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[[Category:Labour Members of Parliament]]
[[Category:Labour Members of Parliament]]


{{Infobox MP

|name = Conor McGinn
|name = Conor McGinn
| honorific-suffix = {{Post-nominals|country=GBR|size=100%|MP}}
| honorific-suffix = {{Post-nominals|country=GBR|size=100%|MP}}

Revision as of 11:09, 7 June 2018


Conor McGinn
MP
Member of Parliament
for St Helens North
Assumed office
8 May 2015
Preceded by David Watts
Majority 18,406 (36.6%)
Personal details
Born (1984-07-31) 31 July 1984 (age 39)
Newry, Northern Ireland
Citizenship Irish; British[1]
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Kate Groucutt
Children One son and one daughter
Alma mater London Metropolitan University
Website www.conormcginn.co.uk

Conor Patrick McGinn (born 31 July 1984 in Camlough) is a British Labour Party politician. At the 2015 general election, he became the Member of Parliament (MP) for St Helens North.

Early life

McGinn was born in Camlough, near Newry, County Armagh, Northern Ireland,[2] and brought up in the nearby village of Bessbrook. The village was highly militarised during The Troubles.[3] His mother was an NHS clerical officer, and his father was a Sinn Féin councillor.[3][4]

McGinn went to St Paul's High School, Bessbrook.[5] Before going to university, he worked for the African National Congress in South Africa on a fellowship for two months.[4] He studied at Goldsmiths, University of London, but did not initially complete his degree, remaining in London working for a mental health charity for Irish immigrants, Immigrant Counselling and Psychotherapy,[5] and later for the Irish Council for Prisoners Overseas.[3][6] He later completed his history, politics and Irish studies degree part-time at London Metropolitan University.[6][4]

Political career

McGinn was chair of the Young Fabians from 2006 to 2007, and has been vice-chair of Young Labour.[6] He stood to be a councillor on Islington London Borough Council in 2006 and 2010 without success.[6][7] He has been on the executive of the Fabian Society and until 2012 was chair of the Labour Party Irish Society.[6] In 2011 he represented the socialist societies on the Labour Party National Executive Committee.[6][8]

He worked as a public affairs and government relations consultant,[6][8] before becoming an advisor to shadow Northern Ireland Secretary Vernon Coaker in 2011, and continued to work for Coaker when he became shadow defence secretary.[8][9]

Post election he was appointed to the Defence Select Committee and as an Opposition Whip.

McGinn was briefly a communist in his youth, but is now regarded as being on the right of the Labour Party.[3] McGinn is listed as a Parliamentary supporter of both the Labour Friends of Israel and Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East. He made an visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories in 2014. He supports a two-state solution. [10] McGinn did not support Jeremy Corbyn’s bid for the leadership of the Labour Party in 2015, instead supporting fellow North West MP Andy Burnham.[11][12][13] McGinn nominated Owen Smith in the 2016 leadership election.[14]

In 2016 he was involved in a Twitter spat, which became a media story, with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, in which McGinn claimed that Corbyn "said that he intended to ring my father", a former Sinn Féin councillor.[15][16] Corbyn's spokesman said the claim was "untrue".[17] The Guardian later reported that McGinn was reporting what other whips had told him, possibly sourced from a Corbyn staff member, rather than directly from Corbyn.[18]

Following the October 2016 Shadow Cabinet reshuffle and the replacement of Dame Rosie Winterton as Chief Whip, McGinn resigned as a whip.[19]