Loading AI tools
British politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mark John Reckless (born 6 December 1970) is a British lawyer and former politician who served as a Member of the Senedd (MS) for South Wales East from 2016 until 2021, having previously served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Rochester and Strood from 2010 to 2015. Initially a member of the Conservative Party, he crossed the floor to join the UK Independence Party (UKIP) in September 2014. He has since changed parties a further three times.
Mark Reckless | |
---|---|
Leader of the Brexit Party in Wales | |
In office 15 May 2019 – 19 October 2020 | |
Leader | Nigel Farage |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Nathan Gill (Reform UK) |
Member of the Senedd for South Wales East | |
In office 5 May 2016 – 29 April 2021 | |
Preceded by | William Graham |
Succeeded by | Natasha Asghar |
UKIP Spokesperson for Economics | |
In office 18 August 2015 – 6 April 2017 | |
Leader | Nigel Farage Diane James Paul Nuttall |
Preceded by | Patrick O'Flynn |
Succeeded by | Patrick O'Flynn |
Member of Parliament for Rochester and Strood | |
In office 20 November 2014 – 30 March 2015 | |
Preceded by | himself |
Succeeded by | Kelly Tolhurst |
In office 6 May 2010 – 30 September 2014 | |
Preceded by | Bob Marshall-Andrews (Medway) |
Succeeded by | himself |
Personal details | |
Born | Mark John Reckless 6 December 1970 London, England |
Political party | Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party (2020–present) |
Other political affiliations | Brexit Party (2019–2020) Independent (member of the Conservative Group in the Senedd) (2017–2019) UK Independence Party (2014–2017) Conservative (2002–2014) |
Spouse | Catriona Brown |
Alma mater | Christ Church, Oxford The University of Law Columbia Business School |
Website | Official website |
While a member of the House of Commons, Reckless was noted for his rebelliousness; he cast 56 votes against the whip between 2010 and 2014, making him the 13th most rebellious Conservative Party MP in the period. He led a rebellion of 53 Conservative MPs on the EU budget, which inflicted the first House of Commons defeat on the coalition government. From November 2010, he served as a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee. After crossing the floor, he won re-election as a UKIP MP in a by-election held in November 2014 but lost his seat to the Conservatives at the 2015 general election.
A Eurosceptic, Reckless was elected to the National Assembly for Wales, later known as the Senedd, in 2016. He campaigned to leave the European Union in the 2016 EU membership referendum. He subsequently left UKIP to join the Conservative group in the National Assembly before joining the Brexit Party in 2019 when he was appointed its leader in the National Assembly by Nigel Farage.[1] On 19 October 2020, Reckless joined the Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party; the party lost both of its seats in the 2021 Senedd election.[2]
Born in London, Reckless was educated at Marlborough College before attending Christ Church, Oxford,[3] where he read philosophy, politics and economics. He then pursued postgraduate studies at Columbia Business School in the United States, receiving an MBA. At Columbia he studied alongside writer Jacob Appel, and is the subject of several thinly-veiled anecdotes in Appel's satire The Man Who Wouldn't Stand Up.[4] After university, he trained as a barrister at the College of Law, gaining an LLB, and was called to the Bar in 2007.
In the mid-1990s, Reckless worked for UBS Warburg.[5] In the late 1990s, he worked as a strategy consultant and associate in Financial Services Group at Booz Allen Hamilton.[6] Until his election in May 2010, Reckless had been a solicitor at Herbert Smith[7] and had worked on legal matters that had had dealings with private investigators.[8] He was a member of the Kent Police Authority from 2007 to 2011.
Between 2002 and 2004, Reckless was a member of the policy unit at Conservative Central Office where he wrote a book on deregulation policy[9] as well as overseeing the development of the policy on directly elected police commissioners.[10] The first police and crime commissioner elections took place on 15 November 2012.
