A councillor on
Ramsbottom Urban District Council from 1972 to 1974, he contested
Darwen at both the
February 1974 and
October 1974 general elections and then
Workington at a
by-election in 1976. He was elected
Member of Parliament for Workington at the
1979 general election. Throughout his 22-year membership of the Commons he was repeatedly subject to periods of illness, on each occasion presenting his party with the prospect of by-elections during politically volatile periods. Campbell-Savours was opposition spokesman for
International Development (1991–1992) and for Food, Agriculture and Rural Affairs (1992–1994), resigning from the front bench in 1994 due to ill health: in 1995 half his lung was removed. He was a member of various
select committees including: Public Accounts (1980–1991), Members Interest (1982–1990), Procedure (1984–1989), Agriculture (1994–1996), Standards and Privileges (1996–2001), and the
Intelligence and Security Committee (1997–2001). He won a number of backbench awards during his period as a member of the House of Commons. His repeated interventions in Parliament in the 1980s on land reclamation following closure of the Workington steel production plant led directly to the establishment of the West Cumberland Enterprise Zones, opening the door to later commercial developments. Having negotiated the transfer of ownership of Maryport Harbour into the public sector, he secured support for dredging and harbour improvement, persuading William Waldegrave, then Secretary of State, of the need for financial support to deal with the harbour's contamination. In 1990 Campbell-Savours established a research project on electoral reform, designing and stress-testing a new voting system: the
Supplementary Vote. The system was adopted by the incoming Labour government in 1997 for the election of City Mayors and this was later extended after 2010 by the incoming Coalition government to all English Mayoral Elections and to electing Police and Crime Commissioners, though these reverted to using First Past The Post from 2023. During his 1990-1992 tenure as a shadow minister for international development, he spearheaded the creation of a working group with the remit to research the creation of a new
Department for International Development (DFID) which was subsequently implemented by the incoming Labour government in 1997. In 1991 Campbell-Savours conducted a four-year project for the creation of a multi campus university in Cumbria, leading to his 1995 proposal for a University of the Lakes, which came to fruition with the establishment of the
University of Cumbria in 2007: Campbell-Savours was appointed a university fellow in recognition of his contribution. In 2002 Campbell-Savours spoke out strongly against the introduction of tuition fees, which he argued would undermine the government's apprenticeship training programmes. As shadow agricultural minister, Campbell-Savours proposed, 1992–94, a national scheme for the registration of cattle for tracking of animal health. This was adopted in 1997, with the
British Cattle Movement Service creating employment for over 1,000 people in Workington. Prior to his retirement from the Commons, Campbell-Savours negotiated a deal with the Labour government for the local authorities to secure ownership over 1000 acres of land, believed at the time to be contaminated, for the price of £1. After long delays, the land on
RNAD Broughton Moor is now being commercially developed.
Iraq War: Campbell-Savours supported the liberation of Kuwait, and argued strongly for enforcement of the UN sanctions regime against Iraq, making several visits to Washington to make the case. Opposed to occupation, he did support military intervention. He arranged for his office researcher to visit the Iraqi Turkish border to report on oil sanction breaches. During a series of interventions during the debate on the war, he proposed the development of safe havens for Kurdish refugees seeking sanctuary from Saddam Hussain's military forces. He later described his subsequent support for the war as the biggest misjudgement of his political life, viewing the war in Iraq as a driver behind the resurgence of militant Islam which subsequently spread across North Africa to Afghanistan and Europe. In 1996 Campbell-Savours gave evidence to the Nolan Commission on the need for a new code of conduct. A number of the recommendations he and others made were accepted by the commission in its final report:
Upholding Standards in Public Life. ==House of Lords==