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  • 8/2/2019 News Bulletin From Conor Burns MP #89

    1/1

    Subject: NewsBulletinfromConorBurnsMP#89

    Date: Saturday,21April201217:39:41UnitedKingdomTime

    From: ConorBurnsMP

    To: [email protected]

    In this edition:

    Conor Burns MPs DiaryWebsite of the Week:Parkinsons UKConor in Parliament:Conor urges HomeSecretary to reformEuropean Court of HumanRightsConor works with

    TripAdvisor to help localBournemouth businessUpdate: Navitus BayWind ParkConor on board forreduced fares to LondonPhoto news:Bournemouth School forBoysConor brings PremierLeague darts back toBournemouth

    Conor in the media:Conor Burns MP isinterviewed on BBC Radio4's The World at Oneregarding Lords reformConor in the papers:Bournemouth MPs callfor tighter law on mobilephone driversConor in the papers:Cameron 'must retreaton charitiesConor in the papers:

    Cam in u-turn on charitytax grabConor in the media:Sir Humphrey dominatingpolicy, claims Tory MPConor in the media:How Thatcher really feltabout the Falklands

    How to contactConor Burns MP

    Issue 89 Saturday 21st April 2012

    Since the past edition, Conor has:

    Met with representatives of the TripAdvisorwebsite to discuss

    how the company can further support small tourism

    businesses in Bournemouth.

    Spoken in the Chamber of the House of Commons to

    encourage the Home Secretary to reform theEuropean Court

    of Human Rights.

    Attended a forum with the Jewish Leadership Council inWestminster to examine the role of faith in society.

    Met with the Friends of Grammar Schools at a reception in

    the House of Commons. Also attending was the Secretary of

    State for Education Michael Gove MP.

    Attended a Parliamentary reception to celebrate 25 years of

    the charity Bowel Cancer UK.

    Met with the Cuban Ambassador Her Excellency Esther

    Armenteros Cardenas.

    Been quoted in the Bournemouth Echo regarding drivers who

    use mobile phones at the wheel.

    Published an article in Total Politics magazine on LadyThatcher and the Falklands conflict.

    Been quoted in The Daily Telegraph, The Mirror, The

    Independent and The Evening Standard calling for a re-think

    on tax plans that will adversely affect charities.

    Welcomed cheaper fares on National Express coaches

    between Bournemouth and London.

    Been quoted on the BBC News website on the power ofcivil

    servants.

    Been interviewed on BBC Radio 4s World at One programme

    regarding reform of the House of Lords.

    Visited Oakmead College with Cllr Nicola Greene, includingseeing the new LeAF Studio

    Website of the Week:

    www.parkinsons.org.ukThe website of Parkinsons UK.Parkinsons UK is the UKs largest Parkinsons support and researchcharity. The charity, which has been active for more than 40 years,

    has invested over 50 million in research on Parkinsons. This week(16th 22nd) is Parkinsons Awareness Week which aims to highlightthe impact Parkinsons has on the 127,000 people who are victim tothis incurable neurological condition in the UK and raise attention tothe cause.This week also saw the announcement of Tracking Parkinsons, afive year national study fully funded by Parkinsons UK. The study willbe using 3,000 volunteers and will work with 50 research centresaround the country, including The Royal Bournemouth Hospital. Thestudy hopes to highlight biomarkers which could indicate the potentialof Parkinsons and early signs of the condition. Volunteers are beingsought who have been diagnosed with Parkinsons in the last 3 years

    or were diagnosed under 50, as well as brothers and sisters of thosewith Parkinsons. The study forms part of 25 million being investedover the next 5 years by Parkinsons UK to bring them closer to findinga cure.Conor is giving his full support to the study and urging people to getinvolved saying, It is very exciting that The Royal BournemouthHospital is joining this ground breaking research. If you know ofanyone who is suitable, please ask them to sign up. They could helpfind a cure for Parkinsons that would improve the lives of hundreds ofthousands of people all over the UK - and millions of people acrossthe world.

    To register your interest in taking part in the study you can find moreinformation by clicking here.

    Conor in Parliament:

    Conor urges Home Secretary to reform

    European Court of Human Rights

    Tuesday 17th April 2012

    Click on the image above to watch Conors exchangewith the Home Secretary.

