Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable Councillor |
The Lord Fuller | |
Office: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start: | 8 March 2024 Life peerage |
Birth Name: | John Charles Fuller |
Birth Date: | 6 June 1968 |
Birth Place: | Great Yarmouth, England |
Party: | Conservative |
Spouse: | Philippa Claire Speight |
Children: | Susan Mary, Laura Elizabeth |
John Charles Fuller, Baron Fuller, (born 6 June 1968) is a British Conservative Party politician. He was Leader of South Norfolk District Council between May 2007 and May 2024. He was appointed a member of the House of Lords in February 2024.
Fuller was born on 6 June 1968 in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, to Michael John Fuller and June Renee Fuller. His grandfather Stanley Fuller represented Great Britain in the men's 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics.[1]
On 1 April 1995, John Fuller married Philippa Claire Speight of Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire. They have two daughters.
Fuller attended Cliff Park Junior School (1973–1978) in Gorleston-on-Sea, Norfolk and later Brandeston Hall Preparatory School (1978–1981] and Framlingham College [1981–1986) in [[Suffolk]].[2] At the University of Reading (1987–1990) he studied BSc Agriculture, graduating with First Class Honours in 1990.
Fuller joined J & H Bunn Ltd,[3] a private fertiliser manufacturing company in Great Yarmouth in May 1991. In 1995 he was awarded a Nuffield Scholarship to study precision farming concepts, investigating emerging technologies in GPS, satellite imagery and the Internet and their application to agriculture.[4] From 1998 to 2011, he was a director of Bunn until it was sold to US-based Koch Industries in March 2011.[5]
Fuller became a founding director and chairman of liquid fertiliser manufacturer Brineflow Ltd in 2011.[6] In the same year, he became a non-executive director of Sentry Ltd,[7] a UK farm management company.
Between 2007 and 2017 he served as a governor of Langley School, near Loddon in Norfolk.[8]
In May 2003 Fuller was elected to South Norfolk District Council as the Conservative Party member for Brooke Ward,[9] encompassing the villages of Brooke, Howe, Norfolk, Seething, Kirstead, Mundham, Bergh Apton and from 2019 boundary changes with Alpington and Yelverton. In 2004 he became Leader of the Opposition Conservative Group on South Norfolk Council.
At the 2007 United Kingdom local elections,[10] he became leader of South Norfolk Council. That election saw the largest swing from the Liberal Democrats to the Conservatives in that district council electoral cycle with 20 seats falling from the Liberal Democrats to the Conservative Party,[11]
In the local government elections held successively in May 2011,[12] 2015,[13] [14] 2019,[15] and in 2023,[16] he led local Conservatives to elected majorities, and retained leadership of the council.[17]
On 22 February 2024, he announced he would be relinquishing his Leadership position at the forthcoming Annual Council Meeting having been awarded a Life Peerage.[18] He stepped down as Leader of the Council on 20th May 2024 after 17 years in post and was succeeded by Cllr Daniel Elmer. [19]
As council leader, he chaired the Greater Norwich Local Plan (2010–2011), the Greater Norwich Growth Board, and Norfolk Public Sector Leaders Board (2009–2010, 2015–2016 and 2023–2024).
He was a member of the East of England Regional Assembly (2009–2010), and the Norfolk Pension Fund. He has served as a Director on the Local Government Association's as deputy Leader of the Conservative Group of Councillors 2019–2023.[20] In 2013 he was appointed to the Local Government Pension Scheme Advisory Board[21] and chaired the Local Government Pension Committee from 2019 to 2023.[22] He served on the Fire Services Pensions Scheme Advisory Board (2014–2018).[23] In 2015, he was appointed by Brandon Lewis, Housing Minister, as a member of the CIL Review[24] to advise on housing infrastructure finance.[25]
In 2017, Fuller became the chairman of the District Councils' Network, the special interest group for District Councils in England.[26] He served in that position for four years until October 2021, a period which included helping coordinate the local Covid-19 pandemic response amongst English District Councils.[27] In 2019, he was elected by fellow Conservative council leaders to be the deputy leader of the Conservative Party in Local Government and became a director and deputy vice-chairman of the Local Government Association.[28] His term of office expired in July 2023.
Fuller was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2019 Birthday Honours for Public and Political service. He was nominated by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak for a life peerage and was created Baron Fuller, of Gorleston-on-Sea in the County of Norfolk, on 8 March 2024.[29] [30] He took his seat in the House of Lords on 12th March 2024 [31]