Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Bourne of Aberystwyth | |
Office: | Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Wales |
Primeminister: | Theresa May |
Term Start: | 27 October 2017 |
Term End: | 26 July 2019 |
Predecessor: | The Lord Duncan of Springbank |
Successor: | Office abolished |
Primeminister1: | David Cameron Theresa May |
Term Start1: | 12 May 2015 |
Term End1: | 17 June 2017 |
Predecessor1: | The Baroness Randerson |
Successor1: | The Lord Duncan of Springbank |
Office2: | Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Faith |
Primeminister2: | Theresa May |
Successor2: | The Viscount Younger of Leckie |
Term Start2: | 17 July 2016 |
Term End2: | 26 July 2019 |
Office3: | Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Northern Ireland |
Primeminister3: | Theresa May |
Term Start3: | 14 June 2017 |
Term End3: | 27 October 2017 |
Predecessor3: | The Lord Dunlop |
Successor3: | The Lord Duncan of Springbank |
Office4: | Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change |
Primeminister4: | David Cameron |
Term Start4: | 12 May 2015 |
Term End4: | 17 July 2016 |
Predecessor4: | The Baroness Verma |
Successor4: | Position abolished |
Office5: | Lord-in-waiting Government Whip |
Primeminister5: | David Cameron |
Term Start5: | 13 August 2014 |
Term End5: | 17 July 2016 |
Predecessor5: | The Baroness Northover |
Successor5: | The Baroness Mobarik |
Office6: | Leader of the Opposition |
Monarch6: | Elizabeth II |
Firstminister6: | Rhodri Morgan Carwyn Jones |
Term Start6: | 11 July 2007 |
Term End6: | 5 May 2011 |
Predecessor6: | Ieuan Wyn Jones |
Successor6: | Andrew RT Davies (Paul Davies) |
Office7: | Leader of the Welsh Conservative Party |
Leader7: | William Hague Iain Duncan Smith Michael Howard David Cameron |
Deputy7: | Andrew R. T. Davies |
Term Start7: | 18 August 1999 |
Term End7: | 6 May 2011 |
Predecessor7: | Rod Richards |
Successor7: | Andrew RT Davies (Paul Davies) |
Office8: | Member of the Welsh Assembly for Mid and West Wales |
Term Start8: | 6 May 1999 |
Term End8: | 6 May 2011 |
Predecessor8: | Office Created |
Successor8: | William Powell |
Office9: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start9: | 9 September 2013 Life Peerage |
Birth Name: | Nicholas Henry Bourne |
Birth Date: | 1952 1, df=yes |
Nationality: | British |
Alma Mater: | University of Wales, Aberystwyth Trinity College, Cambridge |
Occupation: | University lecturer, politician |
Party: | Conservative |
Signature: | Nick Bourne signature.png |
Nicholas Henry Bourne, Baron Bourne of Aberystwyth (born 1 January 1952) is a Conservative Party politician who served as Leader of the Welsh Conservative Party and Member of the Welsh Assembly for Mid and West Wales from August 1999 until May 2011.
During the 2011 National Assembly for Wales election he unexpectedly lost his regional list seat, due to Conservative gains at constituency level. He was elevated to the House of Lords in September 2013,[1] and the following year, became a government whip.
Bourne was the first of two children of John Morgan Bourne and his wife, Joan Edith Mary Bourne. He was educated at King Edward VI School, Chelmsford; University of Wales, Aberystwyth; and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was President of Cambridge University Lawyers and Treasurer of Cambridge University Conservative Association.[2] He is the Honorary President of Aberystwyth University Conservative Future.He obtained the bachelor of laws (First Class Honours) and LLM from University of Wales and the LLM from Trinity College, Cambridge. He was called to the Bar by the Honourable Society of Grays Inn.
A former professor of law, Bourne has been Assistant Principal of Swansea Institute of Higher Education, and was a visiting lecturer at Hong Kong University and an author of various legal textbooks on Commercial and Company Law.[2]
In 2015, Bourne was made a fellow of Aberystwyth University and in 2018, he received the Honorary degree of LLD from the University of Wales, Trinity St David.
Bourne was the Conservative Party candidate in the 1984 Chesterfield by-election, having stood in the same constituency at the previous year's general election. He fought the Worcester constituency in the 1997 general election. He was the Conservatives' chief spokesman in Wales, and led the unsuccessful "Just Say NO" campaign against Welsh devolution, during the 1997 referendum. After the referendum. he served on the National Assembly Advisory Group, the body that set up the institution's working arrangements.[2]
First elected to the National Assembly for Wales in 1999, and re-elected in 2003 and 2007. Bourne headed the regional list for the Conservatives for the entire period that he was in the National Assembly. Bourne sat on the Assembly's European and External Affairs committee and was the party's spokesman on constitutional matters. He was the leader of the Welsh Conservatives from August 1999,[3] and Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly from July 2007. Following a minor reshuffle in June 2008, Bourne also became the Shadow Minister for Finance and Public Service Delivery remaining in the post until 22 October 2008.[4] [5]
In the National Assembly, his political interests included the economy, foreign affairs, health and education. Bourne also supports charities and organizations in Wales, including the NSPCC, the National Trust, and the British Heart Foundation.
Bourne campaigned for rural communities, opposing onshore wind farm developments, the closure of post offices and small schools, and supporting improved health care provision in non-urban areas. He campaigned on issues such as the need for a referendum on plans to give the assembly law making powers and supported the campaign for more legislative powers when David Cameron granted a referendum, the future of the National Botanic Garden, and on the growing cost of government in Wales.[6] He is a member of the Doctors and Dentists Pay Review Body.
In 2005, he was presented with the Local Campaigner of the Year Award by BBC show AM.PM; he also won AM of the Year from ITV.
In 2011, he was nominated by the Welsh Conservatives as their representative on the Commission on Devolution in Wales, chaired by Paul Silk. He was also appointed by Edwina Hart to chair the Haven Waterway Enterprise Zone from 2012 to August 2014. In addition, he served as the Conservative representative on the Williams Commission on Public Service Governance and Delivery.
Bourne was created a life peer on 9 September 2013, taking the title Baron Bourne of Aberystwyth, of Aberystwyth in the County of Ceredigion, and of Wethersfield in the County of Essex.Lord Bourne was made a whip in the House of Lords on 11 August 2014, replacing Lord Bates who had been promoted as part of a mini-reshuffle following the resignation of Baroness Warsi.[7] During this period he was responsible for piloting the Pensions Schemes Bill through the House of Lords.
In May 2015, he was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State jointly for DECC and the Wales Office.[8] [9]
During 2017, Lord Bourne moved to the Northern Ireland Office before returning later in the year to the Wales Office, a post he continued to hold until his resignation in July 2019. At the same time, until his resignation, he was Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State in the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.
Lord Bourne received the National "No to Hate Crime Award" for 2019 from the Anti-Hate Organisation Tell MAMA which campaigns against Islamophobia and anti-Muslim hatred. In December 2019, Lord Bourne was appointed President of Remembering Srebrenica, a British charity initiative which is dedicated to bringing communities together to combat prejudice and intolerance. In particular, it also seeks to inculcate lessons of the genocide in Bosnia Herzegovina in 1995.