Liam Conlon

British politician (born 1988) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liam Joseph Conlon[1] (born March 1988)[2] is a British politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Beckenham and Penge since July 2024.[3] A member of the Labour Party, he is the chairperson of the Labour Party Irish Society.[4]

Preceded byConstituency created
Majority12,905 (24.7%)
BornLiam Joseph Conlon
March 1988 (age 3738)
Quick facts The HonourableMP, Member of Parliament for Beckenham and Penge ...
Liam Conlon
Official portrait, 2024
Member of Parliament
for Beckenham and Penge
Assumed office
4 July 2024
Preceded byConstituency created
Majority12,905 (24.7%)
Personal details
BornLiam Joseph Conlon
March 1988 (age 3738)
PartyLabour
Parents
  • William Conlon (father)
  • Sue Gray (mother)
Close

Career

In the 2006 Epping Forest District Council election, Conlon was the Labour candidate in Waltham Abbey Paternoster ward.[5]

In 2023, Conlon was selected by Labour party members in the newly created constituency of Beckenham and Penge to be the Labour candidate in the 2024 General Election.

In 2024, Conlon was elected MP for Beckenham and Penge with a majority of 12,905 making him the first Labour MP in a constituency entirely in Bromley.

Conlon was appointed as a Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Department for Transport following his election.

In 2024, Conlon voted against the assisted dying bill.

In 2025, Conlon proposed Philomena's law in Parliament, which would create an indefinite capital disregard for payments made to survivors from Ireland's Mother and Baby Institutions Payment Scheme who live in Britain.[6][7]

Following Conlon's campaign, the British Government agreed to disregard payments under Ireland’s Mother and Baby Redress Scheme at the 2026 UK-Ireland Summit.[8]

Personal life

Conlon is the son of Bill Conlon, a former Country music singer, and his wife, former senior civil servant Sue Gray (now Baroness Gray of Tottenham), who served as Downing Street Chief of Staff under Sir Keir Starmer from July to October 2024.[9] He had a hip replacement at the age of 17 due to an accident at the age of 13 where he fractured his hip; for years following the accident he was unable to walk. As a result of this, he is one of a handful of current disabled MPs, and drives an adapted car.[10]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI