Pre-Assembly Career He unsuccessfully contested the seat of
Bridgend at the
1997 general election, finishing in second place 15,248 votes behind
Win Griffiths.
Just Say No Campaign As an opponent of the concept of a new Welsh assembly, Davies helped to set up the 'No' campaign in the
devolution referendum, and being frequently quoted as a spokesperson or 'prominent member' for the campaign throughout the devolution campaign and referendum.
Welsh Assembly First Assembly Davies gained a higher profile and decided to run as the Conservative candidate for
Monmouth. At the inaugural
1999 Welsh Assembly Election he was elected to the
National Assembly for Wales. He was the only Conservative member to win on a constituency ballot. He became the deputy leader of the
Welsh Conservatives and Chief Whip under
Rod Richards. He insisted that this would be temporary, and that Davies, as his deputy, would stand in until the matter was resolved. Davies stood in the role for a total of 5 days, between 5 and 10 August, before the Assembly Conservative group elected to appoint
Nick Bourne as the group's temporary leader, over Davies. Later that month, Bourne would reshuffle the Welsh Conservative's frontbench roles. Davies retained his role as Chief Whip in this reshuffle, as well as being handed the portfolio for Environment, Transport and Planning. In 2000, Davies was investigated by the Independent Adviser on Standards of Conduct for misusing Assembly stationary to invite people to see a display he had put together in the Assembly to oppose to repeal of
Section 28. The case was dismissed shortly after. In November 2000, Davies' retained his responsibilities for Environment and Transport, but lost his responsibilities for local government and planning, with these going to colleague
William Graham. In August 2001, Davies made a statement clarifying that
Edgar Griffin, father of
British National Party founder
Nick Griffin was no longer a member of the Conservative Party's welsh campaign team, which Davies had helped to recruit. Davies supported
Iain Duncan Smith in the
2001 Conservative Party leadership election. In November 2001, Davies was reshuffled away from the role of Chief Whip for the Welsh Conservatives, instead being placed on the Welsh Assembly's economic development committee. Davies was consistently critical of attempts to grant more powers to the Welsh Assembly, publishing a leaflet in 2002 which stated "Only one in four people voted for devolution in the referendum, so it would be grossly unfair to turn the Assembly into a Parliament by stealth. I believe no further powers should be given to the Welsh Assembly without a further referendum, and that referendum should also include a question, 'Should we get rid of the Assembly altogether'?" He did so after fellow Conservative AM
David Melding asked First Minister
Rhodri Morgan if he believed the assembly should be granted primary legislative powers.
Second Assembly Davies was re-elected at the
2003 National Assembly election, and was again the only member of the Welsh Conservatives elected on a constituency ballot, and received the largest vote of any candidate in Wales. He was appointed as the Welsh Conservative Education spokesperson by Nicke Bourne shortly after. He was also handed the role as Conservative Equal Opportunities spokesperson, and placed on the Assembly's Equal Opportunities Committee. Shortly after, Davies spotted attempted to hold a Wales-specific referendum on the
EU Constitutional Treaty, using Section 36 of the
Government of Wales Act 1998, which said "The Assembly may hold a poll in Wales or any part or parts of Wales for the purpose of ascertaining the views of those polled about whether or how any of the Assembly's functions should be exercised." First Minister
Rhodri Morgan described the attempt as "[running] contrary to all British precedent" while Wales Secretary
Peter Hain described it as "outrageous hypocrisy" - stating that Conservative governments had not held referendums on any European treaties. At the time he stated he had no intention to stand down as Assembly member for the constituency. In February 2004, Davies described the
Commission for Racial Equality as "one of the best recruiting sergeants the
BNP could ever have" on television. He further described the CRE's as having "coined the phrase
institutional racism" "because they could not actually pin down any particular examples of racist behaviour." He further described the commission itself as institutionally racist. The CRE's Wales Commissioner Cherry Short described Davies as '"living in cloud cuckoo land" if he believed their work assisted racists. In April 2004, Davies was removed as Welsh Conservative Equal Opportunities Spokesperson, after he walked out of, and subsequently resigned from, the Assembly's Equal Opportunities Committee. He had reportedly asked a representative of
Stonewall "I wonder why you feel a homosexual who is attacked has more rights in the eyes of the law than an elderly lady or an elderly man?", among other questions, after the charity had presented its annual report to the committee.
