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Revision as of 17:53, 23 August 2015 editCollect (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers47,160 edits Alleged Misplaced Pages editing: the findings are of substantial importance lest we imply the allegations held water← Previous edit Revision as of 17:55, 23 August 2015 edit undoCollect (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers47,160 edits Alleged pyramid scheme: allegation of a crime is not directly connected to the individual personper source - hence does not belong in this BLPNext edit →
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==Controversies== ==Controversies==
===Alleged pyramid scheme===
'']'' reported that one of HowTo Corp's products released whilst Shapps was a director in 2007, "sounds very much like a ]". The 20/20 Challenge publication cost $497 and promised customers earnings of $20,000 in 20 days. Upon purchase, the "toolkit" was revealed to be an ebook, advising the user to create their own toolkit and recruit 100 "Joint Venture Partners" to resell it for a share of the profits.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Hall|first1=Richard|title=Revealed: Grant Shapps' get-rich-quick guide (or it that Michael Green's?)|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/revealed-grant-shapps-getrichquick-guide-or-it-that-michael-greens-8209978.html|accessdate=14 April 2015|publisher=Independent|date=13 October 2012}}</ref>

===Donations=== ===Donations===
In May 2008, Shapps was cited as one of several shadow ministers who had received cash from firms linked to their portfolios. The donors were originally recruited by ] who previously held the shadow housing portfolio.<ref>{{cite web|author=David Hencke, Westminster correspondent |url=http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2008/may/16/conservatives |title=Shadow ministers take cash from firms linked to their portfolios &#124; Politics |publisher=The Guardian |date=16 May 2008 |accessdate=3 November 2013}}</ref> The Conservative party said shadow ministers had not been influenced by donations. "Some Conservative policy on housing is actually against the policy of the donors", said a Conservative spokesman.<ref name=Guardian16May2008> ''The Guardian'', 16 May 2008</ref> Shadow ministers are allowed to receive donations from organisations covered by their brief as long as the person has a company in the UK or lives in the UK.<ref name=Guardian16May2008 /> The Commissioner exonerated all shadow cabinet members involved.<ref name=mirror16May2008>{{dead link|date=September 2012}}</ref> In May 2008, Shapps was cited as one of several shadow ministers who had received cash from firms linked to their portfolios. The donors were originally recruited by ] who previously held the shadow housing portfolio.<ref>{{cite web|author=David Hencke, Westminster correspondent |url=http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2008/may/16/conservatives |title=Shadow ministers take cash from firms linked to their portfolios &#124; Politics |publisher=The Guardian |date=16 May 2008 |accessdate=3 November 2013}}</ref> The Conservative party said shadow ministers had not been influenced by donations. "Some Conservative policy on housing is actually against the policy of the donors", said a Conservative spokesman.<ref name=Guardian16May2008> ''The Guardian'', 16 May 2008</ref> Shadow ministers are allowed to receive donations from organisations covered by their brief as long as the person has a company in the UK or lives in the UK.<ref name=Guardian16May2008 /> The Commissioner exonerated all shadow cabinet members involved.<ref name=mirror16May2008>{{dead link|date=September 2012}}</ref>

Revision as of 17:55, 23 August 2015

The Right HonourableGrant ShappsMP
Minister of State for International Development
Incumbent
Assumed office
11 May 2015
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded by(New Position)
Minister without Portfolio
In office
4 September 2012 – 11 May 2015
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byThe Baroness Warsi
Succeeded byThe Lord Feldman of Elstree
Chairman of the Conservative Party
In office
4 September 2012 – 11 May 2015Serving with The Lord Feldman of Elstree
LeaderDavid Cameron
Preceded byThe Baroness Warsi
Succeeded byThe Lord Feldman of Elstree
Minister of State for Housing and Local Government
In office
13 May 2010 – 4 September 2012
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron
Preceded byJohn Healey (Housing)
Rosie Winterton (Local Government)
Succeeded byMark Prisk
Member of Parliament
for Welwyn Hatfield
Incumbent
Assumed office
5 May 2005
Preceded byMelanie Johnson
Majority17,423 (35.6%)
Personal details
Born (1968-09-14) 14 September 1968 (age 56)
Croxley Green, Watford, England
Political partyConservative
SpouseBelinda Goldstone
Children3
Alma materManchester Metropolitan University
PseudonymMichael Green, Sebastian Fox

Grant Shapps (born 14 September 1968) is a British Conservative Party politician, the current Minister of State at the Department for International Development. A former co-chairman of the Conservative Party, he is the member of parliament for Welwyn Hatfield in England. He first won the seat, as Grant V Shapps, in the general election of 5 May 2005. Shapps was returned to parliament in the May 2010 election with a majority of 17,423, which fell to 12,153 in 2015. On 9 June 2010, Shapps was appointed as a Privy Counsellor. On 4 September 2012, he was appointed Conservative Party Co-Chairman, replacing Baroness Warsi; he was also appointed Minister without portfolio in the Cabinet Office. His salary is paid by the party. On 11 May 2015, in a widely anticipated move, Shapps lost his positions as Conservative party co-chairman and minister without portfolio at the Cabinet Office, and was instead appointed as minister of state at the Department for International Development.

