The North West is Chris Davies's region. He was born in Lancashire, grew up in Cheshire, has served as a councillor on Merseyside and as an MP in Greater Manchester. As a competitive fell runner he claims Cumbria as his spiritual home!
Prior to his 1999 election to the European Parliament he was a marketing consultant, and he ran his own business for much of the previous 15 years. He served for two years (1995-97) as Member of Parliament for the Littleborough and Saddleworth constituency (Oldham/Rochdale), represented Lees ward on Oldham MBC from 1994-98. He is a former Chairman of the Housing Committee on Liverpool City Council, and represented the city centre/Toxteth ward of Abercromby from 1980-84.
Since 1979 he has been married to Carol, a school teacher, who at that time was already a councillor in Liverpool having beaten him to become the first of the pair to win an election. They have a daughter named Kate (born 1991), and live in Greenfield, Saddleworth (Oldham MBC) where urban Greater Manchester meets the South Pennine hills.
Chris Davies has been the Liberal Democrat MEP for the North West since 1999, and was re-elected along with the party's second North West MEP, Sajjad Karim, in the 2004 European Parliament elections.
In June 2004 Chris was elected leader of the British Liberal Democrat MEPs - a position he held until May 2006.
He serves also as the Liberal Democrat spokesman on the environment and public health in the European Parliament.
Chris joined the Liberal Party in 1974 and his first voluntary political job was to clear out the toilets in the derelict shop leased by the local party as a general election HQ. Putting academic work first while at Cambridge, he became a true political activist from almost the moment he arrived in Canterbury, leaving time only first to meet Carol before setting up the university Liberal association. This doomed his economic history Ph.D. which remains unfinished in his attic.
In 1977 the two moved to Liverpool (Carol's home city) where Chris set about trying to get elected as a Liberal in the Toxteth/city centre Abercromby ward, then part of the safest Labour constituency in England. Until that time the Liberals traditionally came fourth behind the Communists. He won the seat on his third attempt in 1980.
Liberals elsewhere in Liverpool were already well established, and the party was in minority control of the city council from 1980 to 1983. As chairman of housing (1981-2 acting, 1982-3 full) Chris developed a housing co-operative programme to give people who could never afford to buy a house the chance to control their own homes, introduced the largest private sector housing renewal programme in the country, and also the largest inner city build-for-sale programme in the country.
The Liberals lost control of Liverpool in 1983. Chris worked in London for a couple of years, commuting by train each week, and started looking for a parliamentary seat to contest. His criteria were that it had to be in the North West, had to have hills nearby, had to be within daily commuting distance of Liverpool, and had to have at least an outside chance of being won by a Liberal.
He was selected as parliamentary candidate for Littleborough and Saddleworth in 1985. Although the party locally had come 2nd with 31% of the votes in the 1983 general election, in practice it hardly existed on the ground and held just 4 of the 24 council seats. Chris took a long term lead in building up the organisation and promoting the Liberals. Although he was personally unsuccessful in the 1987 and 1992 elections, by the time of the by-election the party held 20 of the 24 council seats and he had moved the constituency up from 73rd to 13th place on the Liberal Democrats' list of winnable seats.
The Littleborough and Saddleworth by-election in July 1995, following the death of sitting Tory MP Geoffrey Dickens, proved a crucial battle between the forces of 'New Labour' (Peter Mandelson was campaign manager) and Liberal Democrats in an area where the party had grown strong on the ground. Until that time New Labour appeared to be sweeping all before them. Mandelson branded Chris as the candidate who was 'High on Taxes' (he wanted to spend more on education) and 'Soft on Drugs' (he wanted a Royal Commission to review existing laws). The Liberal Democrats' victory gave the party much enhanced national credibility and proved that where it was it was strong on the ground it was perfectly capable of beating the Conservatives. It also set the scene for discussions between Tony Blair and Paddy Ashdown about the 'project' for mutual cooperation.
Chris was Member of Parliament for less than two years. He spoke in the House on some 30 occasions, introduced four pieces of legislation (which, in accord with normal Commons' procedures, disappeared without trace), and asked hundreds of questions. Although he is pleased that with a Government majority reduced to single figures his vote actually mattered, and he is pleased to have stood up for principles important to him, he doesn't believe that he made any difference at all to the legislative agenda of the time.
Incidentally, in 1996 he voted against awarding himself an increase in salary, and subsequently arranged that not a penny of the increase was paid into his pocket.
The Littleborough and Saddleworth seat disappeared through boundary changes in 1997. Chris fought the new Oldham East constituency but failed to win by a margin of 3,000 votes.
Within weeks of the general election it was announced that the next European Parliament elections would be contested on a regional basis with MEPs elected through a voting method ensuring proportional representation. This provided Chris with the opportunity to represent the entire North West, and Liberal Democrat party members selected him to be their lead candidate the following year.