| Anne Milton MP | |
|---|---|
| Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Public Health | |
| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office 11 May 2010 |
|
| Prime Minister | David Cameron |
| Preceded by | Gillian Merron (Minister of State) |
| Member of Parliament for Guildford |
|
| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office 5 May 2005 |
|
| Preceded by | Sue Doughty |
| Majority | 7,782 (14.0%) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 3 November 1955 Cuckfield, West Sussex, England |
| Nationality | English |
| Political party | Conservative |
| Spouse(s) | (1) Neil Milton 1979 (div.) (2) Graham Henderson 2000 |
| Children | Four |
| Alma mater | Haywards Heath Grammar School |
| Occupation | Minister of State for Health |
| Profession | Politician |
Anne Frances Milton (née Turner; born 3 November 1955) is a British Conservative Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Guildford since 2005. After service on the Health Select Committee, in November 2006 she was appointed Shadow Minister for Tourism.[1] In July 2007 she was appointed Shadow Health Minister.[2] She is currently parliamentary under-secretary of state for health as part of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government.[3]
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Milton was educated at Haywards Heath Grammar School (became Haywards Heath Sixth Form College in 1980, then Central Sussex College Sixth Form Campus in 2005) on Harlands Road in West Sussex. She married Neil Milton in 1979 in Haywards Heath, whom she later divorced. She trained as a nurse at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London and worked for the NHS for 25 years, as a district nurse and for people requiring palliative care. Her current husband, Dr Graham Henderson, whom she married in February 2000 in Surrey, also works in the NHS in the field of community medicine, and is Director of Public Health for the East Surrey PCT. She has four children, including a son born in July 1987 and a daughter born in August 1993.
Milton was a councillor in the Borough of Reigate and Banstead 1999–2004 and led the Conservative Group on the council. She was a member of the South East England Regional Assembly and Vice Chairman of the Conservative Medical Society. She applied to go on the Conservative Party's list of Parliamentary candidates in 1999, and was rated highly by the party. In the selection for Bexhill and Battle in August 2000 and at Bridgwater, she was among the three finalists but lost out narrowly and did not find another seat for the 2001 general election.
In 2002, Milton was selected for Guildford, a seat which the Conservatives had unexpectedly lost in 2001 to the Liberal Democrats. This was one of the first selections to be made and Milton stood out not only because few women had been selected. Her connection to health care, an area in which the Conservatives felt weak, and her lack of interest in issues such as British membership of the European Union and asylum-seekers, meant that she was thought of as a member of the modernising wing of the Conservative Party.
Following Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith's 2003 conference speech, Milton was interviewed in the Sunday Herald newspaper published in Glasgow. She stated that the priority she heard from the people of Guildford was crime, but lamented the poor press reaction to Duncan Smith's speech. After Duncan Smith was defeated in a vote of confidence among Conservative MPs, she immediately backed Michael Howard as the new leader; following his election, she played host to his wife Sandra on a campaign trip to Guildford.
There was a good deal of interest in the result at Guildford in the 2005 general election, prompted not only by the fact that the seat was highly marginal but also by the relatively rare phenomenon of two female candidates from major parties contesting a seat.[4] Milton highlighted Conservative plans to abolish regional planning bodies and reduce the amount of new housing built in the area, especially on green field sites. The then sitting Liberal Democrat MP Sue Doughty highlighted the fact that Milton lived outside the constituency, in Reigate, prompting Milton to respond, "It isn't in Tierra del Fuego!". Milton won by just 347 votes, after two recounts.
Once in Parliament, she was appointed to the Health Select Committee, serving until December 2006, following her appointment as Shadow Minister for Tourism. She announced her backing for David Cameron in the Conservative Party leadership election on 11 October 2005, becoming the 29th Conservative MP to support him. She offered herself as a candidate for the 1922 Committee executive in January 2006 but was not elected.
In February 2006, Milton was among a minority of Conservative MPs to oppose exceptions for private clubs from the proposed Smoking ban in England.[5] Milton had previously announced her opposition to a partial ban, stating it was "the worst possible solution".[6] In summer 2007 David Cameron appointed her Shadow Minister for Health. Milton emerged well from the 2009 MPs expenses scandal, being deemed a Daily Telegraph "saint" for not claiming any money for her second home despite her constituency being 30 miles from Westminster.[7]
Milton retained her seat in the 2010 general election, increasing her majority to 14 per cent.
In July 2010, Milton suggested that doctors should describe obese patients as 'fat' to encourage them to take responsibility for their condition. This was criticised by campaigners who pointed out that a clinical definition was being replaced with a subjective, pejorative term.[8]
In August 2010, Milton, in a letter to Scottish Public Health Minister Shona Robison, discussed the idea of withdrawing the scheme which gives free milk to the under-fives. Any idea that the move was policy, itself reminiscent of Margaret Thatcher's withdrawing of milk from 7 to 11 year olds in 1971, was quickly quashed by Number 10; with Prime Minister David Cameron stating that he "did not like" the idea of removing milk from children.
Anne Milton, along with other political representatives in Guildford, has persistently pledged her support for Guildford City Football Club but has come under fire for failing to fulfil promises to help the club find a suitable site to build a permanent ground in the borough.[9]
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| Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Sue Doughty |
Member of Parliament for Guildford 2005–present |
Incumbent |
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