For the
1979 European Parliament elections, Hord was selected as Conservative Party candidate for London West. The constituency included Labour-voting areas but in the election Labour performed poorly and Hord was elected with a comfortable majority. In February 1980 he made a speech in the European Parliament calling for a boycott of the
1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the internal exile of
Andrei Sakharov; he attacked the European Commission's policy as "incredibly absurd, arrogant, insensitive and inept". He also opposed the sale of surplus EEC
butter to the Soviets, criticising Commission President
Roy Jenkins for allowing the sale to happen after announcing that it had ceased. In October 1980 Hord was one of three Conservative MEPs to refuse a new office when a new block was opened in
Strasbourg; the three protested that the building was too expensive and that it would confirm Strasbourg as the main seat of the Parliament. He objected to Labour Party leader
Michael Foot's claim that
Margaret Thatcher's policies were responsible for the 1981
Toxteth riots, blaming instead "small groups of militants .. who have succeeded in disrupting society with the interest of overturning our democratic system". ==Farm prices==