Family and early life

Shapps was born in Croxley Green, Watford, Hertfordshire, to a Jewish family. He was educated at Yorke Mead Primary School, Watford Grammar School for Boys, and Cassio College. He completed a business and finance course at Manchester Polytechnic, and received a Higher National Diploma. Shapps was also National President of the Jewish youth organisation BBYO. In 1989, Shapps was in a car crash in Kansas, United States, that left him in a coma for a week.

He married Belinda Goldstone in 1997 and they have three children. In 1999 Shapps was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma and underwent chemotherapy and radiotherapy recovering from cancer by the following year. As a result of the effects of chemotherapy, his children  were conceived by IVF.

Shapps' brother, Andre Shapps, is a musician. Between 1994 and 1998, Andre Shapps was a member of Big Audio Dynamite (BAD), playing keyboards. The Shapps' cousin, Mick Jones was a key figure in the British punk rock of the late 1970s and a founding member of both The Clash and Big Audio Dynamite.

Political career

Parliamentary candidacy

Shapps unsuccessfully contested the seat of North Southwark and Bermondsey during the 1997 election as the Conservative Party candidate.

Shapps stood for the Welwyn Hatfield constituency in the 2001 election, again unsuccessfully. He was reselected to fight Welwyn Hatfield in 2002 and continued his local campaigning over the next four years.

Member of Parliament

Shapps stood again in the 2005 election and was elected as the Conservative MP for Welwyn Hatfield, defeating the Labour MP and Minister for Public Health, Melanie Johnson. He received 22,172 votes (49.6%) and had a majority of 5,946 (13.3%), recording the second highest swing from Labour to Conservative in the 2005 election of 8.2%.

Shapps publicly backed David Cameron's bid for the leadership of the Conservative Party, seconding Cameron's nomination papers. Upon Cameron's election as party leader Shapps was appointed vice chairman of the Conservative Party with responsibility for campaigning.

He was a member of the Public Administration Select Committee between May 2005 and February 2007.

In the 2010 election, he was re-elected with a further 11.1% swing and a majority of 17,423, taking 57% of the vote.

Shadow housing minister

In June 2007, Shapps became shadow housing minister, outside the shadow cabinet, but entitled to attend its meetings.

He was shadow housing minister during the period of the last four Labour government housing ministers. During this period of opposition he argued in favour of a community-up approach to solving the housing crisis and warned against top-down Whitehall driven housing targets, which he believed had failed in the past.

In April 2009, Shapps launched the Conservative party's ninth green paper on policy, "Strong Foundations". In early 2010 Shapps published a series of six speeches in a pamphlet called "Home Truths".

Minister of State for Housing and Local Government

In May 2010, Shapps became housing and local government minister within the Communities and Local Government department and immediately repealed Home Information Pack (HIP) legislation. He chaired the Cross-Ministerial Working Group on Homelessness which includes ministers from eight Government departments. The group introduced "No Second Night Out", a policy designed to prevent rough sleeping nationwide.

As Minister of State for Housing, Shapps promoted plans for flexible rent and controversially ended automatic lifetime social tenancies. He also introduced the New Homes Bonus which rewarded councils for building more homes. He denied claims that changes in Housing Benefit rules would be unfair claiming that ordinary people could no longer afford some of the homes paid for by the £24bn Housing Benefit bill. Shapps championed Tenant Panels.

At the 2011 party conference, Shapps backed the expansion of right to buy with the income being spent on replacing the sold housing with new affordable housing on a one for one basis.

In 2012, Shapps launched StreetLink – a website and phone app for the public to bring help to rough sleepers.

Conservative Party co-chairman

Shapps speaking at Conservative Party conference 2011

In September 2012, Shapps was appointed Co-Chairman of the Conservative Party in Cameron's first major reshuffle.

On arrival Shapps set about preparing Conservative Campaign Headquarters for the 2015 election by installing an election countdown clock.

In November 2012, Shapps hired Australian strategist Lynton Crosby to provide strategic advice and run the 2015 election campaign. Credited with helping John Howard to win three Australian elections and the re-election of Boris Johnson as Mayor of London, Crosby is a controversial figure who was accused of having influenced government smoking policy in July 2013.

In March 2013, Shapps defended the Welfare Reform Act 2012 (often referred to as the "Bedroom Tax") saying his own children share a bedroom. Some were critical of him for comparing his privileged situation with that of a family receiving housing benefit. Others argued that Shapps was right to point out that families who are not on welfare should not have to pay for additional bedrooms. At the same time Shapps was criticized by Andrew Dilnot, Chairman of the UK Statistics Authority, for wrongly claiming that nearly one million people on disability benefits had dropped their claims rather than face medical checks. The real figure was 19,700. In September 2013, Shapps complained to the Secretary-General of the United Nations about a press release issued in its name claiming that the government's Spare Room Subsidy policy went against human rights.

