First terms (1997–2005) Marshall-Andrews entered Parliament in the
1997 general election. He was perceived as being on the libertarian-left wing of the Labour Party, and was a member of the
Socialist Campaign Group, but unlike other members of this group was not a trade-unionist by background. He was successfully re-elected in 2001, and tackled the immigration issue directly. "The difference between you and me is that you are a racist and I am not", he told a voter. "And under no circumstances are you allowed to vote for me. You will not vote for me!" After a period of bedding down as a new MP, where he aided in the drafting of the banning of handguns, he became an irritant to the government
front bench. He rebelled against the government on multiple occasions (20 of those rebellions being in the 2005 parliament), mainly on issues relating to civil liberty. In particular, he successfully opposed proposals to restrict the right to jury trial and to introduce 90 days executive detention without trial. He was in the vanguard of opposition to the Iraq War.
Later term (2005–10) During the night of the
2005 general election, Marshall-Andrews appeared on national television to comment on his predicted defeat before it had been officially declared, remarking that it would be the only good news
Tony Blair would get that night, while launching a scathing attack on the Prime Minister. However, he managed to hold on to the seat, with a narrow majority of 213 votes. His penchant for rebellion, combined with his friendliness towards many
Conservative MPs, led him to become unpopular within parts of his own party. According to
The Times, senior Labour MPs demanded that the
whip be withdrawn from him as an example to the 49 Labour MPs who rebelled against the government's plans to detain terror suspects for 90 days. During a break in the Terror Bill debate on 9 November 2005, Marshall-Andrews was seen talking to Conservative MPs
Andrew Mitchell,
Greg Knight and
Damian Green in the Commons lobby. Labour MP
Barry Sheerman remonstrated with him. Fellow Labour MP
Jim Dowd intervened and at one stage grabbed Marshall-Andrews by the lapels. Dowd and several observers believed they heard him saying of Dowd, "Here's another
faggot". The near-scuffle was broken up by government whip
Tom Watson, but was widely reported. Marshall-Andrews subsequently insisted that he had actually shouted "faccio", an
Italian word meaning a menial assistant, from which the public school slang 'fag' is thought to derive. On 31 October 2006, Marshall-Andrews was one of 12 Labour MPs to back
Plaid Cymru and the
Scottish National Party's call for an inquiry into the
Iraq War. Despite his leftist position, however, he nominated
Gordon Brown (rather than
John McDonnell) for the Labour Party leadership in 2007 and
Peter Hain as deputy leader at the same time. On 15 June 2008, with former Labour cabinet minister
Tony Benn, Marshall-Andrews again rebelled in his support for
Conservative MP
David Davis' campaign to step down as an MP and force a by-election in his constituency over the bill for a maximum 42-day detention without charge for arrested suspects. Such an action would normally be against party rules, although he believed his withdrawal from the Labour Party whip was improbable because the party was unlikely to put up a candidate against Davis in the by-election. He felt through his action that "the voice of a substantial part of the Labour party may be heard", over a measure which gained strong resistance among Labour MPs and supporters. In December 2008, Marshall-Andrews became the first Labour MP to publicly call for the resignation of Speaker
Michael Martin over the arrest of
Damian Green. On 17 July 2007, he declared that he would stand down as a Labour MP at the next election, and he left the House of Commons at the
2010 general election.
Expenses In 2009, it became known Marshall-Andrews had claimed £118,000 for expenses at his second home. ==Other activities and later life==