Doug Hoyle


Eric Douglas Harvey Hoyle, Baron Hoyle JP is a British politician and life peer who was chair of the Parliamentary Labour Party from 1992 until 1997 and a lord-in-waiting from 1997 to 1999. A member of the Labour Party, he was Member of Parliament for Nelson and Colne from 1974 to 1979 and Warrington North from 1981 to 1997.

Parliamentary career

Hoyle first stood for Parliament at Clitheroe in 1964, but came second. In 1970, he first fought Nelson and Colne, and was defeated by the Conservative incumbent David Waddington by 1,410 votes. He fought the seat again in February 1974, and reduced Waddington's margin to 177. He was finally elected at the general election of October 1974 for Nelson and Colne by 669 votes.
Hoyle narrowly lost his seat at the general election of 1979, but returned to Parliament in 1981 when he saw off a strong challenge from Roy Jenkins in a traditional safe Labour seat, in a notable by election in Warrington when enthusiasm for the newly created Social Democratic Party was at its peak. Constituency boundaries were redrawn for the general election of 1983.

House of Lords

Hoyle stepped down at the general election of 1997, and on 14 May 1997, he was created a life peer as Baron Hoyle, of Warrington in the County of Cheshire.

Other interests

Lord Hoyle served as chairman of Warrington Wolves Rugby League Club from 1999 to 2009. He has also been a non executive director of the major local employer Debt Free Direct. Already having received the Freedom of Gibraltar in 2004, he was awarded the Gibraltar Medallion of Honour, in March 2010, for being a 'supporter of Gibraltar and its people'.
He received the Freedom of the Borough of Warrington on 11 November 2005.
In November 2010, Lord Hoyle was awarded the honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of Chester for his 'outstanding contribution to the Borough of Warrington'.

Family

His son, Lindsay Hoyle, is the Member of Parliament for Chorley and Speaker of the House of Commons.