In 1986 he joined the Labour Party, and became chairman of the
Wrexham branch. He was on Gresford Community Council in Wrexham from 1987 to 1991. He contested the traditionally
conservative seat of
North Shropshire in the
1997 general election, but was narrowly defeated. He has served as a
school governor, and on a local hospital board. He was later selected to stand for the UK Parliament in
Wrexham, and won the seat in
2001. He was
Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to
Bill Rammell MP,
Minister of State for Lifelong Learning, Further and Higher Education. He resigned as PPS on 6 September 2006, due to the refusal by
Tony Blair to name a date for stepping down as Prime Minister. Fellow Welsh Labour MPs
Wayne David and
Mark Tami resigned on the same day. Lucas was promoted by
Gordon Brown in the reshuffle of October 2008, to the role of assistant government whip. He then entered Government as a minister for the first time in the June 2009 reshuffle, becoming
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Business and Regulatory Reform in the
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, and held that post until the Labour government left office in May 2010. He was the shadow minister for the Middle East and Africa. He has served as a member of the Environmental Audit Select Committee and the Transport Select Committee. He has taken an interest in sustainable energy, devolution of powers in
Wales, and links with
Germany. He is a member of both the
Labour Friends of Israel and the
Labour Friends of Palestine & the Middle East. Despite his constituency voting to leave the
European Union in the
2016 referendum, Lucas supported a
second referendum on the UK's EU membership. He would support remaining in the European Union in the event of such a vote. Lucas did not stand for re-election at the
2019 general election. == Parliamentary debate about the murder of Nicolas Churton ==