Election to the UK Parliament and Dual Mandate He was elected at the
2005 general election as member of the
House of Commons for Monmouth, the seat he held in the Welsh Assembly. He defeated the sitting Labour MP
Huw Edwards by 4,527 votes, and remained the MP for the constituency until the July 2024 election. On 18 May 2005 he made his
maiden speech giving a history of his constituency from
Geoffrey of Monmouth onwards. After his election to the UK parliament, his role as Welsh Conservative Spokesperson on Education in the Assembly was re-assigned to
William Graham. He had previously announced his intention to stand down as Assembly Member for Monmouth at the
2007 Welsh Assembly election. The Conservatives retained the Monmouth seat, at that election with
Nick Ramsay being elected.
UK Parliamentary career Once elected to Parliament he joined the
Welsh Affairs Select Committee on his election. After the 2015 general election, he was returned unopposed the chairmanship of the committee. In 2008, Davies criticised the
National Black Police Association's
race-based membership policy for not allowing white people interested in fighting racism to become full members and suggesting that they themselves could be guilty of racism. In 2013 Davies voted against the
Cameron–Clegg coalition government on the issue of
British military intervention in the
Syrian civil war. During the trial of fellow Welsh MP
Nigel Evans, Davies gave evidence of his character, stating that Evans liked a drink and became jovial when intoxicated, unlike some people who have a dark side. Evans was Davies' best man at his 2003 wedding. In May 2013, Davies said of Evans: "He's been a good friend of mine for a lot of years. I am stunned by these allegations and find them impossible to believe." Evans was acquitted of sexual assaults in April 2014. In June 2015, Davies strongly criticised the planning and organisation of the first
Velothon Wales event to be run in Wales which passed through his Monmouth constituency, arguing that business losses should be compensated for. In July 2024, Davies contested the
Monmouthshire constituency. He lost, with Labour's
Catherine Fookes winning by 3,338 votes.
Expenses In 2009
The Daily Telegraph reported that Davies had claimed £2,000 of taxpayers' money and paid it to his family's haulage firm. Davies defended his actions in an interview, denying any wrongdoing and explaining to BBC Wales that his family's firm had been paid to provide postage and produce publicity material at short notice for the annual Monmouth show, that they had not profited, and that he had subsequently used a specialist company in London for the production of such material where the costs were significantly higher.
Welsh Affairs Committee In June 2010 Davies was appointed Chairman of the
Welsh Affairs Committee. He is a former member of the
Home Affairs Select Committee and is an advocate of tough measures to deal with criminality. Davies is also Vice-Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary China Group and a member of the All-Party Parliamentary British-German Group. In January 2012, the Prime Minister
David Cameron announced his appointment as a representative of the UK delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
Secretary of State for Wales On 25 October 2022, upon
Rishi Sunak's
appointment as Prime Minister, Davies was appointed
Secretary of State for Wales, succeeding
Robert Buckland. In April 2023 the Welsh Government wrote to Davies, asking for his consent for legal aid and £1,600 monthly payments to be given to some
asylum seekers under their Basic Income pilot. Davies, describing the request as "highly irresponsible" and "indefensible", and arguing the move would "incentivise human traffickers", declined to approve it. In late 2023, TATA Steel announced plans to close its operations in South Wales, which would have led to thousands of job losses and the end of primary steel making. The UK Government's
Department for Business and Trade and the
Wales Office were able to negotiate a £500 million support package to keep TATA Steel's operations open, but which would lead to the closure of two blast furnaces and the opening of an electric arc furnace. In an interview, Davies said without the government's offer TATA would have closed – but their operations have now been "saved". In May 2024, Davies was accused by his counterpart -
Jo Stevens - of breaking the ministerial code for filming a video in the Wales Office, where he said: "Do they [Welsh Labour] want to spend £120m on Welsh taxpayers' money on creating dozens of extra Senedd members in Cardiff Bay? Or would they prefer to spend that money on employing more nurses, doctors, dentists and teachers? I know which side I'm on." The Welsh government has defended the plans, saying they are needed to better scrutinise their work which has grown significantly since the National Assembly was established in 1999.
Service as a Special Constable Davies was sworn in as a
Special Constable with the
British Transport Police in March 2007. On his third patrol he searched a man 'acting suspiciously' and found a handgun. In August 2011, Davies wrote about his experiences on riot duty and lamented that police were ordered not to go out alone in uniform for safety reasons. Davies had to return from a short holiday for the recall of Parliament to discuss the riots across England and also served on patrols in London that week in his role as a special constable. He called for the police to be encouraged to take tougher action during the riots. He resigned in 2015, after serving nine years as a special constable, because of rules about police officers taking part in politics. == Post-parliamentary career ==