At the
1992 general election, Dowd again contested Lewisham West, and defeated Maples by 1,809 votes. He made his
maiden speech in the
House of Commons on 10 June 1992. Jim Dowd was appointed as an
opposition whip in 1994, before becoming the spokesman on
Northern Ireland in 1995. Following the election of the Labour government at the
1997 General Election he was given a place in the Blair government as a whip. He was unexpectedly sacked after the
2001 general election, since when he was a member of the
Health Select Committee and maintained a voting record strongly in line with government policies. In June 2012, Dowd joined the Science and Technology Select Committee. In 2005, he was involved in a heated confrontation in Parliament with fellow Labour MP
Bob Marshall-Andrews over the
Terrorism Bill. He was a vice-chair of the
All Party Parliamentary Intellectual Property Group. He supported
Owen Smith in the failed attempt to replace
Jeremy Corbyn in the
2016 Labour Party (UK) leadership election.
Intellectual Property Bill On 20 January 2014, Dowd made a speech in the House of Commons during a debate on the Intellectual Property Bill, stating that he had asked for
Worcester Sauce whilst eating a meal at the
Hare and Billet pub in
Blackheath and that he was provided with
Henderson's Relish. Dowd used Henderson's as an example of "parasitic packaging", implying in the debate that it was attempting to pass itself off as
Lea and Perrins. Henderson's Relish is well known within
Sheffield and parts of
Yorkshire and has been manufactured there for over 100 years. Dowd upset supporters of the sauce; the
Sheffield Central member of parliament,
Paul Blomfield, offered to bring a bottle to Parliament and invite Dowd for a meal with him using it – an invitation accepted by Dowd. Simon Freemanthe managing director of Henderson'sjokingly stated that he would order "an internal investigation to find out how it got out of Yorkshire"; a local newspaper, the
Sheffield Star, launched a Twitter campaign with the
hashtag #Hendogate to defend Henderson's, attracting support locally. Dowd later stated his "amazement" at the backlash his comments had caused, which he said included threats of violence. The assistant manager of the Hare and BilletAdam Beastonclaimed that Dowd branded Henderson's a "blatant copy" of Lea and Perrins at the time but that he warned the MP that such a view would be "blasphemy in Sheffield". ==Personal life==