2012, Hammond said same-sex marriage is "too controversial".[28] In January 2013 during a visit to Royal Holloway, University of London he bracketed the tabled legislation, which was passed afterwards, alongside socially unacceptable relationships, at the upper scale of which he stated was the criminal offence of incest. Asked by PinkNews to clarify his remarks, Hammond wrote by email: "The discussion ranged very widely and was not limited to same sex relationships".

In May 2013 Philip Hammond abstained as one of four Cabinet Ministers not to vote in favour of gay marriage.[29] Hammond has been openly critical of the Prime Minister's approach to the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 and said in November 2013 that he was "shocked" at the speed with which it was pushed through and that it is "damaging" to the Conservative Party.[30]

Personal life

Hammond married Susan Carolyn Williams-Walker on 29 June 1991. They have two daughters and a son,[31][32] and live in Send, Surrey, and have another home in London. Hammond's wealth is estimated between £7.5 million[33] and £9 million.[34]

Styles

  • Mr Philip Hammond (1955–97)
  • Mr Philip Hammond MP (1997–2010)
  • The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP (2010–present)

References

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  4. "Debretts Profile"
  5. "Castlemead Homes"
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  12. "MoD balances books first time in four decades"
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  15. "G4S proves we can't always rely on private sector, says minister"
  16. telegraph.co.uk: "Philip Hammond: I am serious about reforming EU" 15 Jul 2014
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  18. "Terror 'apologists' must share blame - Hammond - BBC News". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2015.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
  19. un.org: "United Nations - S/2015/508 - Security Council - Jordan, Lithuania, Malaysia, New Zealand, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and United States of America: draft resolution", 8 July 2015
  20. telegraph.co.uk: "Russia blocks UN resolution condemning Srebrenica massacre as genocide", 8 July 2015
  21. un.org: "UN News Centre: UN officials recall 'horror' of Srebrenica as Security Council fails to adopt measure condemning massacre", 8 July 2015
  22. gov.uk: "Foreign Secretary statement following UN Security Council vote on Srebrenica resolution", 8 July 2015
  23. telegraph.co.uk: "Iran nuclear deal: agreement reached in Vienna - as it happened", 14 July 2015
  24. telegraph.co.uk: "Benjamin Netanyahu intends to fight Iran nuclear deal all the way, says Philip Hammond", 15 July 2015
  25. telegraph.co.uk: "Netanyahu rebuffs Philip Hammond over Iran deal", 16 July 2015
  26. "Hammond sees schedule tight for Britain to vote on EU next year". Reuters. 22 September 2015.
  27. {{URL|example.com|optional display text}}
  28. "Exclusive: Defence Secretary Philip Hammond links incest with same-sex marriage". Pink News. Retrieved 19 February 2015.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
  29. Wigmore, Tim (17 February 2011). "Philip Hammond taken to task over anti-gay rights record". Newstatesman.com. Retrieved 8 September 2015.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
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  31. "Conservative Party"
  32. "BBC News: Vote 2001"
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  34. {{URL|example.com|optional display text}}

External links

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