Leigh first stood for Parliament at the
October 1974 general election, when he unsuccessfully contested
Middlesbrough, coming second with 24.4% of the vote behind the incumbent
Labour Party MP
Arthur Bottomley. Leigh was elected to Parliament as MP for
Gainsborough and Horncastle at the
1983 general election, winning with 50.9% of the vote and a majority of 5,067. He was re-elected as MP for Gainsborough and Horncastle at the
1987 general election with an increased vote share of 53.3% and an increased majority of 9,723. A strong supporter of Margaret Thatcher, Leigh visited
10 Downing Street with fellow MP
Michael Brown on the morning of Thatcher's resignation as
Prime Minister in 1990 to try to persuade her to carry on. Although
Charles Powell advised them it was a forlorn task, they were nonetheless granted access to
the Cabinet which was in process at the time. Leigh and Brown departed 10 Downing Street and walked down
Whitehall back to the
House of Commons reputedly with "tears in their eyes". After Thatcher resigned, in the ensuing leadership election, Leigh supported
Michael Heseltine, under whom he had served at the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), preferring to support someone who had stabbed Thatcher in the front to those who had stabbed her in the back. At the
1992 general election, Leigh was again re-elected with an increased vote share of 54% and an increased majority of 16,245. Leigh served as a
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State under
John Major's premiership but was sacked in May 1993 over his opposition to the
Maastricht Treaty. Whilst a
Minister he was a keen advocate of privatisation of the Post Office. In the
1995 Conservative leadership election, Leigh supported
John Redwood. He was re-elected as MP for Gainsborough at the
2001 general election with an increased vote share of 46.2% and an increased majority of 8,071. From 2001 until 2010, Leigh served as
Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee, the principal parliamentary body auditing the Budget, investigating government waste and seeking value for money in public expenditure. During his two terms as chairman, the PAC took evidence on 420 separate government projects and programmes and was responsible for saving the taxpayer over £4 billion. At the
2005 general election, Leigh was again re-elected, with a decreased vote share of 43.9% and a decreased majority of 8,003. Leigh was President of the socially-conservative
Cornerstone Group representing the views of over 40 Conservative Members of Parliament and was author of the group's inaugural pamphlet
Faith, Flag and Family in 2005. In October 2006, Leigh was vocal in stating that after
David Cameron became
leader of the party, core supporters were drifting away from voting Conservative. Nonetheless, his effective chairmanship of the
Public Accounts Committee led to the rejuvenation of his parliamentary career. Early in 2008, as Chairman of the PAC, Leigh was embarrassed by relying on flawed
Department for Transport (DfT) statistics to attack motorcyclists for
tax evasion. Accusing 38% of motorcyclists of evading
vehicle excise duty, he later apologised for this following the admission by the DfT that 95.5% of motorcycles are entirely legal. At the
2010 general election, Leigh was again re-elected, with an increased vote share of 49.3% and an increased majority of 10,559. From 2010 to 2011, Leigh served as an Independent Financial Advisor to
HM Treasury, appointed by
George Osborne to bring external challenge to the development and implementation of a new financial management strategy for central government. He stood down in 2011, but was then reappointed to report directly to the
Chancellor of the Exchequer on improving Parliament's financial scrutiny of the Budget. He was a member of the Treasury Financial Reporting & Advisory Board and, in 2010, Leigh became a delegate to the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, speaking regularly and serving on the
Culture, Science, Education and Media Committee. Leigh also supported
Boris Johnson's call to George Osborne in 2011 for lowering the rate of taxation in the UK so as to assist its economic recovery following the
credit crunch. At the end of 2010 Leigh was offered but declined the
British ambassadorship to the
Holy See. Leigh, an
Assembly Member of the
Council of Europe, opposed further human rights legislation, as proposed by the
European Court of Human Rights. In 2011, Leigh was appointed Chairman of the
Public Accounts Commission, the body which audits the
National Audit Office. In 2012, Leigh, together with a record number of fellow Conservative MPs, including numerous
Privy Counsellors, successfully voted against the
Coalition Government's attempted railroading of
House of Lords reform by limiting time for meaningful parliamentary debate on this major constitutional issue. In September 2014, Leigh criticised the Government's decision to allow
Mitochondrial replacement therapy to prevent the birth of the children with incurable diseases such as muscular dystrophy. These diseases affect up to 1 in 6,500 babies which Leigh stated could lead to people being "harvested for their parts" and a divide between what he referred to as "the modified and the unmodified". The
Department for Health asserted no genetic modification is involved. In 2015, the French President
François Hollande appointed him to the
Légion d'honneur for his role as "a bridge between our parliaments, our governments and our societies", as stated by
Ambassador Sylvie Bermann at his investiture. Sir Edward was again re-elected at the
2015 general election with an increased vote share of 52.7% and an increased majority of 15,449. In March 2016, he joined three other Conservative MPs in "talking out" a Bill introduced by
Green Party MP
Dr Caroline Lucas, which aimed to reverse moves to privatise the
NHS. By
filibustering for three and a half hours, Lucas was left with just 17 minutes to present her Bill, which was subsequently shelved without a vote. Leigh was again returned to Parliament at the snap
2017 general election with an increased vote share of 61.8% and an increased majority of 17,023. He was one of 21 MPs who, in March 2019, voted against LGBT-inclusive sex and relationship education in English schools. Re-elected at the
2019 general election, with an increased vote share of 66.4% and an increased majority of 22,967, in August 2020, Leigh suggested that the UK
take back Calais to prevent migrants seeking asylum by
crossing the English Channel from France. On 1 March 2022, Leigh praised Home Secretary
Priti Patel's 'proportionate response' over admission of refugees into the UK from the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. Speaking in the Commons, Sir Edward urged the Government "to listen to the voices of people from, for instance in Lincolnshire, where we feel we have done our bit in terms of migration from eastern Europe where we are under extreme pressure in terms of housing and jobs." Despite receiving criticism for these remarks by Labour councillors on Lincolnshire County Council, at the
2024 general election, Leigh was again re-elected, albeit with a decreased vote share of 35.6% and a decreased majority of 3,532. Succeeding
Sir Peter Bottomley as
Father of the House after the election, in July 2024, Leigh was appointed a
Temporary Deputy Speaker acting as
Chairman of Ways and Means until Deputy Speakers for the new parliament were elected. == Views ==