Hall was elected to the
House of Commons for
Warrington South at the
1992 general election, defeating the sitting
Conservative MP
Chris Butler by just 191 votes. He made his
maiden speech on 6 May 1992. Following boundary changes, at the
1997 general election, he moved from Warrington South to the newly created, nearby constituency of
Weaver Vale, which covers
Northwich, Frodsham and parts of
Runcorn. He won this seat with a safe 13,448 majority, and continued to hold the seat comfortably, albeit with reduced majorities at each subsequent election. In Parliament he served as a member of the Public Accounts Committee (1992–1997), and became the
Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the
Leader of the House of Commons Ann Taylor following the 1997 General Election. He became a member of the Labour government, under
Prime Minister Tony Blair, in 1998, when he was appointed as an
Assistant Government Whip. He was sacked following the
2001 General Election. From 2001 to 2005 he served as PPS to the
Secretary of State for Health, initially under
Alan Milburn and, from 2003, his successor,
John Reid. He has been a member of the
Culture, Media and Sport select committee since the
2005 General Election. From October 2008 onwards he was the PPS to
Jack Straw, the
Justice Secretary. In May 2009, it was reported by
The Daily Telegraph that he claimed expenses in excess of £15,000 over three years for cleaning products. On 2 February 2010, Hall announced that he was standing down at the
next general election for health reasons. ==Personal life==