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#William Surrey Hart
karina-gill · 6 months
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Karina Gill and Jamie Hart.
Polished and Worn: Contemporary Silversmithing and Figurative Sculpture Exhibition Comes to Hazelbury Bryan.
Hosted at Alec’s Field Pavilion from 25th May to 9th June 2024 Polished and Worn invites visitors to explore the world of silversmithing and wood sculpture through a curated collection of stunning pieces. From elegant silverware to intricately carved sculptures, each exhibit tells a story of passion, skill, and dedication. This unique exhibition promises to dazzle and inspire, displaying the creativity and craftsmanship of local artisans in a laid-back and welcoming atmosphere.
Visitors can look forward to:
-             Explore a diverse array of silversmithing and woodworking, including hand carved sculptures, silverware, home décor and silver jewellery.
-             Meet the Artists, chat with the talented artisans behind the pieces and gain insight into their creative process and inspiration.
 "Whether you're a seasoned collector or just curious to learn more about these art forms. Karina and Jamie invite you to join them in the pavilion gallery and explore site specific sculpture in a park setting "
The selling exhibition will take place at Alec’s Field Pavilion, Hazelbury Bryan, from 25th May to 9th June 2024, open 10.30am - 5.30pm, with free admission to the public. For more information and to view a sneak peek of the featured artists, visit
www.dorsetartweeks.co.uk
Dorset Art Weeks Venue 263
Alec’s Field Pavilion
Hazelbury Bryan
Nr. Sturminster Newton
DT10 2EB
25th May – 9th June open daily 10.30am - 5.30pm
Jamie Hart
Jamie Hart, graduate of Bath Academy, sculptor produces hand crafted pieces at his Dorset studio. Driven by a profound desire to capture the intricacies and nuances of the human condition, Jamie's sculptures offer a thoughtful exploration of the complexities of our existence. Whether taking inspiration from reality or the realm of imagination, his pieces imbued with a profound sense of depth and emotion. Adhering to a stringent set of artistic constraints, Jamie adeptly creates works that are both visually striking and conceptually profound. Bold and unapologetic, Jamie Hart's sculptures are a testament to the enduring power of the human spirit.
Drawing inspiration from the local environment. His work reflects his devotion to sustainability and his deep appreciation for the beauty of nature. For years, he has diligently collected roots and waste hard wood, with the intention of transforming them into heartfelt sculptures. Allowing the natural characteristics of the wood to guide his designs, resulting in strikingly simple forms that emanate strength and boldness. Through his sculptures, Jamie aims to highlight the raw beauty of his chosen medium, inviting viewers to reconnect with the natural world.
Karina Gill
Contemporary silverware designer Karina Gill will be exhibiting a selection of jewellery and silverware, created using her distinctive style.
Karina studied at the Surrey Institute of Art and Design in Farnham where she gained her BA (Hons) in 3-Dimensional Design in metal work. Since completing her degree in 1996, Karina has built up a business from her workshop in Dorset, where she designs and makes her etched silver bowls, jewellery, boxes, and sculptural pieces.
Drawing inspiration from the delicate cutting and folding of a single sheet of silver, Karina infuses her work with the rich textures of fabric prints, the rugged allure of coastlines and delights in nature’s diverse patterns and organic repetition. Her pieces evoke a sense of complexity without complication, a harmonious balance of skilful artistry and thoughtful design.
Images
Karina Gill
2023
Silver Etched Bowl 'Star'
Photograph Credit: William Cameron
Jamie Hart
2022
Fear and Loathing
Oak Root
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ultraheydudemestuff · 11 months
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Euclid Heights Historic District
2729-2611 Edgehill Rd.
Cleveland Heights, OH 44106
Unlike other National Register Districts in Cleveland Heights, which are exclusively residential and exclusively single-family, the Euclid Heights Historic District's building types and architectural styles create a rich portrait of American upper and middle-class lifestyles during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  This 365-acre suburb bounded by Mayfield Rd., Coventry Rd., Cedar Rd., and Overlook Lane, was one of the first platted in the desirable higher ground located along an escarpment above Cleveland's University Circle and Euclid Avenue. Early on, Euclid Heights’ developers sought to attract wealthy Millionaires’ Row residents who, in the late 19th century, had begun migrating eastward away from the city's pollution and commercial bustle. The development benefited from the advent of electrified streetcars, which could conquer the steep grades leading up to the Heights. Tucked in the corner of a green space framed by Doan Brook and Lake View Cemetery, Euclid Heights offered a stylish retreat where those able to handle longer commutes could enjoy spacious lots, curving streets, handsome architecture, spectacular views, fresh air, privacy and a chance to put distance between themselves and the increasingly dirty, problem-plagued city below.
     The story goes that Atlanta and New York railroad lawyer Patrick Calhoun, grandson of U.S. Vice President and Senator John C. Calhoun, traveled to Cleveland on business in 1890. Having time to spare, Calhoun rode out to Lake View Cemetery to see the recently dedicated memorial to the slain President James A. Garfield, a structure Calhoun’s family had supported. On the way he noticed the building boom going on in the East End (Hough area), and wondered where that was heading. Calhoun had been involved earlier in the Richmond Terminal railroad project in Virginia and was familiar with the groundbreaking work that Frank Sprague, the "Father of Electric Traction," had done there in using electric railroads to promote urban development. Knowing that the East Cleveland Railway Company had recently done some innovative work electrifying streetcars locally, Calhoun saw an opportunity to develop an important streetcar suburb at the top of Cedar Glen.
     Working with local partners, including John D. Rockefeller's real estate man, J.G.W. Cowles, attorney William Lowe Rice and merchant John Hartness Brown, Calhoun had development plans drawn up by 1892. The Panic of 1893 put their plans on hold but by 1896 an amended site plan was recorded—more or less identical to today's layout of the area with Euclid Heights Boulevard bisecting the site from the southwest corner at the crest of Cedar Hill. In the northeast corner of the development would be the commercial district, what we now know as Coventry Village. Other prominent features included The Overlook—Overlook Road southwest of Edgehill Road and featuring large mansions featuring splendid north- and west-facing views—and the Euclid Club, a country club that sported a golf course spanning both sides of Cedar Road and a grand quarter-mile entry path beginning at what is now the corner of Derbyshire and Surrey Roads.
     The development gradually attracted fine homes and also spurred other beautiful subdivisions, such as Barton Deming’s Euclid Golf Allotment on the south portion of the former golf course (which closed in 1912). Moreover, the Van Sweringen brothers, are believed to have been paperboys in the Euclid Heights area and later went on to adopt themes from the Euclid Heights Allotment in their famous Shaker Heights and Shaker Farm communities (the latter comprises streets such as Stratford, Marlboro, Fairfax and Guilford, west of Lee Road and immediately north of Fairmount Boulevard) . Calhoun, however, was distracted by legal problems running the San Francisco streetcar franchise after the Great Earthquake and saw his Euclid Heights development company forced into bankruptcy in 1914. By then William Rice had been murdered while walking home to the Overlook from the Euclid Club, a sensational case that featured John Hartness Brown as a suspect. Although it still maintains its picturesque “Garden City” look, Euclid Heights soon evolved from a private hilltop retreat to a busy gateway to the rapidly developing Heights. A large portion of Calhoun-owned land in the area’s eastern sector was sold off and subdivided, thus explaining why Cleveland Heights homes east of Coventry Road tend to be somewhat more modest than those near the top of the hill.  Euclid Heights was listed with the National Register of Historic Places on October 31, 2012. It remains full of architecturally significant homes (including Calhoun's at 2460 Edgehill), but its main significance is the role it played in opening the Heights as a streetcar suburb for wealthy Clevelanders.
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asexplainedbyttoi · 2 years
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Yet More Resignations As a Result of the Chris Pincher Groping Scandal
Selaine Saxby, Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Treasury
Claire Coutinho, Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Treasury
David Johnston, Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Department of Education
Kemi Badenoch, Equalities Minister
Neil O’Brien, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up and Housing
Alex Burghart, Apprenticeships Minister
Lee Rowley, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Business and Industry
Julia Lopez, DCMS Minister
Mims Davies, Employment Minister
Craig Williams, Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Treasury
Mark Logan, Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Northern Ireland Office
Duncan Baker, Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Department for Levelling Up and Housing
Rachel Maclean, Minister for Safeguarding
Mike Freer, Minister for Exports and Minister for Equalities
MPs Who’ve Lost Confidence:
Anthony Browne - MP for South Cambridgeshire
Chris Skidmore - MP for Kingswood
Dehenna Davison - MP for Bishop Aukland
Gary Sambrook - MP for Birmingham, Northfield
Huw Merriman - MP for Bexhill and Battle (submitted letter of no confidence while grilling Boris Johnson at the Liaison Committee)
Kate Griffiths - MP for Burton
Lee Anderson - MP for Ashfield
Liam Fox - MP for North Somerset
Michael Gove - MP for Surrey Heath
Robert Buckland - MP for South Swindon
Robert Halfon - MP for Harlow
Robert Jenrick, MP for Newark
Sally-Ann Hart - MP for Hastings and Rye
Simon Fell - MP for Barrow and Furness
Tom Hunt - MP for Ipswich
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historical-babes · 4 years
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Emma, Lady Hamilton (1765-1815).
Mistress of Lord Nelson.
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She was an English model and actress, who is best remembered as the mistress of Lord Nelson and as the muse of the portrait artist George Romney.
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The daughter of a blacksmith, she was calling herself Emily Hart when, in 1781, she began to live with Charles Francis Greville, nephew of her future husband, Sir William Hamilton, British envoy to the Kingdom of Naples. In 1786 Greville sent her to Naples to be his uncle’s mistress in return for Hamilton’s payment of Greville’s debts. In September 1791, she and Hamilton were married.
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A beautiful woman whose portrait was frequently painted by George Romney, Lady Emma Hamilton was already a great favourite in Neapolitan society and was the diplomatic intermediary between her husband and her close friend Queen Maria Carolina of Naples. It was said that Lady Hamilton facilitated Lord Nelson’s victory over the French in the Battle of the Nile (Aug. 1, 1798) by securing Neapolitan permission for his fleet to obtain stores and water in Sicily.
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Lady Hamilton and Nelson, who had met in 1793, became lovers after his Nile triumph. In 1800, when the British government recalled Sir William Hamilton, Nelson returned with him and his wife to England, where she flaunted her control over the admiral. They had two daughters, one of whom survived infancy. After her husband’s death (April 1803) she lived with Nelson at Merton, Surrey. Although she inherited money from both men (Nelson was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar, in October 1805), she squandered most of it, was imprisoned for debt (1813–14), and died in impecunious exile.
[Submission]
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diceriadelluntore · 4 years
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Storia Di Musica #137 - Mary Lou Williams, Live At The Cookery, 1975
Se pensiamo al jazz femminile, la prima connessione, quella più immediata, ci porta alle mitiche voci soliste, da Billie Holiday, l’Angelo di Harlem a Nina Simone, da Sara Vaughan a Ella Fitzgerald, da Betty Carter a Etta James, solo per citare le prime che mi vengono in mente. Ma c’è una figura del jazz al femminile che ha attraversato 70 anni di storia jazz, contribuendo in maniera silenziosa ma formidabile a tutte le grandi trasformazioni del jazz in tutti quei 7 decenni.  Mary Elfrieda Scruggs ha 5 anni quando, appassionandosi alle prove che suo padre e i suoi amici pianisti facevano sul pianoforte di casa, inizia ad innamorarsi dello strumento, che impara a suonare ad orecchio. Ha 13 anni quando si esibisce nel primo spettacolo di vaudeville al piano, e ne ha 16 quando si sposa con il sassofonista John Williams, cambiando il suo nome in Mary Lou Williams. Inizia così la carriera di quella che è considerata la più lunga nella storia del jazz, caratterizzata da un esecuzione limpida e sofisticata, una grande passione per gli arrangiamenti e soprattutto una immensa e definitiva libertà artistica e personale, che le faranno fare scelte nient’affatto scontate. La prima grande esperienza agli inizi degli anni ‘30 nella band di Andy Kirk, dove suona con e conosce alcuni dei giganti di quegli anni (Lester Young, Ben Webster,Charlie Parker tra gli altri) associando l’esecuzione solista al pianoforte con nuovi e frizzanti arrangiamenti che iniziano a diventare un marchio di fabbrica. Tanto è che poco dopo, appena poche settimana dall’essersi lasciata con Williams e aver sposato Harold Baker in seconde nozze, inizia a suonare con Art Barkley e il divino Duke Ellington. Eppure il suo spirito libero e la sua voglia di affermazione la spinge ad abbandonare la big band di Sir Duke e spostarsi prima a New York, dove nella sua casa di Harlem discute e compone con altri giganti, tra cui Thelonious Monk, Tadd Dameron Dizzy Gillespie. In maniera pionieristica avvia un viaggio lunghissimo in Europa, ad inizi anni ‘50, avrò una profonda conversione religiosa negli anni ‘60, suonerà nei ‘70 il free jazz con Cecil Taylor. Con lo spirito curioso e intraprendente, la Williams ha pigiato tasti nelle più profonde rivoluzioni del jazz. Pur non essendo una virtuosa, il suo stile pulito, sofisticato, delicato, è bellissimo da sentire. Il disco di oggi ne è la conferma piena: The Cookery Club è un ristorante con palco per i live tra l’8.a e la University St a New York, uno dei templi del jazz elegante. Nel Novembre 1975 Mary Lou William suona per tre sere a settimane accompagnata solo dal contrabbasso di Brian Torff , e ne esce da una serata particolarmente ispirata questo LP, Live At The Cookery, che sarà stampato in CD la prima volta nel 1990 e in una versione rimasterizzata nel 1994 (che è il mio disco di riferimento in collezione). Va detto che la qualità del suono non è perfetta, ma l’esecuzione della Williams e il repertorio a dir poco antologico ne fanno un disco meraviglioso, perfetta espressione delle cose dette fin qui. In scaletta 12 brani, 5 a firma Mary Lou Williams, gli altri sette che spaziano i decenni del jazz, arrangiatati nel modo delicato e amorevole della pianista. Tra gli autografi, le spettacolari Praise The Lord, originariamente presente nell’album Zoning (1974) il suo più grande successo discografico, poi le altrettanto belle Blues For Peter, Roll’Em e l’incalzante Waltz Boogie. Tra le rielaborazioni, si passa da I Can’t Get Started di Vernon Duke e Ira Gershwin, si passa a  The Jeep Is Jumpin' di Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges, Billy Strayhorn, per poi andare nei super classici: My Funny Valentine (Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers),  The Surrey With The Fringe On Top (Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers),  The Man I Love (di George Gershwin e Ira Gershwin, particolarmente emozionante), la storica Mack The Knife della coppia Kurt Weil / Bertold Brecht e addirittura All Blues di Miles Davis (dal capolavoro leggendario Kind Of Blues) per concludere la serata, tra gli applausi del pubblico, con A Grand Night For Swinging, pezzo della band del chitarrista jazz Mundell Lowe che la registrò nel 1957. La Williams muore nel 1981, a 65 anni dal suo debutto sulle scene: ha lasciato un segno forse non spettacolare, ma lungo, sincero e solido, nella storia del jazz.
