Cunningham was selected to contest the
Coventry South East constituency at the
1992 general election following the expulsion of the sitting Labour MP
Dave Nellist, a member of the Trotskyist
Militant group, who had thus become ineligible to be selected as the Labour candidate. Cunningham emerged as the victor with a majority of 1,311 votes over the
Conservative candidate Martine Hyams; Nellist finished third but only by a further 40 votes. Cunningham made his
maiden speech on 12 May 1992 in which he spoke of the social and economic problems of Coventry and criticised the then level of central government resources allocated to the city. Following reports from the previous year that the
Queen was to agree to pay income tax, which
Buckingham Palace and the
Prime Minister denied, he called for the Queen and other members of the
Royal Family to begin paying
income tax in his letter to the
Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1992. Cunningham was heavily involved in the campaign for justice for former workers of
Matrix Churchill. In particular Cunningham was critical of the remit and progress of the
Scott Report into the
Arms-to-Iraq scandal for not consulting the former workers. Reflecting his previous career, Cunningham set up the
All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for
Rolls-Royce, bringing together MPs and trade unions. Throughout his time in Parliament, Cunningham consistently campaigned for Rolls-Royce workers. In 1994 Cunningham chaired the Committee on the hybrid
Croydon Tramlink Bill, which recommended the project go ahead. Cunningham was a founder member and served as chair of the APPG on Strokes. In 2002, Cunningham secured an adjournment debate on the subject. He became a member of the
Home Affairs Select Committee from 1993 until 1997. He then served on the
Trade and Industry Select Committee from 1997 as well as serving upon the
House of Commons Panel of Chairs from 1998, leaving both after the
2001 general election. Cunningham then served on the
Constitutional Affairs Select Committee from 2003 until 2005. Following the
1997 General Election, Cunningham presented a petition to the then Health Secretary
Alan Milburn calling for the renovation of
Walsgrave Hospital in Coventry. Towards the end of the meeting Milburn made clear that Coventry was a candidate for new hospital build via a PFI scheme and wanted proposals by the end of the year. In 2004, he led a parliamentary campaign to prevent
Jaguar Cars closing its
Browns Lane assembly plant. This campaign included organising a meeting of several workers of the plant with the
Prime Minister and the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, as well as Cunningham joining factory workers when they lobbied the
Ford managers at the
Paris Motor Show. Cunningham briefly served on the
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister Select Committee in 2005 before the
general election later that year. and served as the
Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the
Solicitor General Mike O'Brien until 2007. Cunningham remained O'Brien's PPS as O'Brien became a Minister of State at the
Department for Work and Pensions from 2007 until 2008, then a Minister of State at the
Department of Energy and Climate Change from 2008 until 2009, and finally as a Minister of State at the
Department of Health from 2009 until 2010. Cunningham also served on the
Standards and Privileges Select Committee in 2010. During the 2009
parliamentary expenses scandal, Cunningham was praised by
The Telegraph, which cited his consistently low expenses that made him the 27th lowest claiming MP out of 645 MPs. In 2009 Cunningham helped secure extra funding from the government for the Coventry Rape and Sexual Assault Centre (CRASAC). In 2011, Cunningham arranged a meeting with the Minister for Defence Equipment, Support and Technology
Peter Luff, as a response to Rolls-Royce's announcement that it would lay off one quarter of its staff at its
Ansty plant by 2012 due to the UK defence cuts and the plant's reliance upon repairing and servicing
RAF jet engines. As well as these planned redundancies, Rolls-Royce also plans temporary redundancies during periods of low activity and having staff work longer without being paid extra. Cunningham questioned what the government's plans were to secure more work for the plant and met with union officials and management in order to find a solution to safeguard the plant and its work force. Alongside the then-
Coventry North West MP
Geoffrey Robinson, Cunningham lobbied successive governments for the development and expansion of Ansty Park as a centre for high tech manufacturing. This included a visit by the then-Minister
Margaret Hodge to make sure the project did not stall. Cunningham supported the campaign to renovate Coventry's medieval Charterhouse Priory, one of only nine Carthusian monasteries left in the UK. In 2012 he facilitated a visit by the then Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Culture, Communications and Creative Industries
Ed Vaizey to the site to draw attention to the campaign. In 2013, Cunningham campaigned with
Unite the Union to keep
London Taxis International producing the iconic
black Hackney cab in Coventry. Cunningham also actively campaigned to keep
Jaguar Land Rover in the West Midlands following the purchase of the company by
Tata. After raising the concerns of Trade Unions, Cunningham received assurances from
Ratan Tata and the company secretary that work would stay in the region. In the same year Cunningham also campaigned to save the
Remploy factory in his constituency. Cunningham was also a long-term campaigner against the use and abuse of zero hours contracts. In a 2013 debate in Parliament he stated 'that zero-hours contracts are a throwback to the 1930s when miners and dockers had to turn up to work not knowing whether they would get a job. This is a modern veneer on an old, tried and tired system that was chucked out many years ago'. He supported
Owen Smith in the failed attempt to replace
Jeremy Corbyn in the
2016 Labour leadership election. Cunningham consistently called for the Government to intervene in the issues surrounding
Coventry City Football Club. In 2016 he lobbied the then-
Sports Minister Tracey Crouch to appoint a conciliator to break the deadlock in negotiations. In 2019 Cunningham helped to organise a meeting between the interested parties, local MPs and the then
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport,
Jeremy Wright. Cunningham actively supported Coventry's bid to be
UK City of Culture 2021. As part of the campaign, Cunningham hosted a reception for the bid in Parliament and secured an adjournment debate. Cunningham actively supported the
WASPI campaign to compensate Women born in the 1950s who were effected by changes to pensions. In 2019, Cunningham led a campaign to make sure specialist
pancreatic cancer services remained at
University Hospital Coventry. This included meeting with the Minister and raising the topic in the House of Commons at which point assurances were given that the service would not be moved. In the same year Cunningham became a prominent critic of the Conservative Government's plan to scrap free TV Licences for the over 75s. He announced he would be standing down in the
2019 general election shortly after fellow Coventry MP
Geoffrey Robinson also announced his intention to depart. ==Family==