    Conor Burns (Bournemouth West, Conservative): I congratulatethe Home Secretary on her leadership in getting a grip on this issue,

    which has gone on for far too long. Does she agree that we can takegreat pride in this country that, however frustrating it may be, eventhose who despise our values and our freedoms are accorded the fullprotection of due process under the law? Does she agree that forthose frustrations to disappear in future, we need to reform theEuropean Court of Human Rights, as the Prime Minister has said, atsource?Theresa May (Home Secretary; Maidenhead, Conservative): Myhon. Friend is absolutely right to say that we can take pride in the

    justice system that we have here in the United Kingdom. I know thatmany people find it frustrating when they see such decisions comingout of the European Court and when they see us having to take our

    time to get the assurances we need. But, as he has said, it isabsolutely right that we seek reform of the European Court, and that iswhy the Brighton conference this week is so important.

    Conor works with TripAdvisor to help local

    Bournemouth businessConor met this week with representatives from travel firm TripAdvisorto find ways to help the small tourism business in Bournemouth. Themeeting saw two positive outcomes for local businesses and localpeople.

    Firstly, Conor has put TripAdvisor in touch with Bournemouth AreaHospitality Association (BAHA), a forum which promotes tourism in thetown. TripAdvisor will aim to offer master classes to small businesseswhich rely on the tourist trade, such as hotels and restaurants, on howto best use TripAdvisor and similar websites to maximise their ratingsand exposure. These marketing classes will be offered free.Secondly, Conor has encouraged TripAdvisor to run a poll on theirwebsite to get opinions about what should be done with the space leftfrom the soon to be demolished IMAX building. The polls, usuallyanswered by around 5,000 avid travellers, will be a way for those whowill be using the facilities to give their views on what they would like to

    see, and what can be built to bring more tourists to the town.Speaking after the meeting Conor said, I am hugely encouraged bythese outcomes. Tourism is a big part of Bournemouths economyand I look forward to working with TripAdvisor and local businesses in

    providing tourists with the best Bournemouth can offer.

    Update:

    Navitus Bay Wind Park

    Challenge Navitus, a group opposed to the wind park off the coast ofDorset, has produced a video (click image below to watch) to showresidents how the structures will appear from the Bournemouth coast.

    The consultation stage of the wind park proposal, where the publiccould submit their comments and concerns, ended this week

    (Tuesday 17th April). It is understood the final plans will be submittedto the Governments Infrastructure Planning Commission at the end ofnext year. If successful the wind park will be built between 2016 and

    2019.

    Conor on board for reduced fares

    to LondonConor has welcomed cheaper coach travel between London andBournemouth to encourage more people to explore the south coastthis summer.The fares, introduced this week, will be reduced by 27 per cent to 10each way working out at less than 1p per mile.Commenting, Conor said, The reduced fares are brilliant news forBournemouth. I have worked closely with National Express in findingways to bring more people to the town and I am pleased with thisresult. With the Olympics coming up I hope we can attract many newvisitors to the area who will no doubt enjoy the superb beaches andfacilities Bournemouth has to offer.

    Andrew Cleaves, Managing Director of National Express Coach, said:With so much happening across Britain this year we have reducedthe cost of travel from ten major cities across Britain to make days outmore affordable. The simplified pricing structure from Bournemouthwill mean passengers to London will now pay 10 each way when

    they book 14 days in advance.The new fares are available to buy online, over the phone and atBournemouth Bus Station so customers without internet access canstill secure a low fare.National Express operates 18 services per day between Bournemouthand London from the Bus Station.It is hoped the simpler pricing structure will encourage more people tovisit the south coast and help people in Bournemouth take part insome of the iconic events taking place in London during 2012.

    Photo news:

    Bournemouth School for Boys

    Conor pictured with pupils during his recent visit toBournemouth School for Boys.

    Conor brings Premier League darts

    back to BournemouthThe McCoys Premier League Darts returned to the BIC this week

    (Thursday 19th) after Conor encouraged the promoters to bring thepopular contest back to Bournemouth.

    The event, which has fully sold out, will see two of the worlds leadingdarts players, Phil Taylor and Adrian Lewis, providing some of theentertainment.Speaking to the Bournemouth Echo, promoter Barry Hearn said,Bournemouth people can say that without Conor Burns, they wouldnthave had Taylor versus Lewis there.

