Piers Wauchope

British barrister and politician (born 1956) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Piers Andrew Charles Wauchope[1] (born October 1956)[2] is a British barrister and politician who served as interim leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) between June and August 2019.

Preceded byGerard Batten
Succeeded byRichard Braine
ConstituencyRusthall
ConstituencyBelsize
Quick facts Leader of the UK Independence Party, Preceded by ...
Piers Wauchope
Leader of the UK Independence Party
Interim
12 June 2019  10 August 2019
Preceded byGerard Batten
Succeeded byRichard Braine
Member of Tunbridge Wells Borough Council
In office
8 May 2012  16 April 2015
ConstituencyRusthall
Member of Camden Borough Council
In office
2 May 2002  4 May 2006
ConstituencyBelsize
In office
7 May 1998  2 May 2002
ConstituencyAdelaide
Personal details
BornOctober 1956 (age 69)
Kent, England
PartyUKIP (since 2010)
Other political
affiliations
Conservative Party (until 2010)
Close

Career

Previously a member of the Conservative Party, Wauchope was a councillor representing Adelaide and later Belsize wards in the London Borough of Camden from 1998 to 2006, having unsuccessfully stood in the wards of Holborn (in 1986) and Bloomsbury (in 1994). He served as leader of the Conservative Group, and of the opposition, on Camden Council from 2000 to 2006, replacing Pamela Chesters.[3] After leaving the Conservative Party, he joined UKIP and was elected to the NEC in 2015.[4]

Wauchope trained as a criminal barrister,[5] being called to the bar in 1985, and specialises in children's law, injunctions and domestic violence.[6] In 2010, he made the news after separating two brawling men during a court session at Snaresbrook Crown Court. Wauchope was unhurt in the scuffle, having only his glasses knocked off.[7] In 2015, he represented former UKIP parliamentary candidate Matthew Smith in an electoral fraud case.[8]

He was educated at Worth School and the University of Manchester.[9] In addition to authoring legal guides and contributing to journals, Wauchope has written a political history of the London Borough of Camden called Camden: A Political History 1964-2006, which the Camden New Journal described as "An intriguing, witty read......his retelling of power struggles and forgotten gossip sparkles".

In June 2019, he was appointed interim leader of UKIP, following the resignation of Gerard Batten.[10]

Electoral history

In the 2012 United Kingdom local elections, Wauchope ran as a UKIP candidate and won the Rusthall electoral ward seat on Tunbridge Wells Borough Council.[11] He beat the incumbent Conservative councillor and council leader Bob Atwood by 46 votes.[12] He left the position on 16 April 2015.[13]

He stood to be the first police and crime commissioner for Kent in the 2012 elections, but was eliminated in the first round of voting.[14] He also stood unsuccessfully as a UKIP candidate in the 2016 London Assembly election[15] and the 2019 European Parliament election for the South East England seat.[16]

More information Election, Constituency ...
UK local elections
Election Constituency Party Votes % of votes Result
1986 United Kingdom local elections[17] Holborn Conservative 458 11.5 Not elected
1998 United Kingdom local elections[18] Adelaide Conservative 868 14.1 Elected
2002 United Kingdom local elections[1] Belsize Conservative 1,005 13.79 Elected
2006 United Kingdom local elections[19] Belsize Conservative 1,205 12.4 Not elected
2012 United Kingdom local elections[20] Rusthall UKIP 533 38.5 Elected
Close
More information Election, Constituency ...
UK Parliament elections
Election Constituency Party Votes % of votes Result
1997 United Kingdom general election Coatbridge and Chryston Conservative 3,216 8.6 Not elected
2005 United Kingdom general election[21] Hampstead and Highgate Conservative 10,886 28.5 Not elected
2015 United Kingdom general election[22] North Thanet UKIP 12,097 25.7 Not elected
2017 United Kingdom general election[23] Dover UKIP 1,722 3.3 Not elected
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI