Chris White (politician)


Christopher Mark Francis White is a British Conservative Party politician and was the Member of Parliament for Warwick and Leamington from 2010 to 2017. He lost the seat at the 2017 general election. White is currently Director of the Institute for Industrial Strategy at King's College London.

Education

White was educated at the state comprehensive St. Gregory's Catholic School, Tunbridge Wells, followed by the University of Manchester, where he obtained a BEng in Engineering, and an MBA from the University of Bath.

Career

White contested Birmingham Hall Green in the 2001 general election, then Warwick and Leamington in the 2005 general election. In May 2008 he was elected to Warwick District Council. In the 2010 general election, he received 20,876 votes to Labour's James Plaskitt's 17,363 votes, a margin of 3,513 votes. White had a notional swing of 8.8%. He held the seat in the 2015 general election with an increased vote of 24,249 and 47.9% of the vote, leading to a majority of 6,606 votes over Labour's Lynnette Kelly.
He is Vice-Chair of cross-party UK think tank Policy Connect and a patron of the Leamington Spa-based peacebuilding charity Cord.
White proposed the Public Services Act 2012 in 2010 as a private member's bill, aiming to ensure that public sector procurement should take into account wider value to the community provided by suppliers. The bill, which purported to help social enterprises win more public services contracts, was supported by the government and became law in 2013 He was subsequently named as a "Social Value Ambassador" by the government, but was dismissed from the role four months later following rebelling on a vote to intervene militarily in Syria.
White was opposed to Brexit prior to the 2016 referendum.
In February 2016 he was elected chair of the Committees on Arms Export Controls.
In the 2017 general election he lost the seat to the Labour candidate Matt Western.
In May 2018, White was announced as the inaugural Director of the Institute for Industrial Strategy at King's College London.