    Conor in the media:

    Conor Burns MP is interviewed on BBC

    Radio 4's The World at One regarding Lords

    reform

    Friday 20th April 2012

    Click on the image above to listen to the interview.

    Conor in the papers:

    Bournemouth MPs call for tighter law on

    mobile phone driversPaula Roberts, Bournemouth Echo

    Thursday 19th April 2012Lets act now before its too late thats the call from a Bournemouth MP

    who wants tougher penalties formotorists who use their hand-held mobiles while driving.Tobias Ellwood, who represents Bournemouth East, said that with thedevelopment of officially approved hands-free headsets, there wasnow no excuse for anyone caught on their mobiles while driving.Mr Ellwood said: Its a minority that do it but they are a significantminority and you only need one person using their phone to cause anaccident.There is no excuse and it should receive the same level of attentionas drink-driving because you are potentially going to cause anaccident.Its a classic example of the law not keeping up with technology. Atthe moment, the punishment for using them does not match theseverity of the incident that the distraction of using a phone can cause.Unless we act now it will be a serious accident which then promptsthe law to change. We should be wise to that, we shouldnt have towait for a massive accident.Lib Dem MP Annette Brooke has called for a big awareness campaignto be launched to force a change in peoples attitudes towards drivingwhile using a mobile phone.

    She said: There are some very sad stories where people have diedwhile perhaps texting while driving along. These tragedies often affectmore than just the individuals.I think the law needs to be very, very tough. The police have to bevery persistent in enforcing the law so people know there is a risk theywill get caught. Drivers also need to be aware they will face a heftypenalty.People need to be made aware just how dangerous this is.Mrs Brooke, MP for mid Dorset and North Poole, added: I just cannotbelieve that people could be looking at email or the internet while

    driving.We are so used to getting instant news from family and friends, thatpeople cannot wait to stop the car and pull in.Bournemouth West MP Conor Burns says it will take time for themessage to get across that driving while using a mobile phone issocially unacceptable.

    And he said awareness initiatives should be set up by police forces toallow law-abiding drivers to take part in Driver Awareness Courses inreturn for cheaper insurance premiums.

    As it stands only convicted motorists are invited to attend the courses,which educate drivers about the dangers of using phones while drivingas well as other road dangers.

    Conor in the papers:

    Cameron 'must retreat on charities;

    Tory MPs issue warning as Prime Minister

    promises to 'get balance right' on limiting

    tax breaks on donations

    Rowena Mason & James Kirkup, The Daily Telegraph

    Thursday 12th April 2012David Cameron must back down overplans to cap tax breaks on donations tocharity or risk undermining Britain'sculture of philanthropy, MPs have warned.The Prime Minister promised yesterday to listen "very sympathetically"to charities concerned that philanthropic giving will decline after theGovernment criticised rich individuals who benefit from tax relief ondonations.

    Mr Cameron, speaking on a visit to Indonesia, said he wanted to "getthe balance right" between encouraging charities and cracking downon tax avoiders, and indicated that there could be differing taxtreatment for charities registered in Britain and abroad.Higher rate taxpayers giving to a charity can reclaim more than half ofthe tax. From April, the maximum amount that can be reclaimed willbe 50,000 per year or a quarter of the individual's income.Conor Burns, ministerial aide to the Northern Ireland Secretary, OwenPaterson, urged him go further and make a "quick review and retreat".

    He said: "Charitable giving is evermore important and we are allseeing that in our constituencies at a time of frozen or reducedGovernment spending. Central to what the Prime Minister has beentalking about in terms of Big Society are voluntary and charitablegroups. We should be doing everything we can to encourage moreand more giving."Mark Pritchard, secretary of the backbench 1922 Committee, said:"This appears to be going in the opposite direction of encouragingphilanthropy and major giving to charity."Ministers say the change will prevent abuse of the tax code by therich. Charities have said it will deter philanthropists and lose themmillions of pounds.

    A new survey suggests that nine in 10 charity leaders believe theCoalition's plans will reduce donations.The Charities Aid Foundation said the majority of charities wereexpecting the value of major donations to fall by at least 20 per centwhen the rules take effect next year. John Low, the charity's chiefexecutive, said the survey showed "the widespread alarm and despairamong charities" over Mr Cameron's plans.Mr Cameron said the changes were necessary because of "abuse" ofthe rules, often involving donations to charities registered outside theUK.