Reckless was elected as Member of Parliament for Rochester and Strood at the 2010 general election.[11] He had a majority of 9,953, having previously contested the Medway constituency in 2001 and 2005, reducing the majority of the incumbent Labour MP to 3,780 in 2001 and 213 in 2005. He had served as a Medway councillor between 2007 and 2011.[12] The UK Independence Party did not run a candidate of their own in Rochester and Strood in 2010, instead endorsing Reckless.[13]
Reckless was elected to the Home Affairs Select Committee in 2010[14] often appearing on Newsnight and other political programmes, arguing for the deportation of clerics Abu Hamza[15] and Abu Qatada.[16] He was one of parliament's most rebellious MPs and was the 13th-most rebellious Conservative MP between 2010 and 2014, casting 56 votes against the whip.[17][18] He was one of only six Conservative MPs to vote against increase of university tuition fees,[19][20] and was a critic of the government's energy policy, arguing that the government's Energy Bill introduced in December 2012 was "a sad retreat for Conservatives".[21]
In July 2010, Reckless apologised for missing a vote on the budget because he was drunk. He said that he "did not feel it was appropriate to take part in the vote because of the amount he had drunk".[22]
In 2011, he abstained on the military intervention in Libya.[23]
A Eurosceptic,[24] Reckless is also a critic of the European Court of Human Rights, saying it erodes "British freedom and democracy".[25]
He was chair of the all-party parliamentary group on Georgia.[26] The group's aims are "to facilitate greater parliamentary awareness of developments in Georgia".
On 30 September 2014, Reckless applied for the Stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds and therefore ceased to be an MP. A by-election was called on 20 November, at which Reckless was nominated to stand as the UKIP candidate. He was returned as a member of parliament for UKIP, becoming the party's second elected MP.
On 31 October 2012, Reckless led a rebellion of 53 Conservative MPs which inflicted the first House of Commons defeat (307 votes to 294) on the coalition government.[27] The Tory rebels voted with Labour MPs to pass an amendment calling for a real-terms cut in the 2014–2020 EU budget multi-annual financial framework. The coalition government supported only a real-terms freeze in the EU budget as a minimum. The amendment was not binding on the government, but damaged prime minister David Cameron's authority on Europe before key EU budget negotiations in November 2012.[28] As a result of leading the successful rebellion, Reckless was voted 'Backbencher of the Year' by the Conservatives[29] and finished third in a ConservativeHome poll of 'Backbencher of the Year', although the site's editor Tim Montgomerie announced that 'if UKIP readers had been included in the poll Mark Reckless would have topped the vote.'[30]
On 27 September 2014, Reckless defected to the UK Independence Party at its party conference in Doncaster, and announced his resignation in order to seek re-election at a by-election.[31] He became the second Conservative MP in the space of a month to defect to UKIP, the first being his close friend Douglas Carswell. In a speech delivered to the conference, Reckless claimed that the Conservative leadership was 'not serious about real change on Europe', and that 'Britain could be better'.[31]
Although he won the by-election on 20 November 2014 as a UKIP candidate, in the 2015 general election Reckless lost his seat to the Conservative candidate, Kelly Tolhurst.
In June 2015, Reckless was made Director of Policy Development by UKIP.
In March 2016, Reckless was announced as UKIP's lead candidate for the regional seat of South Wales East despite having no previous links to Wales.[32] He was elected on 5 May 2016.
On 6 April 2017, Reckless left UKIP to join the Conservative Group; however, he did not rejoin the Conservative Party. This move made the Conservative group the second-largest in the Welsh Assembly. Upon leaving, he said, "I leave UKIP positively, having achieved our joint aim, a successful referendum to leave the EU".[33][34][35][36][37]
On 14 April 2019, Reckless left the Conservative Group over the party's failure to deliver Brexit. He then sat as an independent member[38] before joining the Brexit Party the following month.[1]
On 15 May 2019, Reckless stated his intention to form a new Brexit Party political group in the Senedd, along with Caroline Jones, Mandy Jones, and David Rowlands, with himself as the leader of the group.[1] In July 2020, he attracted criticism from pro-devolution Brexit Party volunteers when he stated that he would support the campaign to abolish the Senedd.[39] He then left the party and joined the Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party.[40] He said, since Brexit had been effectively achieved, the work of the Brexit Party was complete.[41] Two weeks later, the Brexit Party was rebranded as Reform UK.[42]
At the 2021 Senedd election, Reckless was the Abolish the Welsh Assembly candidate in Monmouth, where he came seventh, with 1,174 votes (3.3%). He was also his party's lead candidate on the South Wales East list, but was not elected.
Rochester and Strood, 2015
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Conservative | Kelly Tolhurst | 23,142 | 44.1 | −5.1 | |
UKIP | Mark Reckless | 16,009 | 30.5 | N/A | |
Labour | Naushabah Khan | 10,396 | 19.8 | −8.7 | |
Green | Clive Gregory | 1,516 | 2.9 | +1.4 | |
Liberal Democrats | Prue Bray | 1,251 | 2.4 | −13.9 | |
TUSC | Dan Burn | 202 | 0.4 | +0.4 | |
Majority | 7,133 | 13.6 | |||
Turnout | 52,516 | 66.5 | |||
Conservative gain from UKIP | Swing | -17.8 |
See 2014 Rochester and Strood by-election
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
UKIP | Mark Reckless | 16,867 | 42.1 | N/A | |
Conservative | Kelly Tolhurst | 13,947 | 34.8 | −14.4 | |
Labour | Naushabah Khan | 6,713 | 16.8 | −11.7 | |
Green | Clive Gregory | 1,692 | 4.2 | +2.7 | |
Liberal Democrats | Geoff Juby | 349 | 0.9 | −15.5 | |
Monster Raving Loony | Hairy Knorm Davidson | 151 | 0.4 | N/A | |
Independent | Stephen Goldsborough | 69 | 0.2 | N/A | |
People Before Profit | Nick Long | 69 | 0.2 | N/A | |
Britain First | Jayda Fransen | 56 | 0.1 | N/A | |
Independent | Mike Barker | 54 | 0.1 | N/A | |
Independent | Charlotte Rose | 43 | 0.1 | N/A | |
Patriotic Socialist Party | Dave Osborn | 33 | 0.1 | N/A | |
Independent | Christopher Challis | 22 | 0.1 | N/A | |
Majority | 2,920 | 7.3 | |||
Turnout | 40,065 | 50.6 | −14.3 | ||
UKIP gain from Conservative | Swing | 28.3% |
The Rochester and Strood seat was fought for the first time at the 2010 general election. Following its boundary review of parliamentary representation in Kent, the Boundary Commission for England renamed the Medway (UK Parliament constituency) seat to Rochester and Strood. This is because the commission agreed that the term Medway is now primarily used for the larger unitary authority.[46]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Conservative | Mark Reckless | 23,604 | 49.2 | +6.6 | |
Labour | Teresa Murray | 13,651 | 28.5 | −13.1 | |
Liberal Democrats | Geoff Juby | 7,800 | 16.3 | +3.9 | |
English Democrat | Ron Sands | 2,182 | 4.5 | N/A | |
Green | Simon Marchant | 734 | 1.5 | N/A | |
Majority | 9,953 | 20.7 | |||
Turnout | 47,971 | 64.9 | +2.5 | ||
Conservative gain from Labour | Swing | +9.8 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labour | Bob Marshall-Andrews | 17,333 | 42.2 | −6.8 | |
Conservative | Mark Reckless | 17,120 | 41.7 | +2.5 | |
Liberal Democrats | Geoffrey Juby | 5,152 | 12.5 | +3.2 | |
UKIP | Bob Oakley | 1,488 | 3.6 | +1.1 | |
Majority | 213 | 0.5 | |||
Turnout | 41,093 | 61.1 | 1.6 | ||
Labour hold | Swing | -4.6 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labour | Bob Marshall-Andrews | 18,914 | 49.0 | +0.1 | |
Conservative | Mark Reckless | 15,134 | 39.2 | +2.3 | |
Liberal Democrats | Geoffrey Juby | 3,604 | 9.3 | −0.8 | |
UKIP | Nikki Sinclaire | 958 | 2.5 | +1.6 | |
Majority | 3,780 | 9.8 | |||
Turnout | 38,610 | 59.5 | −12.8 | ||
Labour hold | Swing |
Reckless is a grandson of Henry McDevitt, who served as a Fianna Fáil TD for Donegal East in Dáil Éireann, the Irish parliament, from 1938 until 1943.[50] His mother emigrated to the UK when she was 17 to train as a nurse; however, Reckless has said that he does not see his mother as an "immigrant" and stated "I don't consider myself to have an immigrant background".[51]
He married Catriona Brown at Westminster Cathedral on 1 October 2011; the reception was held in the Palace of Westminster.[52] His best man was Daniel Hannan MEP.[53] Reckless had been the best man at Hannan's wedding.[54]
In May 2015 Catriona Brown-Reckless was elected as a UKIP Councillor for Strood South in Medway. She resigned in September 2016.[55] In May 2022 she was elected as a Conservative Councillor for the ward of Pentyrch and St Fagans in Cardiff.[56]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.