Paul Uppal

Paul Singh Uppal[1] (born 14 June 1967) is a Conservative Party politician from the United Kingdom. During the parliament elected at the 2010 general election, Uppal was the Member of Parliament for Wolverhampton South West, having won the seat from the incumbent Labour Party MP Rob Marris with 16,344 votes and a majority of 691.[2][3]

Paul Uppal
Member of Parliament
for Wolverhampton South West
In office
6 May 2010  30 March 2015
Preceded byRob Marris
Succeeded byRob Marris
Personal details
Born (1967-06-14) 14 June 1967
Birmingham, England
NationalityBritish
Political partyConservative
Spouse(s)Kashmir Matto
Children3
ResidenceBirmingham
Alma materUniversity of Warwick
Websitepauluppal.co.uk

Uppal was narrowly defeated at the 2015 general election, when Rob Marris regained the seat with a majority of 801. Uppal attempted to win his seat back at the 2017 snap general election, but despite increasing his vote share, he was defeated by a bigger margin of 2,185 votes.

On 20 December 2017, the government announced that he was to be the first Small Business Commissioner.

Early life

Uppal was born in Birmingham, to Surjit Singh Uppal, a magistrate, and Balbir Kaur on 14 June 1967. His parents are Sikhs of East African descent.[4] He attended Harborne Hill Comprehensive School and then studied three A-levels in Politics, History and Sociology at Matthew Boulton College. He studied Politics and Sociology at the University of Warwick.

He married his wife Kashmir, a lawyer, on 17 November 1991 in Derby. They have three children together. He holds a season ticket for Wolverhampton Wanderers Football Club, and is a trustee of the second largest Gurudwara (Sikh Temple) in Wolverhampton.[4]

Political career

Uppal was selected as Conservative Party candidate for Birmingham Yardley less than three months before the 2005 general election. The seat was traditionally a Conservative-Labour marginal, but became a three-way marginal at the 1992 general election and a Labour-Liberal Democrat marginal since the 1997 general election, with the Conservatives pushed into an increasingly distant third place. Uppal came third in 2005, winning 2,970 votes, with Liberal Democrat John Hemming replacing the retiring Labour MP Estelle Morris.

In February 2007, Uppal was selected as the Wolverhampton South West Conservative candidate in an open primary held at Molineux Stadium, in which all constituents were entitled to vote. The seat had once been a safe Conservative seat, held first by Enoch Powell from 1950 to 1974 and then by Nicholas Budgen, but became a Labour marginal, held by Jenny Jones in 1997. Rob Marris held it from 2001 onwards, though the Labour majorities gradually reduced at each election, and Uppal won the seat for the Conservatives in 2010.

In July 2010, he was elected Chairman of the All Party Urban Development Group. In October 2011, he voted against a referendum on the UK's membership of European Union. In September 2012, he was appointed PPS to David Willetts at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

In the run up to the 2015 general election, both Uppal, his main opponent Marris, and even UKIP agreed that immigration was no longer a key issue in the seat which was once held by the controversial MP Enoch Powell.[5] Uppal highlighted the improvement in community relations whilst Marris expressed concern about zero-hour contracts, foodbanks and workers earning less than a living wage.[5]

At the 2015 election, Uppal lost his seat to Marris. Uppal stood as a candidate in the same seat at the 2017 snap election, and despite increasing his party's vote share by 3%, the Labour vote increased by 6.1%, and Uppal consequently lost by 2,185 votes.

References

  1. "Uppal, Paul Singh, (born 14 June 1967), Small Business Commissioner, since 2017". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO.
  2. Ray, Ashis (8 May 2010). "Priti Patel is UK's first Gujarati woman MP". The Times of India. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  3. "Election results: Wolverhampton South West". BBC News. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  4. Paul Uppal Archived 18 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Conservative Party website.
  5. Gentleman, Amelia (29 April 2015). "Immigration: in Enoch Powell's former seat jobs and the economy matter more". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Rob Marris
Member of Parliament for Wolverhampton South West
20102015
Succeeded by
Rob Marris
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