Richard Denison, 9th Baron Londesborough

English entrepreneur From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard John Denison, 9th Baron Londesborough (born 2 July 1959), is an entrepreneur, investor in start-ups and Crossbench member of the House of Lords.

Quick facts The Right HonourableThe Lord Londesborough, Member of the House of Lords ...
The Lord Londesborough
Lord Londesborough in 2021, official photo
Member of the House of Lords
Hereditary peerage
8 April 1996  11 November 1999
Preceded byThe 8th Baron Londesborough
Succeeded bySeat abolished
Elected Hereditary Peer
16 June 2021  29 April 2026
By-election16 June 2021
Preceded byThe 31st Countess of Mar
Succeeded bySeat abolished
Personal details
BornRichard John Denison
(1959-07-02) 2 July 1959 (age 66)
PartyNone (crossbench)
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In May 2026, he was given one of 26 new life peerages, keeping him in the House of Lords after the coming into force of the House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Act 2026.[1]

Early life

Londesborough was a journalist and foreign correspondent in Iran (1978) and Mexico (1982) before setting up from his kitchen table a specialist informational service, Latin America Monitor, with fellow journalist Jonathan Feroze in 1984.

Londesborough and Feroze built up the company (rebranded BMI Research in 1991) into a global country risk platform, employing 300 staff across five continents, with the backing in 2009 of Boston-based Spectrum Equity Partners. They sold the company in 2014 to the Fitch Group.

They set up Sevenex Capital Partners in 2015, providing early stage equity to entrepreneurs across a range of sectors, including B2B media, film, theatre, food & drink, pet care and fintech – including the Social Value Portal, FX Loop, Borrowmydoggy, Loving Vincent and Wipers Times.

Londesborough also became Chairman of information provider Tussell Limited in 2021.

Political career

Londesborough took his seat as a crossbench member of the House of Lords in 1999, and made his maiden/valedictory speech just one week before being excluded by the House of Lords Act 1999.[2]

He became a member of the Lords again in June 2021, having been elected by the whole House in a by-election following the retirement of the Countess of Mar.[3] After a gap of 22 years, Lord Londesborough spoke again in the Lords, touching on his first maiden speech and foreign aid on 27 October 2021.[4]

He spoke regularly on the economy, business, entrepreneurship, sport and small and medium enterprises, and was appointed to the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee in 2023.

He caused controversy in 2023 during a debate on artificial intelligence, by raising the prospect that members of the House of Lords might be replaced by "peerbots with deeper knowledge, higher productivity and lower running costs."

Personal life

Londesborough married Rikki (née Morris) in 1987. They have a son and a daughter, and live on Richmond Hill in west London.

Notes

References

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