In October 2013, Shapps used a Daily Telegraph interview to say that the BBC could lose the right to all of the licence fee if it did not resolve its "culture of waste and secrecy". He also suggested that the organisation was biased against the Tory Party, saying it did not "apply fairness in both directions" and that there was a "question of credibility for the organisation". The licence fee might be withdrawn if it did not address this. His comments sparked a vigorous response from a former BBC Director General Greg Dyke who said that "politicians shouldn't define partiality". Others, including the current BBC Director General Tony Hall echoed some of Shapps's comments by saying that the "BBC needs to start treating public money as its own."

In March 2014, Shapps drew national headlines for a tweet in support of the 2014 budget. Opponents criticised Shapps of being patronising to working people by reducing their hobbies to bingo and beer.

He ceased being co-chairman of the Conservative Party in May 2015.

Minister of State, Department for International Development

On 11 May 2015, Shapps was sacked from the cabinet, which he had attended as Conservative party co-chairman and minister without portfolio at the Cabinet Office, and appointed as minister of state at the Department for International Development. BBC political correspondent Chris Mason said the change appeared to be a demotion, while The Guardian's chief political correspondent, Nicholas Watt, went further calling it “a humiliating blow”.

Controversies

Donations

In May 2008, Shapps was cited as one of several shadow ministers who had received cash from firms linked to their portfolios. The donors were originally recruited by Michael Gove who previously held the shadow housing portfolio. The Conservative party said shadow ministers had not been influenced by donations. "Some Conservative policy on housing is actually against the policy of the donors", said a Conservative spokesman. Shadow ministers are allowed to receive donations from organisations covered by their brief as long as the person has a company in the UK or lives in the UK. The Commissioner exonerated all shadow cabinet members involved.

Alleged copyright infringement

In 2012 Google blacklisted 19 of the Shapps' business websites for violating rules on copyright infringement related to the web scraping-based TrafficPayMaster software sold by the Shapps.

Pseudonym and second job denials

His use of the pen names Michael Green and Sebastian Fox attracted controversy in 2012. Shapps denied having used the pseudonym after entering Parliament and, in 2014, threatened legal action against a constituent who had stated on Facebook that he had. In February 2015 he told LBC Radio presenter Shelagh Fogarty, "Let me get this absolutely clear...I don't have a second job and have never had a second job while being an MP. End of story." In March 2015 Shapps admitted to having had a second job whilst being an MP and practising business under the pen name. In March 2015, Dean Archer, the constituent previously threatened with legal action by Shapps, warned Shapps he was considering legal action against him.

Allegations of Misplaced Pages editing found to be without evidence

In 2012 the Guardian reported that Shapps' Misplaced Pages article had been edited from his office to remove embarrassing information and correct an error. Shapps stated that he had not touched his Misplaced Pages biography for years and that he only edited to make his biography more accurate. During the 2015 general election campaign the Guardian reported allegations by a Misplaced Pages administrator that Shapps had used a sockpuppet account, Contribsx, to remove embarrassing material from his own Misplaced Pages page and make "largely unflattering" edits to articles about other politicians, including some in his own party. Shapps denied the allegations; the Telegraph claimed his accuser was a "Liberal Democrat activist". Misplaced Pages's Arbitration Committee found there was "no significant evidence" to link the Contribsx account to Shapps. Misplaced Pages censured the administrator responsible for the allegation, investigation, comments to the Guardian and the blocking of the Contribsx account. Another administrator removed the block placed on the Contribsx account.

Professional and writing career

In 1990, aged 22, Shapps founded PrintHouse Corporation, a design, print, website creation and marketing business in London, based on a collapsed printing business he purchased from the receiver. He stepped down as a director in 2009, but remained the majority shareholder.

Shapps founded a web publishing business, How To Corp Limited, with his wife while he was recovering from cancer. The company marketed business publications and software. Shapps stood down as a director in July 2008; his wife remained as director until the company was dissolved in 2014.

References

  1. ^ "V weird mystery of Grant Shapps' middle name". The Sun. Sun Nation. 16 March 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015. Shapps' birth certificate shows he was given just the one name: Grant.
    Stewart, J. (15 October 1968). "No. 273" (image; certified copy of an Entry Pursuant to the Births and Deaths Registration Act 1953). 1968 Births in the Sub-District of Watford in the County of Hertford. Fourteen September 1968, 41 Sycamore Road, Croxley Green; Grant; Boy; ...
    Davies, J.L. (16 March 2015). "No.160" (image; Certified Copy of an Entry of Marriage given at the General Register Office Application Number 6368696/1). 1997 Marriage solemonized at Holy Law Synagogue [sic] The Park Royal International Hotel, Stretton Road, Warrington Cheshire; District of Bury in the Borough of Bury. Retrieved 26 April 2015. Thirty First August 1997; Grant Shapps; Belinda Jo Goldstone ... {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
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