    "Some people have been using charities established in other countriesto funnel money in, to get their tax rate so they're not paying 50p taxor 45p tax but in some cases 10p or 20p tax. I think that isn't right," hesaid.Mr Cameron later told ITV News he would meet charity leaders todiscuss the plans before they are published in the form of draftlegislation in the autumn. Whitehall sources said work was being doneto make sure the proposals are aimed at rich people who are usingforeign charities to avoid paying tax.Government sources insisted there was no prospect of a retreat from

    tightening up tax relief, but said the rules could treat British andforeign charities differently."We want to end the abuse involving foreign charities, but that isdifferent to big established British charities raising large sums ofmoney - that is not something we want to hinder," said a source.Treating donations to foreign charities differently would be "extremelycomplicated" but is a "possible scenario".

    Conor in the papers:

    Cam in u-turn on charity tax grabJason Beattie, The Mirror

    Thursday 12th April 2012David Cameron yesterday signalled aretreat on plans to squeeze charitabledonations after being hit by a furiousbacklash from MPs.He also admitted that he had "learned lessons" from the ongoing rowsover the granny tax and pasty tax - also sparked by George Osborne'sbotched Budget.The Prime Minister said the Government would hold talks withcharities over plans to cap tax relief on donations at pounds 50,000."We're going to talk to them about how we will make sure the changewe want to put in place - this restriction on allowances - doesn'tunfairly impinge on giving," he told ITV News.But he said there was "no doubt" some people were using charitablegiving to avoid paying tax.Then asked if he was going to apologise for hitting pensioners with apounds 3billion tax grab and putting VAT on pasties, he replied:

    "There isn't a day of doing this job where you don't learn lessons, youdon't learn important lessons."Conservative backbenchers had been pressing Cameron for a quick"retreat" over the tax cap.Tory MP Conor Burns said: "Charitable giving is ever-more importantat a time of frozen or reduced government There this job youspending."Central to the Prime Minister's Big Society are voluntary andcharitable groups. We should be doing everything we can toencourage more giving."

    Fellow Tory MP Mark Pritchard added: "This appears to be going inthe opposite direction to encouraging philanthropy. This cap needs tobe reviewed as it is already having an impact on charities ranging fromfighting cancer to providing fresh water abroad."

    A survey of charity bosses found nearly 90% feared the cap would hitdonat- ions from major backers. John Low, chief executive of theCharities Aid Foundation, said: "Ultimately, it will not be the rich whowill lose out, but the most vulnerable in society."Shadow Cabinet Office Minister Gareth Thomas said: "Cameron andOsborne are insulting those who give generously to charities. Thearrogance is breathtaking."

    Conor in the media:

    Sir Humphrey dominating policy,

    claims Tory MPBBC News OnlineSunday 15th April 2012Civil servants - rather than electedministers - are dominating government

    policy, an outspoken Tory MP says.Douglas Carswell said an ex-Treasuryofficial told him Budget plans such asthe "pasty tax" and "granny tax" were"perennial proposals... [which] ministerswould then veto. Until now."Conor Burns, aide to the NI secretary, agreed, saying the "generalpoint applies throughout government".One Tory commentator said it was a controversial suggestion.

    On his TalkCarswell blog, Mr Carswell, MP for Clacton, wrote: "A fewgenerations back, Treasury ministers tended to write a lot of thebudget themselves - often quite literally doing the maths."Referring to the fictional civil servant from TV show Yes, Minister, hecontinued: "Today, it seems that the budget process is dominated bythe Sir Humphrey-types, who present ministers with a menu of'either/or' policy options."Stale ideas get re-cycled. Bold ideas left out altogether. Little scopefor original thought. If you are only prepared to contemplate what SirHumphrey puts in front of you, you are pretty much guaranteed neverto be bold."

    Among plans criticised from the Budget were the so-called pasty tax,which will see 20% VAT added to the price of hot savoury food fromOctober.Mr Carswell wrote: "What do the so-called 'pasty tax,' 'granny tax,'child benefit cliff edge and the reduction in tax breaks for charitablegiving all have in common? They were all in the budget, right? Yes.But they have something else in common, too."According to an ex-Treasury special adviser I've been speaking to,these measures were precisely the kind of perennial proposals thattop Treasury officials would put in front of ministers - and ministerswould then veto. Until now."

