Ian Lucas MP |
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Shadow Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Business and Regulatory Reform | |
Assumed office 11 May 2010 |
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Leader | Harriet Harman |
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Business and Regulatory Reform | |
In office 9 June 2009 – 21 May 2010 |
|
Prime Minister | Gordon Brown |
Preceded by | New position |
Succeeded by | Baroness Wilcox |
Member of Parliament for Wrexham |
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Assumed office 7 June 2001 |
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Preceded by | John Marek |
Majority | 3,658 (11.1%) |
Personal details | |
Born |
Gateshead, County Durham, England |
18 September 1960
Nationality | British |
Political party | Labour |
Spouse(s) | Norah Lucas |
Alma mater | New College, Oxford |
Ian Colin Lucas (born 18 September 1960) is a British Labour Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament for (MP) Wrexham since 2001. He was Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Business and Regulatory Reform in the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills from 2009 until Labour's defeat at the 2010 General Election.
He was born and brought up in a council house in Gateshead, the second son of Colin and Alice Lucas. His father worked as a process engineer in a local factory, apart from serving in the army from 1942–1947 during the Second World War. He attended Greenwell Junior High School on Beacon Lough Road in Gateshead then Newcastle Royal Grammar School, and won a place at New College, Oxford University, to study jurisprudence gaining a BA in 1982. He qualified from the College of Law in 1983 and gained a Solicitor's Admission in 1985. He is married with two children.
He became a solicitor practising in London from 1983–6, but moved to Wrexham the 1986, specialising in criminal and personal injury law for Percy Hughes and Roberts in Chester until 1987. He worked for Lees Moore and Price in Birkenhead until 1989. He then worked for Roberts Moore Nicholas Jones until 1992 in Wrexham. In 1992 he moved the short distance to Oswestry in Shropshire working for Dr Crawford, and formed his own practice, Crawford Lucas in 1997. The move was precipitated because of disagreements with his old firm when he had organised protests against cuts in legal aid. He was a partner in Stevens Lucas from 2000–1.