Honorific-Prefix: | Alderman |
Gregory Jones | |
Office: | Alderman of London |
Term Start: | 8 February 2017 |
Predecessor: | Julian Malins KC |
Successor: | in office |
Birthname: | Gregory Percy Jones |
Birth Date: | 4 January 1968 |
Birth Place: | Dartford, Kent, UK |
Spouse: | Rosali Margaretha Pretorius |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Residence: | London |
Gregory Percy Jones (born 4 January 1968), is a British lawyer, who serves as an Alderman of the City of London since 2017.
Of ancient patrilineal Welsh and matrilineal Irish extraction, his parents Colin Jones[1] and Jeannette née McDonnell married in 1966 at Bexley, Kent. He attended Pelham Road Infants and Primary Schools in Bexleyheath and after passing the 11-plus, Jones was educated at Colfe's School (Exhibitioner). Winning a Leathersellers' Scholarship and a Barclay's Bank Scholarship he then went up to New College, Oxford, where he read Jurisprudence (graduating MA). Playing for New College 1st XV at rugby, he also served as President of the Oxford Law Society in 1987 and Treasurer of the Oxford Union in 1988. Jones took a year out of education before pursuing further studies in law at the Inns of Court School of Law (BVC) and University College London (LLM).
Jones was selected to tour the US in 1989 as part of the British National Debate Team organized by the English Speaking Union.[2] He was a stagiaire at the European Commission in 1990. He took his Bar finals at the Inns of Court School of Law whilst a resident at the London House for Overseas Graduates (now called Goodenough College). Jones was called to the Bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1991, taking silk in 2011. A Lincoln's Inn Hardwicke Scholar and Thomas More Bursar,[3] he was also the first Jean Pierre Warner Scholar to the European Court of Justice (1995). Jones is a practising barrister at the independent bar, a member of Francis Taylor Building at the Temple, London, and an associate tenant at KBW Chambers in Leeds.[4] Described in 2017 by Chambers and Partners as "the thinking man's QC" and as "not just the meat-and-two-veg planning silk, he can deal very comfortably with European issues and complexity across the board".[5]
A Fellow of the Centre of European Law at King's College London, and Chancellor of the diocese of Manchester and Deputy Chancellor of the diocese of Truro. Jones was a member of the governing House Council of St. Stephen's House, Oxford (2011–20).[6]
A Bencher of Lincoln's Inn since 2019[7] Jones has also served as a Bencher of Inner Temple from 2020.[8]
Jones served as a Common Councilman for the Ward of Farringdon Without from 21 March 2013 until his election as an Alderman of the City of London for the same ward on 8 February 2017.[9] A Liveryman (then Third Warden for 2020/21)[10] of the Worshipful Company of Leathersellers as well as of the Butchers' and Arbitrators' Companies, Jones is Sheriff-elect of the City of London (for 2024/25).[11]
Jones served for five years as a Governor of Colfe's School and then for seven years as Governor of the Leathersellers' Federation of Schools (three state schools in Lewisham). [12] He is Trustee of the Prendergast Trust and President of the Sir John Staples Society[13] which promotes cultural activities for the Leathersellers' Federation Schools. In 2018, Jones was also appointed a Governor of Goodenough College.[14] In 2015, Jones was appointed by the Irish government to chair an independent expert organizational review of An Bord Pleanála, the independent, statutory, quasi-judicial body responsible for strategic infrastructure and various environmental permitting decisions and all appeals from planning decisions made by local planning authorities in Ireland; the report was published in February 2016 and made 101 recommendations.[15] He serves as a Director of Eye Solar Ltd, a renewables energy company.[16]
Jones is married to Rosali Margaretha Pretorius,[17] a qualified music teacher and solicitor. She is a senior partner in the financial markets law practice of Simmons & Simmons.[18]
Jones is the co-author of several leading legal texts including: