Hutton first stood for election in the
Penrith and the Borders seat in 1987. Two years later, he also failed to be elected as a
Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Cumbria and North
Lancashire region. His election to the Barrow and Furness seat in the
1992 general election saw him replace
Cecil Franks as MP with a majority of 3,578. His majority increased to 14,497 in the Labour landslide of the
1997 Election. After being a part of the
Department of Health from 1998, he was made a member of the
Privy Council in 2001. In the reshuffle following the
2005 general election (in which his majority fell to just over 6,000), he was made
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Minister for the Cabinet Office, replacing his close friend and former flatmate,
Alan Milburn. His position in this role was short lived, however. Following the second resignation of
David Blunkett, Hutton was appointed as his replacement in the role of
Secretary of State for Work and Pensions on 2 November 2005. Hutton was seen as one of
Tony Blair's closest supporters but survived in cabinet following Blair's resignation in June 2007 and was moved by new Prime Minister Gordon Brown to be
Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, which role incorporated the bulk of portfolios from the now dissolved Department of Trade and Industry, including
energy security issues, which many had expected to be ceded to
DEFRA. In 2007 he asked the economist
DeAnne Julius to undertake a review of the public services industry, which was published in July 2008. He welcomed her report and was supportive of her view that private sector service provision and competition could help improve public services. In September 2006, while discussing the forthcoming
Labour Party leadership election, Hutton gave an anonymous quote to BBC journalist
Nick Robinson that
Gordon Brown would be a "fucking disaster" as prime minister. He was moved into the role of Secretary of State for Defence in the cabinet reshuffle on 3 October 2008. On 5 June 2009, Hutton resigned his Cabinet position and announced his intention to stand down as an MP at the next general election. Hutton
gave evidence to the
Iraq Inquiry about his role as Defence Secretary on 25 January 2010, the same day as his predecessor,
Des Browne.
House of Lords On 27 June 2010, he was created a
life peer as
Baron Hutton of Furness,
of Aldingham in the County of Cumbria, and was
introduced in the
House of Lords on 1 July 2010, where he sits on the Labour benches. ==Later career==