    Responding on Twitter, Conor Burns, the Parliamentary PrivateSecretary to the Northern Ireland Secretary Owen Paterson, wrote:"The more I encounter I think general point applies throughoutGovernment".Influential Conservative commentator Tim Montgomerie replied that hethought this was a controversial thing for a PPS to say, given they areexpected to be loyal to the government.He wrote: "Uncontroversial to say Yes Ministerism exists, quitecontroversial to say your govt is giving in to it (which, I agree, it is)."

    Conor in the media:

    How Thatcher really felt about the

    FalklandsConor Burns MP, Total PoliticsApril 2012Conor Burns MP examines the politicaldecisions that led to the Falklandsconflict of 1982 and Margaret

    Thatchers determination to re-establishthe country as a world power.The Falklands marked her soul and mine. Denis Thatchers wordsperhaps state more eloquently than any number of military or historictomes the profound seriousness of the Falklands conflict.It is easy now to look back 30 years and somehow see the events inthe South Atlantic as part of some seamless inevitability in theevolution of one of Britains most remarkable and powerful primeministers of the twentieth century.Yet as Argentina contemplated invasion of the islands that had seen a

    continuous peaceful British presence since 1833, even the mostoptimistic forecaster would have been foolhardy to predict that theepisode would profoundly enhance Margaret Thatchers reputation.Writing many years later in her memoirs, Lady Thatcher remembers itthus: Much was at stake: what we were fighting for 8,000 miles awayin the South Atlantic was not only the territory and the people of theFalklands, important though they were. We were defending ourhonour as a nation, and principles of fundamental importance to thewhole world above all, that aggressors should never succeed andthat international law should prevail over the use of force. She couldeasily have added that she was fighting for the right to remain primeminister.

    It is informative to remember the extent to which doubt aboutwhether it was even right, let alone practicable, to regain the Islandsby force dominated debate. The shadow of Suez still cast itself longover British national pride, decision-making and military prowess.Tony Benn was far from alone in predicting, in the House of Commonsin April 1982, that: The task force will cost this country a far greaterhumiliation than we have already suffered. The attempt will fail. Thatsame month Francis Pym hinted from within Thatchers own cabinet atreal doubt when he said: Maybe we should ask the Falklanders howthey feel about a war.Perhaps the strongest expression of doubt came in the superblycrafted words of Enoch Powell, delivered in the Commons chamber:The prime minister, shortly after she came into office, received asobriquet as the Iron Lady. It arose in the context of remarks whichshe made about defence against the Soviet Union and its allies; butthere was no reason to suppose that the right honourable lady did notwelcome and, indeed, take pride in that description. In the next weekor two this House, the nation and the right honourable lady herself, willlearn of what metal she is made.This was a high-risk adventure taken by a new prime minister withoutprevious military experience or grounding and against the advice ofmany of her key advisers. It was an adventure in which evenThatchers closest ally President Reagan found himself unable to sideunequivocally with the United Kingdom, providing a useful caution to

    those who got too easily misty-eyed about Thatchers mythicalinfluence over the US.

    And it was an adventure, its worth recalling, that many felt wascaused by home-grown mistakes in both diplomacy and military policy.Thatcher was asserting as late as February 1982 that: Our judgementis that the presence of the Royal Marines garrison is sufficientdeterrent against any possible aggression. While giving its actions nolegitimacy or excuse, its certainly arguable that the UK gave nodecisive signal to Argentina that an invasion would be met with amilitary response.It is interesting to speculate whether these matters and perceived

    errors of Thatchers government may have gained more currency andstimulated more widespread political debate had not PeterCarringtons resignation as foreign secretary provided Thatcher withmuch-needed political cover. With Carrington absorbing that blame,Thatcher was quickly able to move from blame to action. And shesoon began to display the characteristics in war that have become herdefining hallmarks. Firstly, she knew her mind, and resolved to bendothers to it. She intended to recapture the Islands by force and herindulgence of peace plans was just that an indulgence, allowing herto be seen to explore all other avenues while vigorously planning herpreferred one.