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theloniousbach · 2 years
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COUCH TOUR: EDDIE HENDERSON with Donald Harrison, George Cables, Gerald Cannon, and Lenny White, SMOKE JAZZ CLUB, 9 SEPTEMBER 2022
Another stand alone “couch tour” for a set in real time. If the previous night’s challenging trio was rewarding albeit work, this one was a more typical end of the week of the week celebration.
Of course, I last saw EDDIE HENDERSON more than 50 years ago as part of Herbie Hancock’s glorious Mwandishi band at a classy Kansas City club. He was, with Benny Maupin and Julian Priester, part of a traditional palette of horns for Hancock to color a churning fusion rhythm section—except Buster Williams played acoustic bass masterfully and Billy Hart, as I’ve rediscovered through the streams of lockdown and beyond, still has subtle chops. So does Lenny White who also paid fusion dues with Return to Forever but contributed to last night’s success.
Henderson has a brighter tone than Jeremy Pelt and Josh Evans who have been my recent trumpet heroes. He can play with force, but his lines are rich and don’t rely on high register pyrotechnics. Still he makes for an interesting contrast with his long time partner, altoist Donald Harrison who brings a grit and New Orleans slinkiness. Henderson swings just fine but he has a different and slightly simpler relation to the beat than Harrison. Still they make a very successful team.
Henderson has released two albums for Smoke with Harrison and the immaculate Kenny Barron. Well, much as I would have loved to see Barron too, it has been too long since I have crossed streaming paths with George Cables who fed both horns rich responses—melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic—with an appealing exuberance. They did his appealingly intricate Why Not, but he/they had standards like Surrey with the Fringe On Top, Born to Be Blue, and another show tune I couldn’t place to dig into.
Straight ahead stuff but not tame, just by now elder statesment (Henderson will turn 82 this year) keeping the craft alive. Harrison and Gerald Cannon, an implacable rock on bass, are a bit younger than me, so elder statesmen age, and Cables and White are in their 70s. They still swing hard even as they are in jackets and ties with ball or thinning hair lines and not dashikis and Afros.
But Miles Davis and his immediate acolytes like Hancock didn’t let the jazz chops fall away during the heyday of fusion even if others took short cuts. Much of it is forgettable, but the players who came back from the brink continue to make a difference.
And we were all young once. I should know.
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lalaounaamina · 3 years
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Reading Poetry 1
Upon 'the 100 Best Recommended English Language Poets' I am willing to read at least one poem by each poet (1 to 100 is a random pick not a ranking).
1 John Milton 1608-1674
2 William Shakespeare 1564-1616
3 Geoffrey Chaucer 1343-1400
4 WB Yeats 1865-1939
5 William Wordsworth 1770-1850
6 John Keats 1795-1821
7 William Blake 1757-1827
8 TS Eliot 1888-1965
9 John Donne 1572-1631
10 Emily Dickinson 1830-1886
11 Walt Whitman 1819-1892
12 Alexander Pope 1688-1744
13 Robert Browning 1812-1899
14 Wallace Stevens 1879-1955
15 Percy Blysse Shelley 1792-1822
16 Lord Byron 1788-1824
17 Alfred Lord Tennysson 1809-1892
18 Edmund Spenser 1552-1599
19 Edgar Allan Poe 1809-1849
20 WH Auden 1907-1973
21 Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772-1934
22 John Dryden 1631-1700
23 Ezra Pound 1885-1972
24 George Herbert 1593-1633
25 Robert Burns 1759-1796
26 Andrew Marvell 1621-1678
27 Thomas Hardy 1840-1928
28 John Ashbery 1927-
29 William Langland 1332-1386
30 Elizabeth Bishop 1911-1979
31 Pearl Poet ?
32 Philip Sidney 1554-1586
33 Gerard Manley Hopkins 1844-1889
34 Robert Frost 1874-1963
35 Matthew Arnold 1822-1888
36 John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester 1647-1680
37 Beowulf Poet ?
38 Robert Lowell 1917-1977
39 Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1806-1861
40 Christina Rossetti 1830-1894
41 James Merrill 1926-1995
42 Thomas Wyatt 1503-1542
43 Sylvia Plath 1932-1963
44 John Clare 1793-1864
45 Algernon Charles Swinburne 1837-1809
46 Philip Larkin 1922-1985
47 John Gower 1330-1408
48 Ben Johnson 1572-1637
49 Hart Crane 1899-1932
50 William Dunbar 1460-?
51 Geoffrey Hill 1932-
52 Seamus Heaney 1939-
53 William Cowper 1731-1800
54 William Carlos Williams 1832-1963
55 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807-1882
56 Thomas Traherne 1636-1674
57 Adrienne Rich 1929-2012
58 Wilfred Owen 1893-1918
59 AE Housman 1859-1936
60 Thomas Moore 1779-1852
61 Dylan Thomas 1914-1953
62 Derek Walcott 1930-
63 EE Cummings 1896-1962
64 Marianne Moore 1887-1972
65 John Berryman 1914-1972
66 Henry Vaughan 1622-1695
67 AR Ammons 1926-2001
68 Anne Finch 1661-1720
69 WS Merwin 1927-
70 Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1828-1882
71 Robert Penn Warren 1905-1989
72 Allen Ginsberg 1926-1997
73 Louise Gluck 1943-
74 Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey 1516-1547
75 Theodore Roethke 1908-1963
76 Felicia Hemans 1793-1835
77 Thomas Gray 1716-1771
78 Paul Muldoon 1951-
79 Thomas Lovell Beddoes 1803-1849
80 Abraham Cowley 1618-1667
81 Henry David Thoreau 1817-1862
82 Jonathan Swift 1667-1745
83 Ted Hughes 1930-1998
84 HD 1886-1961
85 Robinson Jeffers 1887-1962
86 Christopher Marlowe 1564-1593
87 Robert Herrick 1592-1674
88 Edward Arlington Robinson 1860-1935
89 Richard Crashaw 1613-1649
90 Carl Sandburg 1878-1967
91 Langston Hughes 1902-1967
92 Robert Henryson 1460-1500
93 Paul Laurence Dunbar 1872-1906
94 Stephen Crane 1871-1900
95 Anne Carson 1950-
96 Louis MacNeice 1907-1963
97 Anne Bradstreet 1612-1672
98 John Skelton 1460-1529
99 Bob Dylan 1941-
100 Emily Bronte 1818-1848
101 Rudayard Kipling
102 John Green Leaf Whittier
103 Richard Siken
104 Anna de Noailles
105 Edwin Morgan
106 Mary Oliver
107 William Ernest Henley
108 Pablo Neruda
109 Catol Ann Duffy
110 Adrienne Rich
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The Range in Spades.
By Peter Craven. 
As with everyone, My Fair Lady is an ancient memory for Charles Edwards, who seems to oscillate from the Rex Harrison repertoire to Shakespeare – Noël Coward’s Blithe Spirit with Angela Lansbury in the West End and America, but also Oberon to Judi Dench’s Titania, directed by Peter Hall. 
“I was fascinated by it as a child,” he says. “The LP of the original with Rex and Julie [Andrews] I found – I can’t remember how old I would have been, but quite little – but I remember being really fascinated by the wit, even at that stage. I knew it was very clever and very sharp and very English, particularly the way Rex did it.” 
Edwards is the new Henry Higgins in Julie Andrews’ production of My Fair Lady. It’s the Hamlet of high-comedy roles and arguably the greatest of all musicals. So what does he do with Higgins’ sprechgesang? Does he follow the notes or does he do what Rex Harrison did on Broadway in 1956, opposite Andrews’ Eliza Doolittle, hitting a note every so often but speaking his way through? 
“I follow that,” Edwards says, of the latter. “I personally find if you follow the notes in Higgins’ songs, what is revealed to you is that they’re not nearly as much fun. They actually become rather leaden. And what you need with those songs is great lightness and dexterity. 
“I’d been playing around with doing it slightly off the beat, trying to maybe be a little bit clever with it. But Guy Simpson, our brilliant musical director, says it’s much better if you can speak as much as you like but just stick to the beat. It’s more real, there’s more of the character. Higgins knows what he’s saying, he doesn’t have to dither either side of the beat.” Frederick Loewe, after all, wrote it for Harrison, knowing he couldn’t sing. “I think that’s perhaps why if you try to sing more than one should it’s less interesting because it is written for the man who was going to do it like that.” 
Michael Redgrave famously refused the role of Higgins because it meant committing to a long run. How does Edwards feel about a longish stretch of phonetics and feminist musical comedy? “Oh, I could do it for a while,” he says. “I arrived, performed it in Brisbane, and now I’m rehearsing it in a way… for my own satisfaction. Something which would happen in four or six weeks of rehearsal is now happening to me, internally, just myself, finding my way. I feel like I’m still starting out even though the performance is there. I could do it for a bit longer because there is a lot more to explore.” 
I tell him I’ve just watched the recording of him playing Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing – the one role Harrison recorded for Caedmon, which is largely in prose and the Bard’s most Shavian play. “It was really fun,” Edwards says of his stint opposite Eve Best at the Globe in the role with a family resemblance to Higgins. “Julie [Andrews] likes comparing Shaw as the natural successor to Shakespeare in terms of that kind of comedy. I’m very drawn to both of these roles. That was a joy to do.” He adds that he learnt something from the Globe, because it’s rougher, more extroverted theatre. “If it’s done with wit,” he says, “it can be a great crowd-pleaser, without being naff. And I think it has informed my work to such an extent that often since I’ve been told, ‘Just calm down, Charles.’ ” 
When I tell him he was very good as the Tory whip in This House, the parliamentary play by James Graham, done by the National Theatre, he says of the author, “I don’t know how old he is, he’s something annoying like… he’s probably hit 30. I hope he has.” But he adds that at 47 himself he’s probably a bit younger than the received image of Higgins from the film of My Fair Lady, even though Shaw describes him as a pleasant-looking man of 40. It must be odd to inhabit a role with such a powerful acting ghost in the background. 
I once saw Harrison – very, very old – at an airport sweeping past in what looked exactly like the hat and coat he – and Edwards – wears in the opening scene of My Fair Lady in Covent Garden. “There’s a lot, I’m sure, in the production we’ve inherited that he insisted on,” Edwards says. “I’m sure that will be true of the hat … And here we are now, probably wearing the very weave he ordered from a particular tailor.” 
Of course, everyone likes the cut of Higgins’ cloth and would like to make it their own. George Clooney, of all people, is said to have had an eye on the role when Emma Thompson wanted to make a new film of it with Carey Mulligan as Eliza. And with the old George Cukor film, Alan Jay Lerner, treacherously, wanted Peter O’Toole, still in his 30s, rather than Harrison. Like O’Toole, Edwards does both ends of the acting spectrum: the light-as-air prose comedy of Shaw and the poetic majesties of Shakespeare. He worked with Peter Hall, the founder of the Royal Shakespeare Company. 
“I’ve done quite a lot with him,” he says. “I think I auditioned one year when he used to run the season at Bath and he took a shine and kept wanting me back to do this and that.” His work with Hall included another Much Ado, where he played Don Pedro. “He got it into his head,” Edwards says, “that Don Pedro at the end was like Malvolio or Antonio, the man who gets left alone.” So Edwards’ Don was a bit in love with Claudio and something of “a real devil”. 
His Oberon to Dench’s Titania in A Midsummer Night’s Dream came from another of Hall’s bright ideas. “Peter put it to me, ‘Look, I’ve got this idea, it’s like Elizabeth and Essex…’ They did a prelude to the evening where the players were assembling to put on a play for Elizabeth I and then Elizabeth/Judi arrives and selects me.” He says that Dench, like Andrews, is great to be with and “just as nervous and scared as the rest of us all are. They’re very great company people; their fun is being in the company.” This was the second time he’d worked with Dench because he’d been her fancy man, Sandy, when she played Judith Bliss in Coward’s classic comedy Hay Fever. He loves the lightness of My Fair Lady and the way it can modulate into the gravity of “I’ve Grown Accustomed to her Face”, with its utterly moody interplay between hilarities of exasperation, and something else, something at the edge of heartbreak. 
Of course, acting careers have their light and dark. Harrison, high comedian though he was, did Preston Sturges’s Unfaithfully Yours, that demon study of jealousy. Marcello Mastroianni, in many ways his European equivalent, made some of the more serious masterpieces, everything from 8 ½ to La Notte. And Edwards went straight from acting with Olivia Williams in Harley Granville Barker’s Waste to doing a chocolate-box soap TV drama, The Halcyon, with her. He says Granville Barker stands up very well when you prune him back and you know he thinks this of Shaw, too – the way “The Rain in Spain” crystallises something Shaw takes for granted and talks around – and does so operatically. “I find it very touching, that bit,” Edwards says. “It’s wonderful to do.” 
And he’s at pains to defend Higgins, the man who – at Harrison’s insistence – was given another Act II number, “A Hymn to Him”. “He’s not a snob,” Edwards says. “He’s trying to remove the social gaps. He’s trying to erase them, in a rather perverse way by wanting everyone to speak the same and dismiss regional accents – but he’s not a snob. He’s an egalitarian.” 
It’s always a fascinating thing to listen to an actor let his mind roam about the ins and outs, the winding staircase of his career. Charles Edwards went to a preparatory school named Amesbury in Surrey, which he says was “pure Decline and Fall, full of eccentrics, some of them quite dangerous eccentrics”. His salvation was Hamlet. “I was invited by – you know, we all have these teachers who encourage us – his name is Simon Elliot and he’ll still come and see me in shows now. ‘I’d like to talk to you about Hamlet,’ he said. ‘Oh yeah?’ ”
From there, a career. Here he is on Angela Lansbury: “She is in every way fit. In Blithe Spirit she did this extraordinary dance with these jerky movements as she was preparing for a séance. I don’t know what it was but I know every night she loved doing it and changing it.” And on Maria Aitken, brilliant as the wife of John Cleese’s Archie in A Fish Called Wanda, who directed Edwards in The 39 Steps: “With comedy she immediately knows, ‘That’s what I want for this show.’ And that it has to be taken very seriously. She’s the person you need at the centre, taking it absolutely seriously.” She insisted that Edwards – who was the production’s original Hannay in The 39 Steps – had to play the role when it transferred to Broadway. “She was lovely. She fought for me and she said, ‘You need the Englishman. You need the backbone.’ And they brought me over even though the rest of the cast was two Americans and one Canadian. It was great, I was thrilled. But it’s the kind of humour that can tip. It’s got to be tasteful, it’s got to have taste. Taste is the key with humour that involves an audience.” 
