Bell was elected to the City Council of
Newcastle upon Tyne in 1980. In 1982, the Labour MP for Middlesbrough,
Arthur Bottomley announced that he would step down at the next general election; Bell won the subsequent selection process to fight the seat at the
1983 general election. Bell comfortably held
the seat, elected with a majority just short of 10,000 votes. At
Westminster, Bell became the
Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Deputy Leader of the Opposition
Roy Hattersley in 1983. He was promoted to the
shadow frontbench in 1984 by
Neil Kinnock as a Spokesman for
Northern Ireland. However, he chose to resign his post after the
Cleveland child abuse scandal which occupied two years of his life, after making unsubstantiated accusations of 'clinical error' against local paediatricians and
child sexual abuse specialists. The paediatricians, Dr. Marietta Higgs and Dr. Geoffrey Wyatt, were later absolved and their forensic clinical work validated at a committee of inquiry overseen by Dame
Elizabeth Butler-Sloss. The committee concluded that most of the diagnoses were incorrect. As a result, 94 of the 121 children were returned to their homes. Following the
1992 general election and the election of
John Smith as the Leader of the Labour Party, Bell returned to the shadow frontbenches as a spokesman for
Trade and Industry. After the election of the Labour Government at the
1997 general election he was dropped from Labour's frontbench, but was appointed on the advice of
Tony Blair as the
Second Church Estates Commissioner, the spokesman for the
Church of England in the
House of Commons, a position he held from 1997 to 2010. In 1998, Bell was one of 14 Labour MPs who voted against equalising the
age of consent for homosexual activity. From 2000 to 2005 he was the Chairman of the
Finance and Services Committee, which manages the annual budget of the House of Commons and its many employees. In 2005 he became a member of the Finance and Services Committee until 2008 when he served as chairman until 2010. Relatedly, from 2000 until 2010 he was a member of the
House of Commons Commission, which oversees the administration of the House and the Members Estimate Committee that sets MPs' pay and pensions. He was a member of the Liaison Committee between 2000 and 2010. He was a member of the Ecclesiastical Committee from 1997. Bell sat on the Members Estimates Committee at Parliament and was heavily involved representing MPs' interests in the
MPs' expenses scandal of 2009. He was a member in Speaker's Committee for the
Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority between 2009 and 2010. A founder member of the
British-Irish Inter-Parliamentary Body, he was a Treasurer of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for the Promotion of First Past the Post. and was Secretary of the Franco-British Parliamentary Relations Committee in the Commons. In February 2010 Bell was played by
David Calder in the television film
On Expenses. ==Criticism and controversy==