    Also, she was prepared to resign rather than yield, as she

    demonstrated when she told her ministers in May 1982: Gentlemen, Ihave spent the night thinking about this Peruvian [peace] initiative andI have to tell you that, if it is your decision to accept, then you will haveto find another prime minister. Increasingly, few doubted that shemeant it.Cecil Parkinson recalls one of the first times the war cabinet met, andhow politicians reflected afterwards that the military had better be upto it. Later, the military told the politicians that it had been thinkingexactly the same of them. Yet mutual doubts evaporated, as AdmiralTerence Lewin later recalled: She was a decisive leader, which, ofcourse, is what the military want. We dont want somebody whovacillates, we want to be able to put the case to her, the requirements

    to her, and say this is how it is, this is the decision we want, we want itnow and we want it quickly and we dont want a wishy-washy decision,we want a clear-cut decision. She was magnificent in her support ofthe military.However, her public robustness later successfully characterised byher opponents as an absence of compassion and feeling oftenbelied her vulnerability. Speaking in 1990, Sir Michael Haversrecalled: [Admiral] Lewin would come in and give the bad newsstraight away. He said he was sorry, but the Sheffield had been sunk.That was one of the occasions when she would put her head downand stare at the table and I felt had really withdrawn herself from thewar cabinet, for about a minute. Then shed shake herself and comeback in again, tears running down her face.Thatcher herself remembers the intensity with which she lived theperiod: You were thinking every moment of the day about it. It was atthe back of your mind no matter what else you were doing. You werethinking of what was happening down there and the decisions that hadto be taken. When the telephone went or one of the duty clerks cameup with a piece of paper in his hand, you always braced yourself asthe thought raced through your mind, is this bad news?Thatchers fear of bad news ultimately gave way to the news ofvictory, which helped secure her reputation for the rest of herpremiership and beyond. In the South Atlantic she did not justvanquish an Argentina invasion; she saw herself as vanquishing so

    much more: the spirit of decline, the lingering humiliation of Suez, thedecline of Britain and the restoration of its role in the world. TheFalklands conflict was vital to Thatchers mission for her country, andit gave her domestic programme an added zeal. Indeed, she often tiedthe two together in speaking of the Falklands victory. Her post-warcomments were characteristic: We have ceased to be a nation inretreat. We have instead a newfound confidence born in theeconomic battles at home and tested and found true 8,000 milesaway. And so today, we can rejoice at our success in the Falklandsand take pride in the achievement of the men and women of our taskforce. But we do so, not as some flickering of a flame which must soonbe dead. No, we rejoice that Britain has rekindled that spirit which hasfired her for generations past and which today has begun to burn as

    brightly as before. Britain found herself again in the South Atlantic andwill not look back from the victory she has won.So as we prepare to remember the events of 30 years ago, whatlessons remain for us today? Perhaps most important is that the

    Argentine invasion was made more likely with the looming anniversaryof 150 years of British rule over the Falklands. Anniversaries arepotent. Secondly, just as Thatcher could not depend on PresidentReagan, so, not least given recent US statements on the subject, canCameron depend on President Obama for any support. But perhapsmost importantly, for all the talk of the rights of self-determination,legal rights, international law and UN charters, what saved theFalkland Islanders was the unbreakable political will of a single British

    PM to be on their side. These events once more show why history andbiography are so utterly bound together.

    And perhaps it is worth busting one important myth. The FalklandsFactor has gone down in history as being the decisive factor in whythis unpopular prime minister went on to win a landslide majority in1983. Yet objective analysis of the polls of the time shows that supporthad begun to shift decisively in the Conservatives direction wellbefore the conflict, and was tied to rising living standards.So, what then of some real myths that remain intact? As someoneprivileged to see Lady Thatcher regularly to this day, there are twoperiods of her time in Downing Street that she remembers well. One

    was the Brighton bomb, which she survived. The other was theFalklands conflict, which she lived with an intensity she says shenever experienced before or since. It and how it changed her came to define her.Enoch Powell answered the question he had posed on the cusp ofwar: It shows that the substance under test consists of ferrous metalof the highest quality. It is of exceptional tensile strength, resistant towear and tear, and may be used with advantage for all nationalpurposes.From the victory in south Atlantic, in a very real sense, the Iron Ladyherself truly emerged and Thatcherism became real. For that reasonalone it deserves its place in history.

    Three ways to contact Conor Burns MP:

    By Phone: 020 7219 7021

    By email: [email protected]

    By post: Conor Burns MPHouse of CommonsLondon SW1A 0AA

    www.conorburns.com

    More news from Conor Burns MP, Conservative Member ofParliament for Bournemouth West, coming soon

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