Sir Stephen Wall | |
Order: | 48th |
Office: | List of Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to PortugalBritish Ambassador to Portugal |
Term Start: | 1993 |
Term End: | 1995 |
Order2: | 7th |
Office2: | List of Permanent Representatives of the United Kingdom to the European UnionBritish Permanent Representative to the European Union |
Term Start2: | 1995 |
Term End2: | 2000 |
Birth Name: | John Stephen Wall |
Birth Date: | January 1947 |
Sir Stephen Wall (born January 1947) is a retired British diplomat who served as Britain's ambassador to Portugal and Permanent Representative to the European Union.
Wall, who was educated at Douai School[1] and Selwyn College, Cambridge, entered the Diplomatic Service in 1968.[2] His early postings included the United Nations, Addis Ababa and Paris.[2] On his return to London in 1974, he worked in the Foreign Office News Department and was later seconded to the press office of James Callaghan, who was then Prime Minister.[3] He subsequently served as Assistant Private Secretary to David Owen, the Foreign Secretary and Lord Carrington, David Owen's successor.[2]
Wall spent four years at the British Embassy, Washington, D.C. from 1979 to 1983, when he returned to the Foreign Office.[2] From 1983 to 1988 he served as Assistant Head, and later Head, of the Foreign Office's European Community Department (Internal.) He was Private Secretary to the Foreign Secretary from 1988 to 1991, serving under Geoffrey Howe, John Major and Douglas Hurd.[2] He was Private Secretary to Prime Minister John Major from 1991 to 1993, responsible for foreign policy and defence issues.[3]
Wall was sent as Ambassador to Portugal in 1993, and he remained there until 1995, when he was named as Britain's Permanent Representative to the European Union.[4] He returned to London in 2000 to takes charge of the Cabinet Office's European Secretariat as European adviser to Prime Minister Tony Blair. He remained in that post until 2004. He was named as principal adviser to Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster in June 2004, and he served until June 2005.[5]
From 2009 to 2019 Sir Stephen Wall was chairman of Cumberland Lodge, an educational charity initiating fresh debate on the burning questions facing society.[6] From 2005 to 2014, he was a Council Member at UCL and was Council Chair from 2008 to 2014. He was chair of the pro-EU 'Federal Trust' from 2010 to 2020.
From 2009 to 2014 he was co-chair of the Belgo-British Conference.
He was (2014–2021) a Board member (and later chair) of The Kaleidoscope Trust – a charity campaigning for LGBT rights overseas.[7] He has worked as an Official Historian at the Cabinet Office, writing the Official History of Britain's relationship with the rest of the European Union.
Wall was married with one son.[8] In 2014, Stephen Wall came out publicly as homosexual. He divorced in 2014. In 2019, he married Dr Edward Sumner, who died in 2021. He was Equalities Champion at UCL for LGBT+ issues. He said that reading Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion led him to abandon Catholicism.[9]