All of which brings us round to the ending of My Fair Lady where Eliza comes back to Higgins. She has sung that she can do “Without You”. “Absolutely,” he says, “and this is heightened by the ending, the fact that some people would ask why does she come back to him. But there has to be a meeting of minds, a meeting of souls, and that’s what he realises right at the end. She comes back to show him that she has to be there, but she is in charge. And he sees that and accepts that. And all of that we try to do in three seconds of the show.” 
Edwards laughs. 
So what is it like to work with Julie Andrews as she re-creates the original production of My Fair Lady by the legendary Moss Hart? “It was a real treat, it’s an extraordinary thing and very touching to see her remembering it,” Edwards says. 
Obviously the production is a blueprint, which he had to fit himself to, but the man who is best known here for his stint in Downton Abbey adds, “But you have to imbue it with a new texture.”.
Taken from The Saturday Paper, published Jul 15, 2017.
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gyrlversion · 5 years
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How did your MP vote on the deal?
TORY AYES (286) 
Nigel Adams (Selby and Ainsty),
Bim Afolami (Hitchin and Harpenden)
Peter Aldous (Waveney), 
Lucy Allan (Telford), 
David Amess (Southend West), 
Stuart Andrew (Pudsey), 
Edward Argar (Charnwood), 
Victoria Atkins (Louth and Horncastle), 
Richard Bacon (South Norfolk), 
Kemi Badenoch (Saffron Walden), 
Harriett Baldwin (West Worcestershire), 
Stephen Barclay (North East Cambridgeshire), 
Henry Bellingham (North West Norfolk), 
Richard Benyon (Newbury), 
Paul Beresford (Mole Valley), 
Jake Berry (Rossendale and Darwen), 
Bob Blackman (Harrow East), 
Crispin Blunt (Reigate), 
Nick Boles (Grantham and Stamford), 
Peter Bottomley (Worthing West), 
Andrew Bowie (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine), 
Ben Bradley (Mansfield), 
Karen Bradley (Staffordshire Moorlands), 
Graham Brady (Altrincham and Sale West), 
Jack Brereton (Stoke-on-Trent South), 
Steve Brine (Winchester), 
James Brokenshire (Old Bexley and Sidcup), 
Fiona Bruce (Congleton), 
Robert Buckland (South Swindon), 
Alex Burghart (Brentwood and Ongar), 
Conor Burns (Bournemouth West), 
Alistair Burt (North East Bedfordshire), 
Alun Cairns (Vale of Glamorgan), 
James Cartlidge (South Suffolk), 
Maria Caulfield (Lewes), 
Alex Chalk (Cheltenham), 
Rehman Chishti (Gillingham and Rainham), 
Jo Churchill (Bury St Edmunds), 
Colin Clark (Gordon),
Greg Clark (Tunbridge Wells), 
Kenneth Clarke (Rushcliffe), 
Simon Clarke (Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland), 
James Cleverly (Braintree), 
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (The Cotswolds), 
Therese Coffey (Suffolk Coastal), 
Damian Collins (Folkestone and Hythe), 
Alberto Costa (South Leicestershire), 
Robert Courts (Witney), 
Geoffrey Cox (Torridge and West Devon),
Stephen Crabb (Preseli Pembrokeshire), 
Tracey Crouch (Chatham and Aylesford), 
Chris Davies (Brecon and Radnorshire), 
David T. C. Davies (Monmouth), 
Glyn Davies (Montgomeryshire), 
Mims Davies (Eastleigh), 
Philip Davies (Shipley)
David Davis (Haltemprice and Howden),
Caroline Dinenage (Gosport), 
Jonathan Djanogly (Huntingdon), 
Leo Docherty (Aldershot), 
Michelle Donelan (Chippenham), 
Nadine Dorries (Mid Bedfordshire), 
Steve Double (St Austell and Newquay), 
Oliver Dowden (Hertsmere), 
Jackie Doyle-Price (Thurrock), 
Richard Drax (South Dorset), 
David Duguid (Banff and Buchan),
Iain Duncan Smith (Chingford and Woodford Green), 
Alan Duncan (Rutland and Melton), 
Philip Dunne (Ludlow), 
Michael Ellis (Northampton North), 
Tobias Ellwood (Bournemouth East), 
Charlie Elphicke (Dover), 
George Eustice (Camborne and Redruth), 
Nigel Evans (Ribble Valley), 
David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford), 
Michael Fabricant (Lichfield), 
Michael Fallon (Sevenoaks), 
Mark Field (Cities of London and Westminster), 
Vicky Ford (Chelmsford), 
Kevin Foster (Torbay), 
Liam Fox (North Somerset), 
Lucy Frazer (South East Cambridgeshire), 
George Freeman (Mid Norfolk), 
Mike Freer (Finchley and Golders Green), 
Roger Gale (North Thanet), 
Mark Garnier (Wyre Forest), 
David Gauke (South West Hertfordshire), 
Nusrat Ghani (Wealden), 
Nick Gibb (Bognor Regis and Littlehampton), 
Cheryl Gillan (Chesham and Amersham),
John Glen (Salisbury), 
Zac Goldsmith (Richmond Park), 
Robert Goodwill (Scarborough and Whitby), 
Michael Gove (Surrey Heath), 
Luke Graham (Ochil and South Perthshire), 
Richard Graham (Gloucester), 
Bill Grant (Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock), 
Helen Grant (Maidstone and The Weald), 
James Gray (North Wiltshire), 
Chris Grayling (Epsom and Ewell), 
Chris Green (Bolton West), 
Damian Green (Ashford), 
Andrew Griffiths (Burton), 
Kirstene Hair (Angus), 
Robert Halfon (Harlow), 
Luke Hall (Thornbury and Yate), 
Philip Hammond (Runnymede and Weybridge), 
Stephen Hammond (Wimbledon), 
Matt Hancock (West Suffolk), 
Greg Hands (Chelsea and Fulham), 
Mark Harper (Forest of Dean), 
Richard Harrington (Watford), 
Rebecca Harris (Castle Point), 
Trudy Harrison (Copeland), 
Simon Hart (Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire), 
John Hayes (South Holland and The Deepings),
Oliver Heald (North East Hertfordshire), 
James Heappey (Wells), 
Chris Heaton-Harris (Daventry), 
Peter Heaton-Jones (North Devon), 
Gordon Henderson (Sittingbourne and Sheppey), 
Nick Herbert (Arundel and South Downs), 
Damian Hinds (East Hampshire), 
Simon Hoare (North Dorset), 
George Hollingbery (Meon Valley), 
Kevin Hollinrake (Thirsk and Malton), 
John Howell (Henley), 
Nigel Huddleston (Mid Worcestershire), 
Eddie Hughes (Walsall North),
Jeremy Hunt (South West Surrey), 
Nick Hurd (Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner), 
Alister Jack (Dumfries and Galloway), 
Margot James (Stourbridge), 
Sajid Javid (Bromsgrove), 
Robert Jenrick (Newark), 
Boris Johnson (Uxbridge and South Ruislip), 
Caroline Johnson (Sleaford and North Hykeham), 
Gareth Johnson (Dartford), 
Andrew Jones (Harrogate and Knaresborough),
Marcus Jones (Nuneaton), 
Daniel Kawczynski (Shrewsbury and Atcham), 
Gillian Keegan (Chichester), 
Seema Kennedy (South Ribble), 
Stephen Kerr (Stirling), 
Julian Knight (Solihull), 
Greg Knight (East Yorkshire), 
Kwasi Kwarteng (Spelthorne), 
John Lamont (Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk), 
Mark Lancaster (Milton Keynes North), 
Pauline Latham (Mid Derbyshire), 
Andrea Leadsom (South Northamptonshire), 
Jeremy Lefroy (Stafford), 
Edward Leigh (Gainsborough), 
Oliver Letwin (West Dorset), 
Andrew Lewer (Northampton South), 
Brandon Lewis (Great Yarmouth),
Ian Liddell-Grainger (Bridgwater and West Somerset), 
David Lidington (Aylesbury), 
Jack Lopresti (Filton and Bradley Stoke),
Jonathan Lord (Woking), 
Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham),
Rachel Maclean (Redditch), 
Anne Main (St Albans), 
Alan Mak (Havant), Kit Malthouse (North West Hampshire), 
Scott Mann (North Cornwall), 
Paul Masterton (East Renfrewshire), 
Theresa May (Maidenhead), 
Paul Maynard (Blackpool North and Cleveleys), 
Patrick McLoughlin (Derbyshire Dales), 
Stephen McPartland (Stevenage), 
Esther McVey (Tatton), 
Mark Menzies (Fylde), 
Johnny Mercer (Plymouth, Moor View), 
Huw Merriman (Bexhill and Battle), 
Stephen Metcalfe (South Basildon and East Thurrock), 
Maria Miller (Basingstoke), 
Amanda Milling (Cannock Chase), 
Nigel Mills (Amber Valley), 
Anne Milton (Guildford), 
Andrew Mitchell (Sutton Coldfield), 
Damien Moore (Southport), 
Penny Mordaunt (Portsmouth North), 
Nicky Morgan (Loughborough), 
David Morris (Morecambe and Lunesdale), 
James Morris (Halesowen and Rowley Regis), 
Wendy Morton (Aldridge-Brownhills), 
David Mundell (Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale), 
Sheryll Murray (South East Cornwall), 
Andrew Murrison (South West Wiltshire), 
Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst), 
Sarah Newton (Truro and Falmouth), 
Caroline Nokes (Romsey and Southampton North), 
Jesse Norman (Hereford and South Herefordshire), 
Neil O’Brien (Harborough), 
Matthew Offord (Hendon), 
Guy Opperman (Hexham), 
Neil Parish (Tiverton and Honiton), 
Mark Pawsey (Rugby), 
Mike Penning (Hemel Hempstead), 
John Penrose (Weston-super-Mare), 
Andrew Percy (Brigg and Goole),
Claire Perry (Devizes), 
Chris Philp (Croydon South), 
Christopher Pincher (Tamworth), 
Dan Poulter (Central Suffolk and North Ipswich), 
Rebecca Pow (Taunton Deane), 
Victoria Prentis (Banbury), 
Mark Prisk (Hertford and Stortford), 
Mark Pritchard (The Wrekin), 
Tom Pursglove (Corby), 
Jeremy Quin (Horsham), 
Will Quince (Colchester), 
Dominic Raab (Esher and Walton), 
Jacob Rees-Mogg (North East Somerset), 
Mary Robinson (Cheadle), 
Douglas Ross (Moray), 
Amber Rudd (Hastings and Rye),
David Rutley (Macclesfield), 
Antoinette Sandbach (Eddisbury), 
Paul Scully (Sutton and Cheam), 
Bob Seely (Isle of Wight), 
Andrew Selous (South West Bedfordshire), 
Grant Shapps (Welwyn Hatfield), 
Alok Sharma (Reading West), 
Alec Shelbrooke (Elmet and Rothwell),
Keith Simpson (Broadland), 
Chris Skidmore (Kingswood), 
Chloe Smith (Norwich North), 
Henry Smith (Crawley), 
Julian Smith (Skipton and Ripon), 
Royston Smith (Southampton, Itchen), 
Nicholas Soames (Mid Sussex), 
Caroline Spelman (Meriden), 
Mark Spencer (Sherwood), 
John Stevenson (Carlisle), 
Bob Stewart (Beckenham), 
Iain Stewart (Milton Keynes South), 
Rory Stewart (Penrith and The Border),
Gary Streeter (South West Devon),
Mel Stride (Central Devon), 
Graham Stuart (Beverley and Holderness), 
Julian Sturdy (York Outer), 
Rishi Sunak (Richmond (Yorks)),
Desmond Swayne (New Forest West), 
Hugo Swire (East Devon), 
Robert Syms (Poole),
Derek Thomas (St Ives), 
Ross Thomson (Aberdeen South), 
Maggie Throup (Erewash), 
Kelly Tolhurst (Rochester and Strood), 
Justin Tomlinson (North Swindon), 
Michael Tomlinson (Mid Dorset and North Poole), 
Craig Tracey (North Warwickshire),
David Tredinnick (Bosworth), 
Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Berwick-upon-Tweed), 
Elizabeth Truss (South West Norfolk), 
Tom Tugendhat (Tonbridge and Malling), 
Edward Vaizey (Wantage), 
Shailesh Vara (North West Cambridgeshire), 
Martin Vickers (Cleethorpes), 
Charles Walker (Broxbourne), 
Robin Walker (Worcester), 
Ben Wallace (Wyre and Preston North), 
David Warburton (Somerton and Frome), 
Matt Warman (Boston and Skegness), 
Giles Watling (Clacton), Helen Whately (Faversham and Mid Kent), 
Heather Wheeler (South Derbyshire), 
John Whittingdale (Maldon), 
Bill Wiggin (North Herefordshire), 
Gavin Williamson (South Staffordshire), 
Mike Wood (Dudley South), 
William Wragg (Hazel Grove), 
Jeremy Wright (Kenilworth and Southam),
Nadhim Zahawi (Stratford-on-Avon). 
The post How did your MP vote on the deal? appeared first on Gyrlversion.
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seanhartlive · 6 years
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Two Guns, Arizona
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I wanna talk about this ghost town I stumbled up while doing research for a novel. In the middle of the Arizona desert, by Canyon Diablo, is Two Guns; an outlaws haven. Canyon Diablo’s fourteen saloons, ten gambling houses, and four brothels were said to’ve been open 24/7 lining the only street in town, known by the locals as Hell Street. The nearest law enforcement a 100 miles away. And when they did elect a local Marshall, he was buried a mere five hours after taking the job. Billy the Kid’s gang out outlaws had hideouts all throughout the area. Another four men robbed a train, making off with 2,500 new silver dollars and $40,000 in gold coins, as well as jewelry, and diamonds, burying it in Two Guns. Near Two Guns is the Death Cave. After a battle in 1878 between the Apache and Navajo, several Navajo scouts went to find three kidnapped women. They set fire to the sagebrush in front of the cave. The cave, named after the deaths of the forty-two Apache, was eventually exploited by an eccentric publicist named Harry E. Miller. Harry claiming to be a full-blooded Apache and advertised himself as "Chief Crazy Thunder." Harry built a zoo with cages made of brick and mortar were he kept mountain lions, cougars, gila monsters, coral snakes, birds, and a lynx. He sold Apache skulls found in the cave as souvenirs in his gift store. So, why’s it called Two Guns? Sure it has something to do with the gunsligers and outlaws? Maybe a Marshall came to town called ‘Two-Guns’ and cleaned the place up? The town was named after one of Harry E. Miller’s friends, William Surrey Hart, a famous silent movie star, known in the biz as ‘Two Gun Bill.’
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arsenalhistory · 7 years
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May 16th In Arsenal’s History
On this day in 1881, Edwin 'Teddy' Bateup was born in Horley, Surrey. He made 36 appearances in goal for Woolwich Arsenal after joining as an amateur from Faversham in 1905. He left to sign for New Brompton in 1911.
On this date in 1891, due to financial difficulties, at its Annual General Meeting Royal Arsenal voted against forming a Ltd company and offered to resign from the London FA and the Kent FA, but neither took up the offer.
In Europe today in 1907 Woolwich Arsenal faced SK Slavia IPS in a friendly. John Coleman scored twice and Charlie Satterthwaite was amongst the goalscorers in a 2-4 win for the Arsenal.
In 1910 with the onset of another set of financial problems this date saw a share of the club sold to Glasgow Rangers. Shortly afterwards they bought a further share. It is believed that this arrangement came about through the help of manager George Morrell who had previously worked for Rangers. In 1930 in a gesture of gratitude for that help the club made a gift of 14 more shares to the Scottish club and this stake in Arsenal was held until owner Craig Whyte, with Rangers experiencing their own money worries sold the shares to Alisher Usmanov for £230,000 in January 2012, ending a 102 year connection between the clubs. The press meanwhile were propagating rumours that Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea and Fulham were trying to buy the south London club.
In Germany on this date in 1912 it was Woolwich Arsenal versus Deutscher FC. Although I have been unable to find who scored the goals we do know it ended 1-4 to the Gunners.
Touring in Sweden today in 1922 William Bradshaw, Clement Voysey (2) and Alf Baker scored the goals that gave Arsenal a 1-4 win over Gais.
Arsenal must have enjoyed the experience as they were back in Sweden today in 1923 when they played a Sweden Combined XI. Goals from Harry Moffat, Billy Blyth and Bob Turnbull made it 1-3 in Arsenal's favour at the final whistle.
On this day in 1925 manager Leslie Knighton officially departed the club to be replaced by Herbert Chapman. His volatile relationship with Henry Norris was over.
This date in 1934 Jack Crayston  joined Arsenal. He signed from Bradford Park Avenue and played 187 times for the club scoring 17 goals. He stayed as a player until he retired in 1939 and they advent of World War II but would later be coach and manager of the club.
Back in Sweden today in 1939 the Gunners took on Gothenburg Alliance. A goal from George Drury and two from Ted Drake made it a 0-3 English win.
At the temporary wartime home of White Hart Lane Arsenal played Brentford today in 1942 in the London War Cup. Arsenal couldn't score but Brentford helped out by putting through their own net. The Bees went on to win 1-2 though.
Once again back in Sweden Arsenal took on Staevnet today in 1961. Vic Groves scored the only goal of the match to give the Gunners the 0-1 win.
In 1962 today the great Jack Kelsey injured his back and retired from Arsenal and football. The goalkeeper that the Brazilian national team nicknamed the 'cat with magnetic paws' had played 352 times between the posts for Arsenal.
The Gunners made the trip to Molineux for a Division 1 match against Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1980 and returned to the capital with the points after a 1-2 victory. Frank Stapleton and Steve Walford got the ogals for the win.
Arsenal were invited to the Valley today in 1984. It was the Les Berry Testimonial match and the assembled supporters saw seven goals. Brian Talbot, Paul Davis (2) and Raphael Meade scored the goals the made it 3-4 against Charlton Athletic.
May 16th 1997 Arsenal signed Matthew Upson  from Luton Town for £2m. Over the next six years he would make only 56 appearances for the club. He left to join Birmingham City in 2003.
On this day in 1998 it was FA Cup final day at Wembley Stadium. Arsenal were to face Newcastle United. David Seaman, Lee Dixon, Tony Adams, Martin Keown, Nigel Winterburn, Ray Parlour, Patrick Viera, Emmanuel Petit, Marc Overmars, Christopher Wreh & Nicolas Anelka took to the Wembley turf and after the first 45 minutes Arsenal were 1-0 up through a 23rd minute Marc Overmars  goal. The Gunners scored again in the second half as Nicolas Anelka (picture bottom right) found the back of the net on 69 minutes. That was enough! Arsenal lifted the trophy and the Gunners had achieved their second league and cup double. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyf0A-rCVA8
Into the Premiership era and today in 1999 saw Aston Villa make the trip to Highbury but they were unable to get anything from the game and Arsenal sneaked a 1-0 win thanks to a goal by Nwankwo Kanu. Arsenal finished 2nd in the league (just a point behind Manchester United) and Nicolas Anelka was top scorer with 19 goals.
Finally, 75,468 supporters took their places at Old Trafford in 2009 to watch the Gunners against Manchester United. The points were shared as no one could break the deadlock and the score remained 0-0.
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gamemodustk-blog · 7 years
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In memoriam: April 2017
Tributes are paid to the CAs who have as of late passed away.
Graham Alexander Mckinlay Armstrong CA
Graham Alexander Mckinlay Armstrong CA, who lived in Edinburgh, passed on in July 2016 matured 67. He was conceived on 17 December 1948 and admitted to participation on 27 November 1973.
In the wake of qualifying, Mr Armstrong brought a position with Arthur Young McClelland Moores and Co, was later an administration bookkeeper at BP Chemicals Ltd, and before retirement was a controller at BP Solvay Polyethylene (UK).
Walter Pressler Crowe MA CA
Walter Pressler Crowe MA CA, who lived in Alloa, passed on 31 December 2016 matured 68. He was conceived on 27 May 1948 and admitted to participation on 23 October 1973.
In the wake of qualifying, Mr Crowe brought a position with Price Waterhouse and Co, was later a universal inspector with Dunfermline Building Society and before retirement was a frameworks fund administrator at Abbey National Financial Investment Services plc.
Maurice James Ferguson CA
Maurice James Ferguson Ca, who lived in Innerleithen, Peeblesshire, passed on 26 November 2016 matured 81. He was conceived on 29 May 1935 and admitted to participation on 25 March 1959.
In the wake of qualifying, Mr Ferguson brought a position with Petfood Ltd, was later with Book Distributors Ltd and preceding retirement worked with Grandreams Ltd.
Ian William Guthrie Ma CA
Ian William Guthrie Ma CA, who lived in Glasgow, passed on 26 December 2016 matured 81. He was conceived on 12 October 1935 and admitted to participation on 1 April 1966.
Subsequent to finishing his apprenticeship with Peat Marwick Mitchell and Co, Mr Guthrie brought a position with Touche Ross and Co, was later gathering money related controller at Hutchison and Craft Ltd, and before retirement was gathering budgetary controller at Gellatly Hankey et Cie (Djibouti) SA.
Martin Anderson Hodge CA
Martin Anderson Hodge CA, who lived in Orpington, passed on 22 November 2016 matured 86. He was conceived on 13 November 1930 and went to The High School of Glasgow before being admitted to enrollment on 31 March 1954.
In the wake of finishing his apprenticeship with JJ Gillies, Mr Hodge brought a position with Transport Development Group Ltd and stayed with the organization until his retirement as gathering bookkeeper. He is made due by his significant other, Anne, and three kids, Amanda, Katrione and Duncan.
Subside Johnston McLean BSc CA
Subside Johnston McLean BSc CA, who lived in West Kilbride, kicked the bucket on 18 March 2016 matured 67. He was conceived on 26 June 1948 and admitted to participation on 19 December 1975.
In the wake of qualifying, Mr McLean brought a position with Robert J Hart and Co, was later a join forces with McCallum Hart and Co, and preceding retirement was a band together with McLay, McAlister and McGibbon Ltd.
Mary Ferguson McQueen CA
Mary Ferguson McQueen CA, who lived in Motherwell, passed on 2 March 2017 matured 91. She was conceived on 31 October 1925 and admitted to participation of the Institute of Accountants and Actuaries in Glasgow on 28 September 1950.
In the wake of finishing her apprenticeship with Moores Carson and Watson, Miss McQueen stayed with the firm after its merger to wind up McClelland Moores and Co and in this way Arthur Young until her retirement.
Christine Murphy BSc CA
Christine Murphy BSc CA, who lived in Hamilton, passed on 16 July 2016 matured 63. She was conceived on 29 January 1953 and admitted to participation on 28 November 1980.
In the wake of finishing her apprenticeship with Martin Aitken and Anderson, Ms Murphy brought a position with Chalmers, Impey and Co, was later with Strathclyde Regional Council, and before her demise was a chief at Elderpark Housing Association Ltd.
Charles Patrick O'Neill CA
Charles Patrick O'Neill CA, who lived in Surrey, kicked the bucket on 19 January 2017 matured 82. He was conceived on 20 September 1934 and admitted to enrollment on 28 March 1962.
Subsequent to qualifying. Mr O'Neill took a position at Govancroft Potteries Ltd, was later a monetary bookkeeper at Smiths Industries Aerospace and Defense Systems Ltd, and before retirement was a budgetary bookkeeper at Thorn EMI Electronics Ltd.
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sophsweet · 7 years
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When I read the latest Register of Ministers’ Interests, i noticed lists of entries for various MPs who had been paid £50 here and £75 there on various dates by certain polling companies. These include YouGov, ComRes, Ipsos MORI, Harris Research and more.
A look at the polling companies own websites doesn’t reveal which polls they might be being paid to answer. Polls I can see say they are weighted to represent the public.
I decided to try and research this to find out what is going on. On face value, polls appear regularly in the mainstream press, such as for Channel 4, the Sunday Mirror, the Express and the Independent. What do these polls say?
The general slant of these polls seem to be to heavily suggest that the Conservatives are ahead of Labour by quite a percentage. Are these designed to make supporters of other political parties lose face, give up or change their vote strategically?
For example: Here is a poll run by Ipsos MORI called:”Levels of pessimism for future of NHS, policing and education highest for 15 years”, which seems to want people to understand that
Nearly two in three think that the quality of public services have got worse over the last five years, according to a new study from Ipsos MORI. Meanwhile, pessimism for the future of the NHS, policing and education are at record levels.
So what effect does that have on the voter? On the surface, it suggests that people have not been happy with the last 5 years of government and the cuts to spending on the NHS, education and policing. But is this a thinly veiled attempt to justify selling schools, the NHS and policing to private contractors?
It seems that polls are a vehicle being paid for in an attempt to influence voters via the mainstream press. Why are MPs being paid to enter polls that are surely to gauge the opinion of the general public.
One MP’s entry for polls answered for ComRes
Mr Peter Bone of Wellingborough is a Conservative.As shown in the screengrab. No mention is made of his fees being donated.
ComRes was mentioned five times in the Register of Ministers Interests. Let’s see who they are and what parties they stand for and what they do with their fees.
Mark Durkan of Foyle (Social Democratic and Labour Party in Ireland) has been paid by ComRes eight times in 2016. All fees paid to charities or community organisations.
Julie Elliott of Sunderland Central has done 7 polls for ComRes earning her £575 in 2016, She stands for Labour. Julie has helped YouGov out with 9 polls for which she was paid in 2016. All her fees are paid to her constituency party.
Chris Evans of Islwyn is a Labour MP, whose website suggests he is very active in his constituency standing up for fairness for his constituents. He technically stands for the Labour Co-operative Parties, where he has been endorsed by both Labour and the Co-operative Party. As well as writing for a boxing magazine, Chris has been paid to answer 5 polls for ComRes in 2016. I’ve tweeted him to ask if he will reveal what these polls are. All his fees from surveys are donated to community organisations.
Paul Flynn of Newport West in Ireland has answered 13 surveys for ComRes and states that all fees were donated to charity. He is also Labour and he writes a blog. Paul Flynn is prolific with polls, answering 3 for ipsos MORI and 8 for YouGov.
Another Labour Co-operative MP is Mike Gapes, who has done 8 for ComRes and 2 for YouGov. He donates his fees to Redbridge Organisers, a branch of his constituency party.
Interestingly, another Conservative, Cheryl Gillian for Chesham and Amersham has earned four times for ComRes and there is no mention of her fees being donated. She is one of the longest standing female Conservative MP in parliament, first elected in 1992.
Glen John, Conservative MP for Salisbury, has entered 11 polls for ComRes and 2 for YouGov. There is no mention of fees being donated and he has rental income over £10,000 for a flat in London and shares worth over £70,000 for an IT and communications company.
I am trying to steer clear of bias in this blog, so as I’ve only got to G in the alphabet Therefore I will list names,parties, number of surveys and whether they are donated or not to see if there is a pattern.
James Gray. Conservative. North Wiltshire: ComRes 6. YouGov 9 Ipsos MORI 2 Populus 7 plus rental income from 3 properties. No mention of donation of fees.
Neil Gray. Scottish National Party. ComRes 4. Fees donated to charity and local organisations.
Andrew Gwynne. Labour. Denton and Reddish. ComRes 9 Ipsos MORI 2 (fees donated to local campaign fund) and YouGov 6 (fees donated to local campaign fund).
Labour MP David Hanson for Delyn, ComRes 8 YouGov 8 and a one off fee from Ipsos MORI for “Winter MORI Survey 2016, which was donated to the Labour Party in Delyn. He donated winnings from William Hill to charity.
At this juncture, an actual poll of 440 MPs is shown. These polls were taken face to face in the MPs Westminster Offices and is weighted to reflect the balance of power. Here is a snap shot of what MPs were asked and their responses, which is interesting on the whole Brexit question.
As this study reveals quite a lot of information and another blog may be required for a summary of findings, I will do 2 more MPs and their usage of poll survey fees and other interests if they stand out. The last 2 are both conservatives, but they seem to be very different from each other.
Rebecca Harris. Conservative for Castle Point. All fees donated to charity. ComRes 6. YouGov 7 and what looks like the Ipsos MORI Winter survey. (1). She stands for more people in parliament with business experience and she backs this up with her own career before she entered politics: Looks like A Good Conservative!?
Rebecca spent the majority of her working life in business, principally with Phillimore & Co, specialist publishers of British local history (including publishing titles on Hadleigh, Thundersley, Canvey Island and Daws Heath). At Phillimore Rebecca worked in various aspects of the firm including warehousing, as a delivery driver and Sales Rep. She joined the Board as Marketing Director in 1997, a position she held until the sale of the firm in 2007.
Simon Hart. Conservative. Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire. ComRes 6. YouGov 6 and MORI 2. No mention of donations to charity. He also earns as High Net Worth Consultant for Countryside Alliance being paid £30,000 a year for 8 hours work a week. He is a member of the United and Cecil Club, a dining club formed in 1949 (following the merger of 2 much older organisations) with close links to the Conservative Party. Members have previously been accused of using a loophole to make large donations to the Conservatives without declaring them. Simon Hart received two donations totally £5000. Finally, a private donation was made by businessman Fraser Duffin (article about donation to refurb a restaurant) of £10,000. Not said for what.
An example of a survey of MPs opinions to possibly back the motion to add a third runway at Heathrow, that was publicised in the mainstream press.
In summary, out of the first 3rd of MPs: * Many surveys have been completed and paid for. * Apart from Rebecca Harris, the Conservatives do not mention any donation of fees, but the Labour ones do, although not for fees from every polling company. * The only poll declared to be amongst MPs is the Winter MORI Survey 2016. * That more of the Conservative MPs had private donations, rental income, shares and other local business and club associations. and That the polls themselves suggest they are funded to give weight to parliamentary action, such as selling the NHS, policing and education to private contractors. 
Suggestion of flat denial as ComRes employee asks for proof of links between Tories and opinion poll companies. But that isn’t the main story.
On a last note. ComRes Chairman Andrew Hawkins appears to be on Twitter to respond quite aggressively to bloggers questioning or raising concerns about opinion polls, fees paid to MPs and transparency about political leanings within poll companies, bias and what polls MPs are being paid to answer. What are they about. One on the list of MP surveys is about whether they will take a holiday abroad. In one Tweet sent to blogger Buddy_Hell with what seems to be a flat denial that MPs are paid for ComRes surveys.
Here is a list of surveys of MPs done by ComRes.
It may be worth noting that the opinion companies do not * Poll all MPs. They poll the same ones each time. * I just went through the whole register and counted 62 MPs on the Register of Interests have completed many surveys for ComRes.,Typically, they are the ones also completing for YouGov and Ipsos MORI as well.
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I counted 62 MPs paid for surveys. This says 118. Needs investigation.
Anything to do with Jeremy Hunt’s Surrey ward where child care became an issue with Virgin Care?
Are Polls Skewed? Opinion is Divided When I read the latest Register of Ministers' Interests, i noticed lists of entries for various MPs who had been paid £50 here and £75 there on various dates by certain polling companies.
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New Post has been published on News Twitter
New Post has been published on http://www.news-twitter.com/2017/02/02/skynews-how-did-your-mp-vote-on-the-article-50-trigger-16/
Skynews: How did your MP vote on the Article 50 trigger?
The SNP, Liberal Democrats and many Labour MPs voted against the EU (Notification Of Withdrawal) Bill.
One hundred and fourteen MPs in total were noes, but did your constituency’s MP vote to push the bill forward?
YES:
Debbie Abrahams (Labour – Oldham East and Saddleworth)
Nigel Adams (Conservative – Selby and Ainsty)
Adam Afriyie (Conservative – Windsor)
Peter Aldous (Conservative – Waveney)
Lucy Allan (Conservative – Telford)
Heidi Allen (Conservative – South Cambridgeshire)
Sir David Amess (Conservative – Southend West)
Mr David Anderson (Labour – Blaydon)
Stuart Andrew (Conservative – Pudsey)
Caroline Ansell (Conservative – Eastbourne)
Edward Argar (Conservative – Charnwood)
Jonathan Ashworth (Labour (Co-op) – Leicester South)
Victoria Atkins (Conservative – Louth and Horncastle)
Ian Austin (Labour – Dudley North)
Mr Richard Bacon (Conservative – South Norfolk)
Mr Adrian Bailey (Labour (Co-op) – West Bromwich West)
Mr Steve Baker (Conservative – Wycombe)
Harriett Baldwin (Conservative – West Worcestershire)
Stephen Barclay (Conservative – North East Cambridgeshire)
Mr John Baron (Conservative – Basildon and Billericay)
Sir Kevin Barron (Labour – Rother Valley)
Gavin Barwell (Conservative – Croydon Central)
Guto Bebb (Conservative – Aberconwy)
Margaret Beckett (Labour – Derby South)
Sir Henry Bellingham (Conservative – North West Norfolk)
Hilary Benn (Labour – Leeds Central)
Richard Benyon (Conservative – Newbury)
Sir Paul Beresford (Conservative – Mole Valley)
James Berry (Conservative – Kingston and Surbiton)
Mr Clive Betts (Labour – Sheffield South East)
Andrew Bingham (Conservative – High Peak)
Bob Blackman (Conservative – Harrow East)
Nicola Blackwood (Conservative – Oxford West and Abingdon)
Tom Blenkinsop (Labour – Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)
Paul Blomfield (Labour – Sheffield Central)
Crispin Blunt (Conservative – Reigate)
Mr Peter Bone (Conservative – Wellingborough)
Victoria Borwick (Conservative – Kensington)
Sir Peter Bottomley (Conservative – Worthing West)
Tracy Brabin (Labour – Batley and Spen)
Karen Bradley (Conservative – Staffordshire Moorlands)
Mr Graham Brady (Conservative – Altrincham and Sale West)
Sir Julian Brazier (Conservative – Canterbury)
Andrew Bridgen (Conservative – North West Leicestershire)
Steve Brine (Conservative – Winchester)
James Brokenshire (Conservative – Old Bexley and Sidcup)
Mr Nicholas Brown (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne East)
Fiona Bruce (Conservative – Congleton)
Robert Buckland (Conservative – South Swindon)
Richard Burden (Labour – Birmingham, Northfield)
Richard Burgon (Labour – Leeds East)
Andy Burnham (Labour – Leigh)
Conor Burns (Conservative – Bournemouth West)
Sir Simon Burns (Conservative – Chelmsford)
Mr David Burrowes (Conservative – Enfield, Southgate)
Alistair Burt (Conservative – North East Bedfordshire)
Liam Byrne (Labour – Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
Alun Cairns (Conservative – Vale of Glamorgan)
Mr Alan Campbell (Labour – Tynemouth)
Mr Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party – East Londonderry)
Mr Ronnie Campbell (Labour – Blyth Valley)
Neil Carmichael (Conservative – Stroud)
Mr Douglas Carswell (UK Independence Party – Clacton)
James Cartlidge (Conservative – South Suffolk)
Sir William Cash (Conservative – Stone)
Maria Caulfield (Conservative – Lewes)
Alex Chalk (Conservative – Cheltenham)
Sarah Champion (Labour – Rotherham)
Jenny Chapman (Labour – Darlington)
Rehman Chishti (Conservative – Gillingham and Rainham)
Mr Christopher Chope (Conservative – Christchurch)
Jo Churchill (Conservative – Bury St Edmunds)
Greg Clark (Conservative – Tunbridge Wells)
James Cleverly (Conservative – Braintree)
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative – The Cotswolds)
Vernon Coaker (Labour – Gedling)
Dr Thérèse Coffey (Conservative – Suffolk Coastal)
Damian Collins (Conservative – Folkestone and Hythe)
Oliver Colvile (Conservative – Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport)
Julie Cooper (Labour – Burnley)
Rosie Cooper (Labour – West Lancashire)
Yvette Cooper (Labour – Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford)
Jeremy Corbyn (Labour – Islington North)
Alberto Costa (Conservative – South Leicestershire)
Robert Courts (Conservative – Witney)
Mr Geoffrey Cox (Conservative – Torridge and West Devon)
Stephen Crabb (Conservative – Preseli Pembrokeshire)
Sir David Crausby (Labour – Bolton North East)
Tracey Crouch (Conservative – Chatham and Aylesford)
Jon Cruddas (Labour – Dagenham and Rainham)
John Cryer (Labour – Leyton and Wanstead)
Judith Cummins (Labour – Bradford South)
Alex Cunningham (Labour – Stockton North)
Mr Jim Cunningham (Labour – Coventry South)
Nic Dakin (Labour – Scunthorpe)
Simon Danczuk (Independent – Rochdale)
Wayne David (Labour – Caerphilly)
Byron Davies (Conservative – Gower)
Chris Davies (Conservative – Brecon and Radnorshire)
David T. C. Davies (Conservative – Monmouth)
Dr James Davies (Conservative – Vale of Clwyd)
Glyn Davies (Conservative – Montgomeryshire)
Mims Davies (Conservative – Eastleigh)
Philip Davies (Conservative – Shipley)
Mr David Davis (Conservative – Haltemprice and Howden)
Gloria De Piero (Labour – Ashfield)
Caroline Dinenage (Conservative – Gosport)
Mr Jonathan Djanogly (Conservative – Huntingdon)
Mr Nigel Dodds (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast North)
Sir Jeffrey M. Donaldson (Democratic Unionist Party – Lagan Valley)
Michelle Donelan (Conservative – Chippenham)
Nadine Dorries (Conservative – Mid Bedfordshire)
Steve Double (Conservative – St Austell and Newquay)
Peter Dowd (Labour – Bootle)
Oliver Dowden (Conservative – Hertsmere)
Jackie Doyle-Price (Conservative – Thurrock)
Richard Drax (Conservative – South Dorset)
Jack Dromey (Labour – Birmingham, Erdington)
Mrs Flick Drummond (Conservative – Portsmouth South)
James Duddridge (Conservative – Rochford and Southend East)
Michael Dugher (Labour – Barnsley East)
Mr Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative – Chingford and Woodford Green)
Sir Alan Duncan (Conservative – Rutland and Melton)
Mr Philip Dunne (Conservative – Ludlow)
Ms Angela Eagle (Labour – Wallasey)
Clive Efford (Labour – Eltham)
Julie Elliott (Labour – Sunderland Central)
Tom Elliott (Ulster Unionist Party – Fermanagh and South Tyrone)
Michael Ellis (Conservative – Northampton North)
Jane Ellison (Conservative – Battersea)
Mr Tobias Ellwood (Conservative – Bournemouth East)
Chris Elmore (Labour – Ogmore)
Charlie Elphicke (Conservative – Dover)
Bill Esterson (Labour – Sefton Central)
George Eustice (Conservative – Camborne and Redruth)
Chris Evans (Labour (Co-op) – Islwyn)
Graham Evans (Conservative – Weaver Vale)
Mr Nigel Evans (Conservative – Ribble Valley)
David Evennett (Conservative – Bexleyheath and Crayford)
Michael Fabricant (Conservative – Lichfield)
Sir Michael Fallon (Conservative – Sevenoaks)
Suella Fernandes (Conservative – Fareham)
Frank Field (Labour – Birkenhead)
Mark Field (Conservative – Cities of London and Westminster)
Jim Fitzpatrick (Labour – Poplar and Limehouse)
Robert Flello (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent South)
Colleen Fletcher (Labour – Coventry North East)
Caroline Flint (Labour – Don Valley)
Paul Flynn (Labour – Newport West)
Kevin Foster (Conservative – Torbay)
Yvonne Fovargue (Labour – Makerfield)
Dr Liam Fox (Conservative – North Somerset)
Mr Mark Francois (Conservative – Rayleigh and Wickford)
Lucy Frazer (Conservative – South East Cambridgeshire)
George Freeman (Conservative – Mid Norfolk)
Mike Freer (Conservative – Finchley and Golders Green)
Richard Fuller (Conservative – Bedford)
Gill Furniss (Labour – Sheffield, Brightside and Hillsborough)
Marcus Fysh (Conservative – Yeovil)
Barry Gardiner (Labour – Brent North)
Mark Garnier (Conservative – Wyre Forest)
Sir Edward Garnier (Conservative – Harborough)
Mr David Gauke (Conservative – South West Hertfordshire)
Nusrat Ghani (Conservative – Wealden)
Nick Gibb (Conservative – Bognor Regis and Littlehampton)
Mrs Cheryl Gillan (Conservative – Chesham and Amersham)
John Glen (Conservative – Salisbury)
Mary Glindon (Labour – North Tyneside)
Helen Goodman (Labour – Bishop Auckland)
Mr Robert Goodwill (Conservative – Scarborough and Whitby)
Michael Gove (Conservative – Surrey Heath)
Richard Graham (Conservative – Gloucester)
Mrs Helen Grant (Conservative – Maidstone and The Weald)
James Gray (Conservative – North Wiltshire)
Chris Grayling (Conservative – Epsom and Ewell)
Chris Green (Conservative – Bolton West)
Damian Green (Conservative – Ashford)
Justine Greening (Conservative – Putney)
Margaret Greenwood (Labour – Wirral West)
Mr Dominic Grieve (Conservative – Beaconsfield)
Nia Griffith (Labour – Llanelli)
Andrew Griffiths (Conservative – Burton)
Ben Gummer (Conservative – Ipswich)
Andrew Gwynne (Labour – Denton and Reddish)
Mr Sam Gyimah (Conservative – East Surrey)
Louise Haigh (Labour – Sheffield, Heeley)
Robert Halfon (Conservative – Harlow)
Luke Hall (Conservative – Thornbury and Yate)
Fabian Hamilton (Labour – Leeds North East)
Mr Philip Hammond (Conservative – Runnymede and Weybridge)
Stephen Hammond (Conservative – Wimbledon)
Matt Hancock (Conservative – West Suffolk)
Greg Hands (Conservative – Chelsea and Fulham)
Mr David Hanson (Labour – Delyn)
Ms Harriet Harman (Labour – Camberwell and Peckham)
Mr Mark Harper (Conservative – Forest of Dean)
Richard Harrington (Conservative – Watford)
Carolyn Harris (Labour – Swansea East)
Rebecca Harris (Conservative – Castle Point)
Simon Hart (Conservative – Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire)
Mr John Hayes (Conservative – South Holland and The Deepings)
Sue Hayman (Labour – Workington)
Sir Oliver Heald (Conservative – North East Hertfordshire)
John Healey (Labour – Wentworth and Dearne)
James Heappey (Conservative – Wells)
Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative – Daventry)
Peter Heaton-Jones (Conservative – North Devon)
Gordon Henderson (Conservative – Sittingbourne and Sheppey)
Mr Mark Hendrick (Labour (Co-op) – Preston)
Mr Stephen Hepburn (Labour – Jarrow)
Nick Herbert (Conservative – Arundel and South Downs)
Damian Hinds (Conservative – East Hampshire)
Simon Hoare (Conservative – North Dorset)
Mrs Sharon Hodgson (Labour – Washington and Sunderland West)
Kate Hoey (Labour – Vauxhall)
Kate Hollern (Labour – Blackburn)
George Hollingbery (Conservative – Meon Valley)
Kevin Hollinrake (Conservative – Thirsk and Malton)
Mr Philip Hollobone (Conservative – Kettering)
Adam Holloway (Conservative – Gravesham)
Kelvin Hopkins (Labour – Luton North)
Kris Hopkins (Conservative – Keighley)
Sir Gerald Howarth (Conservative – Aldershot)
John Howell (Conservative – Henley)
Ben Howlett (Conservative – Bath)
Nigel Huddleston (Conservative – Mid Worcestershire)
Mr Jeremy Hunt (Conservative – South West Surrey)
Mr Nick Hurd (Conservative – Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner)
Imran Hussain (Labour – Bradford East)
Mr Stewart Jackson (Conservative – Peterborough)
Margot James (Conservative – Stourbridge)
Dan Jarvis (Labour – Barnsley Central)
Sajid Javid (Conservative – Bromsgrove)
Mr Ranil Jayawardena (Conservative – North East Hampshire)
Mr Bernard Jenkin (Conservative – Harwich and North Essex)
Andrea Jenkyns (Conservative – Morley and Outwood)
Robert Jenrick (Conservative – Newark)
Alan Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle)
Boris Johnson (Conservative – Uxbridge and South Ruislip)
Diana Johnson (Labour – Kingston upon Hull North)
Dr Caroline Johnson (Conservative – Sleaford and North Hykeham)
Gareth Johnson (Conservative – Dartford)
Joseph Johnson (Conservative – Orpington)
Andrew Jones (Conservative – Harrogate and Knaresborough)
