At the snap
2017 general election, Logan contested
East Antrim for the
Conservative Party, coming in sixth place with 2.5% of the vote, behind the incumbent
DUP MP
Sammy Wilson,
Alliance's
Stewart Dickson, the
UUP's
John Stewart,
Sinn Féin's
Oliver McMullan, and the
SDLP candidate. Logan was elected as MP for
Bolton North East at the
2019 general election, winning with 45.4% of the vote and a majority of 378. Logan is a campaigner for a direct train link from Bolton to London.
APPGs and Commons Select Committees During his Parliamentary career, Logan was the Chair of
All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Afghanistan and Vice Chair of APPGs on British Council, China and Japan. In 2024, Logan was amongst the delegation attending the 40th annual meeting of the UK-Japan 21st Century Group convened in Tokyo and Odawara, Kanagawa. Logan served on the
Science, Innovation and Technology Select Committee during the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The committee's work was central to scrutinising government and industries' response to the COVID-19 outbreak in the UK. He is also a founding member of the Parliamentary Export Programme
webinar series, which seeks to help local businesses increase international sales.
Parliamentary Private Secretary Career: 2022–2024 Logan was appointed as
Parliamentary Private Secretary to the
Northern Ireland Office in March 2022. This was notable in that he was the only Northern Irish accent in the Conservative party and government of the day, the last being Brian Mawhinney in 2005. On
King Charles III becoming the monarchy, Mark created a media storm by giving his Parliamentary oath in
Ulster Scots. He resigned on 6 July 2022 in protest at
Boris Johnson's conduct in the
Chris Pincher scandal, calling his position "almost impossible". On 15 November 2022, Logan was appointed a Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) for the
Department for Work and Pensions by Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak.
Resignation from the Conservative Party On 30 May 2024 he announced he planned to vote for the Labour Party, citing ideological differences with the Conservative Party. Logan is one of the leading experts in Chinese politics and UK-China relations within UK politics. He is a fluent speaker of Mandarin Chinese and also speaks some Shanghai dialect. Expanding on his Asia expertise, Logan is also currently learning Japanese. ==References==