Iain Stewart (politician)


Iain Aitken Stewart is a British Conservative Party politician and former accountant. He was first elected as the Member of Parliament for Milton Keynes South at the 2010 general election.

Early life

Stewart was born on 18 September 1972 in Scotland and grew up in Hamilton. He was privately educated at Hutchesons' Grammar School and studied politics at the University of Exeter before training as an accountant with Coopers & Lybrand in Milton Keynes between 1993 and 1994.
Stewart then worked for the Scottish Conservative Party between 1994 and 2006, first as Head of Research, then Deputy Director and finally as Director between 2001 and 2006. He then worked as an associate for executive recruitment company Odgers Berndtson until his election in 2010.

Political career

Stewart stood unsuccessfully as the Conservative Party candidate in the 1999 Scottish Parliament election, for the Glasgow Rutherglen constituency, finishing fourth. Returning to Milton Keynes, he was selected to fight Milton Keynes South West at the 2001 general election, losing to incumbent Phyllis Starkey by 6,978 votes. Running again at the 2005 election, he lost to Starkey by 4,010 votes.
He successfully stood against Starkey for the redrawn Milton Keynes South constituency in the 2010 general election, winning by 5,201 votes. In the 2015 general election, he was re-elected with an increased vote of 27,601 and majority of 8,672. Stewart was a member of Shenley Brook End parish council between 2005 and 2011.
In 2012, The Daily Telegraph reported that Stewart was renting a flat from his constituency caseworker on expenses. Stewart responded that there was no conflict of interest in renting from his staff member as the flat is let "on a proper legal contract" and fully approved by the expenses watchdog.
Transport, constitutional affairs and education are listed amongst his main political interests. He was a member of the Transport Select Committee of the House of Commons from 2010 to 2013, and was the longest-serving Conservative Member of that Committee. In 2011 he travelled, with various members of the transport committee, around Europe studying various rail links and rail systems. In the October 2013 Ministerial reshuffle, he was appointed as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Rt Hon Patrick McLoughlin MP, Secretary of State for Transport.
Following the 2015 election, he moved to become PPS to David Mundell, Secretary of State for Scotland, to assist with the Scotland Bill. He was also re-elected to the Transport Select Committee.
In July 2016 he was appointed as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Liam Fox, Secretary of State for the Department for International Trade. He held this post until the 2017 general election.
In June 2017, Stewart was returned as the MP for Milton Keynes South with a majority of 1,725 over Labour candidate Hannah O'Neill. He retained his place on the Transport Committee in September 2017.
In December 2017, following the publication of the National Infrastructure Commission's report on the Oxford-Milton Keynes-Cambridge corridor, he was appointed as the Government's official champion for the project.
In July 2018, he was asked by the Prime Minister to join the Government and he became an Assistant Whip in the Government Whips Office.
In June 2020, he was appointed Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Scotland.

Personal life

He is openly gay and was formerly Deputy chairman of LGBTory, the Conservative LGBT Group. He is now a Patron of the group. In his maiden speech to the house, on 25 June 2010, he paid tribute to Alan Turing, and Gordon Brown's official apology for the state's persecution of Turing. He has spoken about how he was bullied at school for being gay and on the impact of homophobic bullying in schools. He was shortlisted for the Stonewall 'Politician of the Year' 2012.