Gerald Jones (Labour – Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
Graham Jones (Labour – Hyndburn)
Helen Jones (Labour – Warrington North)
Mr David Jones (Conservative – Clwyd West)
Mr Kevan Jones (Labour – North Durham)
Mr Marcus Jones (Conservative – Nuneaton)
Susan Elan Jones (Labour – Clwyd South)
Mike Kane (Labour – Wythenshawe and Sale East)
Daniel Kawczynski (Conservative – Shrewsbury and Atcham)
Barbara Keeley (Labour – Worsley and Eccles South)
Liz Kendall (Labour – Leicester West)
Seema Kennedy (Conservative – South Ribble)
Danny Kinahan (Ulster Unionist Party – South Antrim)
Stephen Kinnock (Labour – Aberavon)
Simon Kirby (Conservative – Brighton, Kemptown)
Julian Knight (Conservative – Solihull)
Sir Greg Knight (Conservative – East Yorkshire)
Kwasi Kwarteng (Conservative – Spelthorne)
Mark Lancaster (Conservative – Milton Keynes North)
Pauline Latham (Conservative – Mid Derbyshire)
Ian Lavery (Labour – Wansbeck)
Andrea Leadsom (Conservative – South Northamptonshire)
Dr Phillip Lee (Conservative – Bracknell)
Jeremy Lefroy (Conservative – Stafford)
Sir Edward Leigh (Conservative – Gainsborough)
Charlotte Leslie (Conservative – Bristol North West)
Sir Oliver Letwin (Conservative – West Dorset)
Mrs Emma Lewell-Buck (Labour – South Shields)
Brandon Lewis (Conservative – Great Yarmouth)
Clive Lewis (Labour – Norwich South)
Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative – New Forest East)
Mr Ivan Lewis (Labour – Bury South)
Mr Ian Liddell-Grainger (Conservative – Bridgwater and West Somerset)
Mr David Lidington (Conservative – Aylesbury)
Mr Peter Lilley (Conservative – Hitchin and Harpenden)
Rebecca Long Bailey (Labour – Salford and Eccles)
Jack Lopresti (Conservative – Filton and Bradley Stoke)
Mr Jonathan Lord (Conservative – Woking)
Tim Loughton (Conservative – East Worthing and Shoreham)
Ian C. Lucas (Labour – Wrexham)
Holly Lynch (Labour – Halifax)
Craig Mackinlay (Conservative – South Thanet)
David Mackintosh (Conservative – Northampton South)
Fiona Mactaggart (Labour – Slough)
Justin Madders (Labour – Ellesmere Port and Neston)
Mr Khalid Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Perry Barr)
Shabana Mahmood (Labour – Birmingham, Ladywood)
Mrs Anne Main (Conservative – St Albans)
Mr Alan Mak (Conservative – Havant)
Seema Malhotra (Labour (Co-op) – Feltham and Heston)
Kit Malthouse (Conservative – North West Hampshire)
John Mann (Labour – Bassetlaw)
Scott Mann (Conservative – North Cornwall)
Rob Marris (Labour – Wolverhampton South West)
Gordon Marsden (Labour – Blackpool South)
Christian Matheson (Labour – City of Chester)
Dr Tania Mathias (Conservative – Twickenham)
Mrs Theresa May (Conservative – Maidenhead)
Paul Maynard (Conservative – Blackpool North and Cleveleys)
Steve McCabe (Labour – Birmingham, Selly Oak)
Jason McCartney (Conservative – Colne Valley)
Karl McCartney (Conservative – Lincoln)
Siobhain McDonagh (Labour – Mitcham and Morden)
Andy McDonald (Labour – Middlesbrough)
John McDonnell (Labour – Hayes and Harlington)
Mr Pat McFadden (Labour – Wolverhampton South East)
Conor McGinn (Labour – St Helens North)
Alison McGovern (Labour – Wirral South)
Liz McInnes (Labour – Heywood and Middleton)
Sir Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative – Derbyshire Dales)
Jim McMahon (Labour (Co-op) – Oldham West and Royton)
Stephen McPartland (Conservative – Stevenage)
Sir Alan Meale (Labour – Mansfield)
Mark Menzies (Conservative – Fylde)
Johnny Mercer (Conservative – Plymouth, Moor View)
Huw Merriman (Conservative – Bexhill and Battle)
Stephen Metcalfe (Conservative – South Basildon and East Thurrock)
Edward Miliband (Labour – Doncaster North)
Mrs Maria Miller (Conservative – Basingstoke)
Amanda Milling (Conservative – Cannock Chase)
Nigel Mills (Conservative – Amber Valley)
Anne Milton (Conservative – Guildford)
Mr Andrew Mitchell (Conservative – Sutton Coldfield)
Penny Mordaunt (Conservative – Portsmouth North)
Jessica Morden (Labour – Newport East)
Nicky Morgan (Conservative – Loughborough)
Anne Marie Morris (Conservative – Newton Abbot)
David Morris (Conservative – Morecambe and Lunesdale)
Grahame Morris (Labour – Easington)
James Morris (Conservative – Halesowen and Rowley Regis)
Wendy Morton (Conservative – Aldridge-Brownhills)
David Mowat (Conservative – Warrington South)
David Mundell (Conservative – Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale)
Mrs Sheryll Murray (Conservative – South East Cornwall)
Dr Andrew Murrison (Conservative – South West Wiltshire)
Lisa Nandy (Labour – Wigan)
Robert Neill (Conservative – Bromley and Chislehurst)
Sarah Newton (Conservative – Truro and Falmouth)
Caroline Nokes (Conservative – Romsey and Southampton North)
Jesse Norman (Conservative – Hereford and South Herefordshire)
Mr David Nuttall (Conservative – Bury North)
Dr Matthew Offord (Conservative – Hendon)
Melanie Onn (Labour – Great Grimsby)
Chi Onwurah (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne Central)
Guy Opperman (Conservative – Hexham)
Kate Osamor (Labour (Co-op) – Edmonton)
Mr George Osborne (Conservative – Tatton)
Albert Owen (Labour – Ynys Môn)
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party – North Antrim)
Neil Parish (Conservative – Tiverton and Honiton)
Priti Patel (Conservative – Witham)
Mr Owen Paterson (Conservative – North Shropshire)
Mark Pawsey (Conservative – Rugby)
Teresa Pearce (Labour – Erith and Thamesmead)
Mike Penning (Conservative – Hemel Hempstead)
Matthew Pennycook (Labour – Greenwich and Woolwich)
John Penrose (Conservative – Weston-super-Mare)
Andrew Percy (Conservative – Brigg and Goole)
Toby Perkins (Labour – Chesterfield)
Claire Perry (Conservative – Devizes)
Jess Phillips (Labour – Birmingham, Yardley)
Bridget Phillipson (Labour – Houghton and Sunderland South)
Chris Philp (Conservative – Croydon South)
Sir Eric Pickles (Conservative – Brentwood and Ongar)
Christopher Pincher (Conservative – Tamworth)
Dr Dan Poulter (Conservative – Central Suffolk and North Ipswich)
Rebecca Pow (Conservative – Taunton Deane)
Lucy Powell (Labour (Co-op) – Manchester Central)
Victoria Prentis (Conservative – Banbury)
Mr Mark Prisk (Conservative – Hertford and Stortford)
Mark Pritchard (Conservative – The Wrekin)
Tom Pursglove (Conservative – Corby)
Jeremy Quin (Conservative – Horsham)
Will Quince (Conservative – Colchester)
Yasmin Qureshi (Labour – Bolton South East)
Dominic Raab (Conservative – Esher and Walton)
Angela Rayner (Labour – Ashton-under-Lyne)
John Redwood (Conservative – Wokingham)
Mr Steve Reed (Labour (Co-op) – Croydon North)
Christina Rees (Labour (Co-op) – Neath)
Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative – North East Somerset)
Rachel Reeves (Labour – Leeds West)
Emma Reynolds (Labour – Wolverhampton North East)
Jonathan Reynolds (Labour (Co-op) – Stalybridge and Hyde)
Marie Rimmer (Labour – St Helens South and Whiston)
Mr Laurence Robertson (Conservative – Tewkesbury)
Gavin Robinson (Democratic Unionist Party – Belfast East)
Mary Robinson (Conservative – Cheadle)
Mr Geoffrey Robinson (Labour – Coventry North West)
Andrew Rosindell (Conservative – Romford)
Steve Rotheram (Labour – Liverpool, Walton)
Amber Rudd (Conservative – Hastings and Rye)
David Rutley (Conservative – Macclesfield)
Joan Ryan (Labour – Enfield North)
Antoinette Sandbach (Conservative – Eddisbury)
Paul Scully (Conservative – Sutton and Cheam)
Andrew Selous (Conservative – South West Bedfordshire)
Naz Shah (Labour – Bradford West)
Jim Shannon (Democratic Unionist Party – Strangford)
Grant Shapps (Conservative – Welwyn Hatfield)
Alok Sharma (Conservative – Reading West)
Mr Barry Sheerman (Labour (Co-op) – Huddersfield)
Alec Shelbrooke (Conservative – Elmet and Rothwell)
Paula Sherriff (Labour – Dewsbury)
David Simpson (Democratic Unionist Party – Upper Bann)
Mr Keith Simpson (Conservative – Broadland)
Chris Skidmore (Conservative – Kingswood)
Mr Dennis Skinner (Labour – Bolsover)
Ruth Smeeth (Labour – Stoke-on-Trent North)
Cat Smith (Labour – Lancaster and Fleetwood)
Chloe Smith (Conservative – Norwich North)
Henry Smith (Conservative – Crawley)
Julian Smith (Conservative – Skipton and Ripon)
Mr Andrew Smith (Labour – Oxford East)
Nick Smith (Labour – Blaenau Gwent)
Royston Smith (Conservative – Southampton, Itchen)
Karin Smyth (Labour – Bristol South)
Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative – Mid Sussex)
Amanda Solloway (Conservative – Derby North)
Anna Soubry (Conservative – Broxtowe)
John Spellar (Labour – Warley)
Dame Caroline Spelman (Conservative – Meriden)
Mark Spencer (Conservative – Sherwood)
Keir Starmer (Labour – Holborn and St Pancras)
Andrew Stephenson (Conservative – Pendle)
John Stevenson (Conservative – Carlisle)
Bob Stewart (Conservative – Beckenham)
Iain Stewart (Conservative – Milton Keynes South)
Rory Stewart (Conservative – Penrith and The Border)
Mr Gary Streeter (Conservative – South West Devon)
Wes Streeting (Labour – Ilford North)
Mel Stride (Conservative – Central Devon)
Graham Stringer (Labour – Blackley and Broughton)
Graham Stuart (Conservative – Beverley and Holderness)
Ms Gisela Stuart (Labour – Birmingham, Edgbaston)
Julian Sturdy (Conservative – York Outer)
Rishi Sunak (Conservative – Richmond (Yorks))
Sir Desmond Swayne (Conservative – New Forest West)
Sir Hugo Swire (Conservative – East Devon)
Mr Robert Syms (Conservative – Poole)
Mark Tami (Labour – Alyn and Deeside)
Derek Thomas (Conservative – St Ives)
Gareth Thomas (Labour (Co-op) – Harrow West)
Nick Thomas-Symonds (Labour – Torfaen)
Emily Thornberry (Labour – Islington South and Finsbury)
Maggie Throup (Conservative – Erewash)
Edward Timpson (Conservative – Crewe and Nantwich)
Kelly Tolhurst (Conservative – Rochester and Strood)
Justin Tomlinson (Conservative – North Swindon)
Michael Tomlinson (Conservative – Mid Dorset and North Poole)
Craig Tracey (Conservative – North Warwickshire)
David Tredinnick (Conservative – Bosworth)
Mrs Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative – Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Jon Trickett (Labour – Hemsworth)
Elizabeth Truss (Conservative – South West Norfolk)
Tom Tugendhat (Conservative – Tonbridge and Malling)
Anna Turley (Labour (Co-op) – Redcar)
Karl Turner (Labour – Kingston upon Hull East)
Mr Andrew Turner (Conservative – Isle of Wight)
Derek Twigg (Labour – Halton)
Stephen Twigg (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, West Derby)
Mr Andrew Tyrie (Conservative – Chichester)
Mr Chuka Umunna (Labour – Streatham)
Mr Edward Vaizey (Conservative – Wantage)
Mr Shailesh Vara (Conservative – North West Cambridgeshire)
Keith Vaz (Labour – Leicester East)
Valerie Vaz (Labour – Walsall South)
Martin Vickers (Conservative – Cleethorpes)
Mrs Theresa Villiers (Conservative – Chipping Barnet)
Mr Charles Walker (Conservative – Broxbourne)
Mr Robin Walker (Conservative – Worcester)
Mr Ben Wallace (Conservative – Wyre and Preston North)
David Warburton (Conservative – Somerton and Frome)
Matt Warman (Conservative – Boston and Skegness)
Dame Angela Watkinson (Conservative – Hornchurch and Upminster)
Tom Watson (Labour – West Bromwich East)
James Wharton (Conservative – Stockton South)
Helen Whately (Conservative – Faversham and Mid Kent)
Heather Wheeler (Conservative – South Derbyshire)
Chris White (Conservative – Warwick and Leamington)
Craig Whittaker (Conservative – Calder Valley)
Mr John Whittingdale (Conservative – Maldon)
Bill Wiggin (Conservative – North Herefordshire)
Craig Williams (Conservative – Cardiff North)
Gavin Williamson (Conservative – South Staffordshire)
Mr Rob Wilson (Conservative – Reading East)
Phil Wilson (Labour – Sedgefield)
Sammy Wilson (Democratic Unionist Party – East Antrim)
Mr David Winnick (Labour – Walsall North)
Dame Rosie Winterton (Labour – Doncaster Central)
Dr Sarah Wollaston (Conservative – Totnes)
John Woodcock (Labour (Co-op) – Barrow and Furness)
William Wragg (Conservative – Hazel Grove)
Jeremy Wright (Conservative – Kenilworth and Southam)
Mr Iain Wright (Labour – Hartlepool)
Nadhim Zahawi (Conservative – Stratford-on-Avon)
NO:
Ms Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh (Scottish National Party – Ochil and South Perthshire)
Heidi Alexander (Labour – Lewisham East)
Rushanara Ali (Labour – Bethnal Green and Bow)
Mr Graham Allen (Labour – Nottingham North)
Dr Rosena Allin-Khan (Labour – Tooting)
Richard Arkless (Scottish National Party – Dumfries and Galloway)
Hannah Bardell (Scottish National Party – Livingston)
Luciana Berger (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Wavertree)
Mhairi Black (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire South)
Ian Blackford (Scottish National Party – Ross, Skye and Lochaber)
Kirsty Blackman (Scottish National Party – Aberdeen North)
Philip Boswell (Scottish National Party – Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill)
Mr Ben Bradshaw (Labour – Exeter)
Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat – Carshalton and Wallington)
Kevin Brennan (Labour – Cardiff West)
Deidre Brock (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh North and Leith)
Alan Brown (Scottish National Party – Kilmarnock and Loudoun)
Lyn Brown (Labour – West Ham)
Chris Bryant (Labour – Rhondda)
Ms Karen Buck (Labour – Westminster North)
Dawn Butler (Labour – Brent Central)
Ruth Cadbury (Labour – Brentford and Isleworth)
Dr Lisa Cameron (Scottish National Party – East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow)
Mr Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat – Orkney and Shetland)
Douglas Chapman (Scottish National Party – Dunfermline and West Fife)
Joanna Cherry (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh South West)
Mr Kenneth Clarke (Conservative – Rushcliffe)
Mr Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat – Sheffield, Hallam)
Ann Clwyd (Labour – Cynon Valley)
Ann Coffey (Labour – Stockport)
Ronnie Cowan (Scottish National Party – Inverclyde)
Neil Coyle (Labour – Bermondsey and Old Southwark)
Angela Crawley (Scottish National Party – Lanark and Hamilton East)
Mary Creagh (Labour – Wakefield)
Stella Creasy (Labour (Co-op) – Walthamstow)
Martyn Day (Scottish National Party – Linlithgow and East Falkirk)
Thangam Debbonaire (Labour – Bristol West)
Martin Docherty-Hughes (Scottish National Party – West Dunbartonshire)
Stuart Blair Donaldson (Scottish National Party – West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine)
Stephen Doughty (Labour (Co-op) – Cardiff South and Penarth)
Jim Dowd (Labour – Lewisham West and Penge)
Mark Durkan (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Foyle)
Maria Eagle (Labour – Garston and Halewood)
Mrs Louise Ellman (Labour (Co-op) – Liverpool, Riverside)
Paul Farrelly (Labour – Newcastle-under-Lyme)
Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat – Westmorland and Lonsdale)
Marion Fellows (Scottish National Party – Motherwell and Wishaw)
Margaret Ferrier (Scottish National Party – Rutherglen and Hamilton West)
Vicky Foxcroft (Labour – Lewisham, Deptford)
Mike Gapes (Labour (Co-op) – Ilford South)
Stephen Gethins (Scottish National Party – North East Fife)
Patricia Gibson (Scottish National Party – North Ayrshire and Arran)
Patrick Grady (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North)
Peter Grant (Scottish National Party – Glenrothes)
Neil Gray (Scottish National Party – Airdrie and Shotts)
Lilian Greenwood (Labour – Nottingham South)
Helen Hayes (Labour – Dulwich and West Norwood)
Drew Hendry (Scottish National Party – Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey)
Lady Hermon (Independent – North Down)
Meg Hillier (Labour (Co-op) – Hackney South and Shoreditch)
Stewart Hosie (Scottish National Party – Dundee East)
Dr Rupa Huq (Labour – Ealing Central and Acton)
George Kerevan (Scottish National Party – East Lothian)
Calum Kerr (Scottish National Party – Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk)
Peter Kyle (Labour – Hove)
Mr David Lammy (Labour – Tottenham)
Chris Law (Scottish National Party – Dundee West)
Caroline Lucas (Green Party – Brighton, Pavilion)
Angus Brendan MacNeil (Scottish National Party – Na h-Eileanan an Iar)
Rachael Maskell (Labour (Co-op) – York Central)
John Mc Nally (Scottish National Party – Falkirk)
Kerry McCarthy (Labour – Bristol East)
Stewart Malcolm McDonald (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South)
Stuart C. McDonald (Scottish National Party – Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East)
Dr Alasdair McDonnell (Social Democratic & Labour Party – Belfast South)
Natalie McGarry (Independent – Glasgow East)
Catherine McKinnell (Labour – Newcastle upon Tyne North)
Anne McLaughlin (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North East)
Carol Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Glasgow North West)
Dr Paul Monaghan (Scottish National Party – Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross)
Mrs Madeleine Moon (Labour – Bridgend)
Roger Mullin (Scottish National Party – Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
Ian Murray (Labour – Edinburgh South)
Gavin Newlands (Scottish National Party – Paisley and Renfrewshire North)
John Nicolson (Scottish National Party – East Dunbartonshire)
Brendan O’Hara (Scottish National Party – Argyll and Bute)
Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat – Richmond Park)
Kirsten Oswald (Scottish National Party – East Renfrewshire)
Steven Paterson (Scottish National Party – Stirling)
Stephen Pound (Labour – Ealing North)
John Pugh (Liberal Democrat – Southport)
Ms Margaret Ritchie (Social Democratic & Labour Party – South Down)
Angus Robertson (Scottish National Party – Moray)
Alex Salmond (Scottish National Party – Gordon)
Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru – Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
Mr Virendra Sharma (Labour – Ealing, Southall)
Tommy Sheppard (Scottish National Party – Edinburgh East)
Tulip Siddiq (Labour – Hampstead and Kilburn)
Andy Slaughter (Labour – Hammersmith)
Jeff Smith (Labour – Manchester, Withington)
Owen Smith (Labour – Pontypridd)
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party – Glasgow South West)
Jo Stevens (Labour – Cardiff Central)
Alison Thewliss (Scottish National Party – Glasgow Central)
Michelle Thomson (Independent – Edinburgh West)
Owen Thompson (Scottish National Party – Midlothian)
Stephen Timms (Labour – East Ham)
Mike Weir (Scottish National Party – Angus)
Catherine West (Labour – Hornsey and Wood Green)
Dr Eilidh Whiteford (Scottish National Party – Banff and Buchan)
Dr Alan Whitehead (Labour – Southampton, Test)
Dr Philippa Whitford (Scottish National Party – Central Ayrshire)
Hywel Williams (Plaid Cymru – Arfon)
Mr Mark Williams (Liberal Democrat – Ceredigion)
Pete Wishart (Scottish National Party – Perth and North Perthshire)
Daniel Zeichner (Labour – Cambridge)
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gyrlversion · 6 years
Text
Remainers launch their bid to force a soft Brexit
Tory No Votes (265) 
Nigel Adams (Selby and Ainsty), 
Adam Afriyie (Windsor), 
Peter Aldous (Waveney), 
Lucy Allan (Telford),
David Amess (Southend West), 
Stuart Andrew (Pudsey), 
Edward Argar (Charnwood), 
Victoria Atkins (Louth and Horncastle), 
Richard Bacon (South Norfolk), 
Kemi Badenoch (Saffron Walden), 
Steve Baker (Wycombe), 
Harriett Baldwin (West Worcestershire), 
Stephen Barclay (North East Cambridgeshire), 
John Baron (Basildon and Billericay), 
Henry Bellingham (North West Norfolk), 
Paul Beresford (Mole Valley), 
Jake Berry (Rossendale and Darwen), 
Bob Blackman (Harrow East), 
Crispin Blunt (Reigate), 
Peter Bone (Wellingborough), 
Peter Bottomley (Worthing West), 
Andrew Bowie (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine), 
Ben Bradley (Mansfield), 
Karen Bradley (Staffordshire Moorlands),
Graham Brady (Altrincham and Sale West), 
Suella Braverman (Fareham), Jack Brereton (Stoke-on-Trent South), 
Andrew Bridgen (North West Leicestershire), 
Steve Brine (Winchester), 
James Brokenshire (Old Bexley and Sidcup), 
Fiona Bruce (Congleton), 
Alex Burghart (Brentwood and Ongar), 
Conor Burns (Bournemouth West), 
Alun Cairns (Vale of Glamorgan), 
James Cartlidge (South Suffolk), 
William Cash (Stone), 
Maria Caulfield (Lewes), 
Alex Chalk (Cheltenham), 
Rehman Chishti (Gillingham and Rainham), 
Christopher Chope (Christchurch), 
Jo Churchill (Bury St Edmunds), 
Colin Clark (Gordon), 
Simon Clarke (Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland), 
James Cleverly (Braintree), 
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (The Cotswolds), 
Therese Coffey (Suffolk Coastal), 
Damian Collins (Folkestone and Hythe), 
Robert Courts (Witney), 
Geoffrey Cox (Torridge and West Devon), 
Tracey Crouch (Chatham and Aylesford), 
Chris Davies (Brecon and Radnorshire),
David T. C. Davies (Monmouth),
Glyn Davies (Montgomeryshire),
Mims Davies (Eastleigh), 
Philip Davies (Shipley), 
David Davis (Haltemprice and Howden), 
Caroline Dinenage (Gosport), 
Leo Docherty (Aldershot), Michelle Donelan (Chippenham), 
Nadine Dorries (Mid Bedfordshire), 
Steve Double (St Austell and Newquay), 
Oliver Dowden (Hertsmere), 
Jackie Doyle-Price (Thurrock), 
Richard Drax (South Dorset), 
James Duddridge (Rochford and Southend East), 
David Duguid (Banff and Buchan), 
Iain Duncan Smith (Chingford and Woodford Green), 
Alan Duncan (Rutland and Melton), 
Philip Dunne (Ludlow), 
Michael Ellis (Northampton North), 
Charlie Elphicke (Dover), 
George Eustice (Camborne and Redruth), 
Nigel Evans (Ribble Valley), 
David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford), 
Michael Fabricant (Lichfield), 
Michael Fallon (Sevenoaks), 
Mark Field (Cities of London and Westminster), 
Kevin Foster (Torbay), 
Liam Fox (North Somerset), 
Mark Francois (Rayleigh and Wickford), 
Lucy Frazer (South East Cambridgeshire), 
Marcus Fysh (Yeovil), 
Roger Gale (North Thanet), 
Mark Garnier (Wyre Forest), 
Nusrat Ghani (Wealden), 
Nick Gibb (Bognor Regis and Littlehampton), 
Cheryl Gillan (Chesham and Amersham), 
John Glen (Salisbury), 
Zac Goldsmith (Richmond Park),
Robert Goodwill (Scarborough and Whitby), 
Michael Gove (Surrey Heath), 
Luke Graham (Ochil and South Perthshire), 
Bill Grant (Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock), 
Helen Grant (Maidstone and The Weald),
James Gray (North Wiltshire), 
Chris Grayling (Epsom and Ewell), 
Chris Green (Bolton West), 
Andrew Griffiths (Burton), 
Kirstene Hair (Angus), 
Robert Halfon (Harlow), 
Luke Hall (Thornbury and Yate), 
Philip Hammond (Runnymede and Weybridge), 
Matt Hancock (West Suffolk), 
Greg Hands (Chelsea and Fulham), 
Mark Harper (Forest of Dean), 
Rebecca Harris (Castle Point), 
Trudy Harrison (Copeland), 
Simon Hart (Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire), 
John Hayes (South Holland and The Deepings), 
James Heappey (Wells),
Chris Heaton-Harris (Daventry), 
Gordon Henderson (Sittingbourne and Sheppey), 
Nick Herbert (Arundel and South Downs), 
Damian Hinds (East Hampshire), 
George Hollingbery (Meon Valley), 
Kevin Hollinrake (Thirsk and Malton), 
Philip Hollobone (Kettering), Adam Holloway (Gravesham), 
John Howell (Henley), 
Eddie Hughes (Walsall North),
Jeremy Hunt (South West Surrey), 
Nick Hurd (Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner), 
Sajid Javid (Bromsgrove), 
Ranil Jayawardena (North East Hampshire),
Bernard Jenkin (Harwich and North Essex), 
Andrea Jenkyns (Morley and Outwood), 
Robert Jenrick (Newark), 
Boris Johnson (Uxbridge and South Ruislip), 
Caroline Johnson (Sleaford and North Hykeham), 
Gareth Johnson (Dartford), 
Andrew Jones (Harrogate and Knaresborough), 
David Jones (Clwyd West), 
Marcus Jones (Nuneaton), 
Daniel Kawczynski (Shrewsbury and Atcham), 
Gillian Keegan (Chichester), Seema Kennedy (South Ribble), 
Stephen Kerr (Stirling), Julian Knight (Solihull), 
Greg Knight (East Yorkshire), 
Kwasi Kwarteng (Spelthorne), 
John Lamont (Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk),
Mark Lancaster (Milton Keynes North), 
Pauline Latham (Mid Derbyshire), 
Andrea Leadsom (South Northamptonshire), 
Edward Leigh (Gainsborough), 
Andrew Lewer (Northampton South), 
Brandon Lewis (Great Yarmouth), 
Julian Lewis (New Forest East),
Ian Liddell-Grainger (Bridgwater and West Somerset), 
David Lidington (Aylesbury), 
Julia Lopez (Hornchurch and Upminster), 
Jack Lopresti (Filton and Bradley Stoke), 
Jonathan Lord (Woking), 
Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham), 
Craig Mackinlay (South Thanet), 
Rachel Maclean (Redditch), 
Anne Main (St Albans), 
Alan Mak (Havant), 
Kit Malthouse (North West Hampshire), 
Scott Mann (North Cornwall), 
Theresa May (Maidenhead), 
Paul Maynard (Blackpool North and Cleveleys),
Patrick McLoughlin (Derbyshire Dales), 
Stephen McPartland (Stevenage), 
Esther McVey (Tatton), 
Mark Menzies (Fylde), 
Johnny Mercer (Plymouth, Moor View), 
Huw Merriman (Bexhill and Battle), 
Stephen Metcalfe (South Basildon and East Thurrock), 
Maria Miller (Basingstoke), 
Amanda Milling (Cannock Chase), 
Nigel Mills (Amber Valley), 
Andrew Mitchell (Sutton Coldfield), 
Damien Moore (Southport), 
Penny Mordaunt (Portsmouth North), 
Nicky Morgan (Loughborough), 
Anne Marie Morris (Newton Abbot), 
David Morris (Morecambe and Lunesdale), 
James Morris (Halesowen and Rowley Regis),
Wendy Morton (Aldridge-Brownhills), 
Sheryll Murray (South East Cornwall), 
Andrew Murrison (South West Wiltshire), 
Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst), 
Caroline Nokes (Romsey and Southampton North),
Jesse Norman (Hereford and South Herefordshire), 
Neil O’Brien (Harborough), 
Matthew Offord (Hendon), 
Guy Opperman (Hexham), 
Neil Parish (Tiverton and Honiton),
Priti Patel (Witham), 
Owen Paterson (North Shropshire), 
Mike Penning (Hemel Hempstead), 
John Penrose (Weston-super-Mare), 
Andrew Percy (Brigg and Goole), 
Chris Philp (Croydon South), 
Christopher Pincher (Tamworth), 
Dan Poulter (Central Suffolk and North Ipswich), 
Rebecca Pow (Taunton Deane), 
Mark Prisk (Hertford and Stortford), 
Mark Pritchard (The Wrekin), 
Tom Pursglove (Corby), 
Will Quince (Colchester), 
Dominic Raab (Esher and Walton), 
John Redwood (Wokingham), 
Jacob Rees-Mogg (North East Somerset), 
Laurence Robertson (Tewkesbury), 
Mary Robinson (Cheadle), 
Andrew Rosindell (Romford), 
Douglas Ross (Moray), 
Lee Rowley (North East Derbyshire), 
David Rutley (Macclesfield), 
Paul Scully (Sutton and Cheam), 
Bob Seely (Isle of Wight), 
Andrew Selous (South West Bedfordshire), 
Grant Shapps (Welwyn Hatfield),
Alok Sharma (Reading West), 
Alec Shelbrooke (Elmet and Rothwell), 
Chris Skidmore (Kingswood), 
Chloe Smith (Norwich North),
Henry Smith (Crawley), 
Julian Smith (Skipton and Ripon), 
Royston Smith (Southampton, Itchen), 
Mark Spencer (Sherwood), 
Andrew Stephenson (Pendle), 
John Stevenson (Carlisle), 
Bob Stewart (Beckenham), 
Iain Stewart (Milton Keynes South),
Rory Stewart (Penrith and The Border), 
Mel Stride (Central Devon), 
Graham Stuart (Beverley and Holderness), 
Julian Sturdy (York Outer), 
Rishi Sunak (Richmond (Yorks)), 
Desmond Swayne (New Forest West), 
Hugo Swire (East Devon), 
Robert Syms (Poole), 
Derek Thomas (St Ives), 
Ross Thomson (Aberdeen South), 
Maggie Throup (Erewash), 
Kelly Tolhurst (Rochester and Strood), 
Justin Tomlinson (North Swindon),
Michael Tomlinson (Mid Dorset and North Poole), 
Craig Tracey (North Warwickshire), 
David Tredinnick (Bosworth), 
Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Berwick-upon-Tweed), 
Elizabeth Truss (South West Norfolk), 
Tom Tugendhat (Tonbridge and Malling), 
Shailesh Vara (North West Cambridgeshire), 
Martin Vickers (Cleethorpes), 
Theresa Villiers (Chipping Barnet), 
Charles Walker (Broxbourne), 
Robin Walker (Worcester), 
Ben Wallace (Wyre and Preston North), 
David Warburton (Somerton and Frome), 
Matt Warman (Boston and Skegness), 
Giles Watling (Clacton), 
Helen Whately (Faversham and Mid Kent), 
Heather Wheeler (South Derbyshire), 
Craig Whittaker (Calder Valley), 
John Whittingdale (Maldon), 
Bill Wiggin (North Herefordshire), 
Gavin Williamson (South Staffordshire), 
Mike Wood (Dudley South), 
William Wragg (Hazel Grove), 
Jeremy Wright (Kenilworth and Southam), 
Nadhim Zahawi (Stratford-on-Avon). 
The post Remainers launch their bid to force a soft Brexit appeared first on Gyrlversion.
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gyrlversion · 6 years
Text
Britain faces TWO YEARS of Brexit limbo unless Theresa May wins vote
Tory No Votes (265) 
Nigel Adams (Selby and Ainsty), 
Adam Afriyie (Windsor), 
Peter Aldous (Waveney), 
Lucy Allan (Telford),
David Amess (Southend West), 
Stuart Andrew (Pudsey), 
Edward Argar (Charnwood), 
Victoria Atkins (Louth and Horncastle), 
Richard Bacon (South Norfolk), 
Kemi Badenoch (Saffron Walden), 
Steve Baker (Wycombe), 
Harriett Baldwin (West Worcestershire), 
Stephen Barclay (North East Cambridgeshire), 
John Baron (Basildon and Billericay), 
Henry Bellingham (North West Norfolk), 
Paul Beresford (Mole Valley), 
Jake Berry (Rossendale and Darwen), 
Bob Blackman (Harrow East), 
Crispin Blunt (Reigate), 
Peter Bone (Wellingborough), 
Peter Bottomley (Worthing West), 
Andrew Bowie (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine), 
Ben Bradley (Mansfield), 
Karen Bradley (Staffordshire Moorlands),
Graham Brady (Altrincham and Sale West), 
Suella Braverman (Fareham), Jack Brereton (Stoke-on-Trent South), 
Andrew Bridgen (North West Leicestershire), 
Steve Brine (Winchester), 
James Brokenshire (Old Bexley and Sidcup), 
Fiona Bruce (Congleton), 
Alex Burghart (Brentwood and Ongar), 
Conor Burns (Bournemouth West), 
Alun Cairns (Vale of Glamorgan), 
James Cartlidge (South Suffolk), 
William Cash (Stone), 
Maria Caulfield (Lewes), 
Alex Chalk (Cheltenham), 
Rehman Chishti (Gillingham and Rainham), 
Christopher Chope (Christchurch), 
Jo Churchill (Bury St Edmunds), 
Colin Clark (Gordon), 
Simon Clarke (Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland), 
James Cleverly (Braintree), 
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (The Cotswolds), 
Therese Coffey (Suffolk Coastal), 
Damian Collins (Folkestone and Hythe), 
Robert Courts (Witney), 
Geoffrey Cox (Torridge and West Devon), 
Tracey Crouch (Chatham and Aylesford), 
Chris Davies (Brecon and Radnorshire),
David T. C. Davies (Monmouth),
Glyn Davies (Montgomeryshire),
Mims Davies (Eastleigh), 
Philip Davies (Shipley), 
David Davis (Haltemprice and Howden), 
Caroline Dinenage (Gosport), 
Leo Docherty (Aldershot), Michelle Donelan (Chippenham), 
Nadine Dorries (Mid Bedfordshire), 
Steve Double (St Austell and Newquay), 
Oliver Dowden (Hertsmere), 
Jackie Doyle-Price (Thurrock), 
Richard Drax (South Dorset), 
James Duddridge (Rochford and Southend East), 
David Duguid (Banff and Buchan), 
Iain Duncan Smith (Chingford and Woodford Green), 
Alan Duncan (Rutland and Melton), 
Philip Dunne (Ludlow), 
Michael Ellis (Northampton North), 
Charlie Elphicke (Dover), 
George Eustice (Camborne and Redruth), 
Nigel Evans (Ribble Valley), 
David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford), 
Michael Fabricant (Lichfield), 
Michael Fallon (Sevenoaks), 
Mark Field (Cities of London and Westminster), 
Kevin Foster (Torbay), 
Liam Fox (North Somerset), 
Mark Francois (Rayleigh and Wickford), 
Lucy Frazer (South East Cambridgeshire), 
Marcus Fysh (Yeovil), 
Roger Gale (North Thanet), 
Mark Garnier (Wyre Forest), 
Nusrat Ghani (Wealden), 
Nick Gibb (Bognor Regis and Littlehampton), 
Cheryl Gillan (Chesham and Amersham), 
John Glen (Salisbury), 
Zac Goldsmith (Richmond Park),
Robert Goodwill (Scarborough and Whitby), 
Michael Gove (Surrey Heath), 
Luke Graham (Ochil and South Perthshire), 
Bill Grant (Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock), 
Helen Grant (Maidstone and The Weald),
James Gray (North Wiltshire), 
Chris Grayling (Epsom and Ewell), 
Chris Green (Bolton West), 
Andrew Griffiths (Burton), 
Kirstene Hair (Angus), 
Robert Halfon (Harlow), 
Luke Hall (Thornbury and Yate), 
Philip Hammond (Runnymede and Weybridge), 
Matt Hancock (West Suffolk), 
Greg Hands (Chelsea and Fulham), 
Mark Harper (Forest of Dean), 
Rebecca Harris (Castle Point), 
Trudy Harrison (Copeland), 
Simon Hart (Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire), 
John Hayes (South Holland and The Deepings), 
James Heappey (Wells),
Chris Heaton-Harris (Daventry), 
Gordon Henderson (Sittingbourne and Sheppey), 
Nick Herbert (Arundel and South Downs), 
Damian Hinds (East Hampshire), 
George Hollingbery (Meon Valley), 
Kevin Hollinrake (Thirsk and Malton), 
Philip Hollobone (Kettering), Adam Holloway (Gravesham), 
John Howell (Henley), 
Eddie Hughes (Walsall North),
Jeremy Hunt (South West Surrey), 
Nick Hurd (Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner), 
Sajid Javid (Bromsgrove), 
Ranil Jayawardena (North East Hampshire),
Bernard Jenkin (Harwich and North Essex), 
Andrea Jenkyns (Morley and Outwood), 
Robert Jenrick (Newark), 
Boris Johnson (Uxbridge and South Ruislip), 
Caroline Johnson (Sleaford and North Hykeham), 
Gareth Johnson (Dartford), 
Andrew Jones (Harrogate and Knaresborough), 
David Jones (Clwyd West), 
Marcus Jones (Nuneaton), 
Daniel Kawczynski (Shrewsbury and Atcham), 
Gillian Keegan (Chichester), Seema Kennedy (South Ribble), 
Stephen Kerr (Stirling), Julian Knight (Solihull), 
Greg Knight (East Yorkshire), 
Kwasi Kwarteng (Spelthorne), 
John Lamont (Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk),
Mark Lancaster (Milton Keynes North), 
Pauline Latham (Mid Derbyshire), 
Andrea Leadsom (South Northamptonshire), 
Edward Leigh (Gainsborough), 
Andrew Lewer (Northampton South), 
Brandon Lewis (Great Yarmouth), 
Julian Lewis (New Forest East),
Ian Liddell-Grainger (Bridgwater and West Somerset), 
David Lidington (Aylesbury), 
Julia Lopez (Hornchurch and Upminster), 
Jack Lopresti (Filton and Bradley Stoke), 
Jonathan Lord (Woking), 
Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham), 
Craig Mackinlay (South Thanet), 
Rachel Maclean (Redditch), 
Anne Main (St Albans), 
Alan Mak (Havant), 
Kit Malthouse (North West Hampshire), 
Scott Mann (North Cornwall), 
Theresa May (Maidenhead), 
Paul Maynard (Blackpool North and Cleveleys),
Patrick McLoughlin (Derbyshire Dales), 
Stephen McPartland (Stevenage), 
Esther McVey (Tatton), 
Mark Menzies (Fylde), 
Johnny Mercer (Plymouth, Moor View), 
Huw Merriman (Bexhill and Battle), 
Stephen Metcalfe (South Basildon and East Thurrock), 
Maria Miller (Basingstoke), 
Amanda Milling (Cannock Chase), 
Nigel Mills (Amber Valley), 
Andrew Mitchell (Sutton Coldfield), 
Damien Moore (Southport), 
Penny Mordaunt (Portsmouth North), 
Nicky Morgan (Loughborough), 
Anne Marie Morris (Newton Abbot), 
David Morris (Morecambe and Lunesdale), 
James Morris (Halesowen and Rowley Regis),
Wendy Morton (Aldridge-Brownhills), 
Sheryll Murray (South East Cornwall), 
Andrew Murrison (South West Wiltshire), 
Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst), 
Caroline Nokes (Romsey and Southampton North),
Jesse Norman (Hereford and South Herefordshire), 
Neil O’Brien (Harborough), 
Matthew Offord (Hendon), 
Guy Opperman (Hexham), 
Neil Parish (Tiverton and Honiton),
Priti Patel (Witham), 
Owen Paterson (North Shropshire), 
Mike Penning (Hemel Hempstead), 
John Penrose (Weston-super-Mare), 
Andrew Percy (Brigg and Goole), 
Chris Philp (Croydon South), 
Christopher Pincher (Tamworth), 
Dan Poulter (Central Suffolk and North Ipswich), 
Rebecca Pow (Taunton Deane), 
Mark Prisk (Hertford and Stortford), 
Mark Pritchard (The Wrekin), 
Tom Pursglove (Corby), 
Will Quince (Colchester), 
Dominic Raab (Esher and Walton), 
John Redwood (Wokingham), 
Jacob Rees-Mogg (North East Somerset), 
Laurence Robertson (Tewkesbury), 
Mary Robinson (Cheadle), 
Andrew Rosindell (Romford), 
Douglas Ross (Moray), 
Lee Rowley (North East Derbyshire), 
David Rutley (Macclesfield), 
Paul Scully (Sutton and Cheam), 
Bob Seely (Isle of Wight), 
Andrew Selous (South West Bedfordshire), 
Grant Shapps (Welwyn Hatfield),
Alok Sharma (Reading West), 
Alec Shelbrooke (Elmet and Rothwell), 
Chris Skidmore (Kingswood), 
Chloe Smith (Norwich North),
Henry Smith (Crawley), 
Julian Smith (Skipton and Ripon), 
Royston Smith (Southampton, Itchen), 
Mark Spencer (Sherwood), 
Andrew Stephenson (Pendle), 
John Stevenson (Carlisle), 
Bob Stewart (Beckenham), 
Iain Stewart (Milton Keynes South),
Rory Stewart (Penrith and The Border), 
Mel Stride (Central Devon), 
Graham Stuart (Beverley and Holderness), 
Julian Sturdy (York Outer), 
Rishi Sunak (Richmond (Yorks)), 
Desmond Swayne (New Forest West), 
Hugo Swire (East Devon), 
Robert Syms (Poole), 
Derek Thomas (St Ives), 
Ross Thomson (Aberdeen South), 
Maggie Throup (Erewash), 
Kelly Tolhurst (Rochester and Strood), 
Justin Tomlinson (North Swindon),
Michael Tomlinson (Mid Dorset and North Poole), 
Craig Tracey (North Warwickshire), 
David Tredinnick (Bosworth), 
Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Berwick-upon-Tweed), 
Elizabeth Truss (South West Norfolk), 
Tom Tugendhat (Tonbridge and Malling), 
Shailesh Vara (North West Cambridgeshire), 
Martin Vickers (Cleethorpes), 
Theresa Villiers (Chipping Barnet), 
Charles Walker (Broxbourne), 
Robin Walker (Worcester), 
Ben Wallace (Wyre and Preston North), 
David Warburton (Somerton and Frome), 
Matt Warman (Boston and Skegness), 
Giles Watling (Clacton), 
Helen Whately (Faversham and Mid Kent), 
Heather Wheeler (South Derbyshire), 
Craig Whittaker (Calder Valley), 
John Whittingdale (Maldon), 
Bill Wiggin (North Herefordshire), 
Gavin Williamson (South Staffordshire), 
Mike Wood (Dudley South), 
William Wragg (Hazel Grove), 
Jeremy Wright (Kenilworth and Southam), 
Nadhim Zahawi (Stratford-on-Avon). 
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