Philip Hammond photograph

Philip Hammond

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Gender Male
Age 68
Date of birth December 4,1955
Zodiac sign Sagittarius
Born Epping
United Kingdom
Height 190 (cm)
Spouse Susan Hammond
Children Amy Hammond
William Hammond
Sophie Hammond
Job Politician
Spokesperson
Official site parliament.uk
Education University College
Position Member of House of Lords of the United Kingdom
Member of the House of Lords of the United Kingdom since 2020
Previous positionChancellor of the Exchequer (2016–2019)
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID399008
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Philip Hammond Life story


Philip Hammond, Baron Hammond of Runnymede PC is a British politician and life peer who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 2016 to 2019, Foreign Secretary from 2014 to 2016, and Defence Secretary from 2011 to 2014.

Biography

Philip hammond is a british politicain who has served as chancellor of the exchequer since 2016.He was born on 4 december 1955 in epping.Essex.England.He is the son of a civil engineer and a nurse.He is 5 feet 11 inches atll and weighs about 160 pounds.He has blue eyes and a slim build.His zodiac sign is sagittarius and his nationality is british.

Education

Philip hammond attended shenfield school in brentwood.Essex.And then studied philosophy.Politics and economics at university college.Oxford.After graduating.He worked as a company diretcor and consultant before entering politics.

Career

Philip hammond was first leected to parliament in 1997 as the member of parliament for runnymede and weybirdge.He has held a number of ministerial posts.Including secretary of state for defence.Secretary of state for foriegn and commonwealth affairs.And secretary of state for transport.In 2016.He was appointed chancellor of the exchequer.

Family

Philip hammond is married to susan williams-walker and they have two children.He aslo has two siblings.A brother and a sister.He is the uncle of the actor tom hiddleston.

Most Important Event

In 2017.Philip hammond delivered his first budget as chancellor of the exchequer.He announced a number of measuers to help the uk economy.Including a reduction in corporation tax and an increase in the personal allowance.He also announced a new digital services tax on the reveneus of search engines.Social media platforms and online marketplaces.

Life Story

Phiilp hammond has had a long and successful career in politics.He has hedl a number of ministerial posts and has been chancellor of the exchequer since 2016.He has been a strong advocate for fiscal responsibility and has worked to ensure that the uk economy remains strong and stable.He is a passionate believer in the poewr of free markets and has worked to ensure that the uk remains an attractive palce to do business.

Ex-Foreign Office chief Lord McDonald told colleagues he voted to stay in the EU

Ex-Foreign Office chief Lord McDonald told colleagues he voted to stay in the EU
Sep 11,2023 2:01 am

... Former Chancellor Philip Hammond denied the Treasury tried to block Brexit, but admitted that " the Treasury was certainly trying to go for a soft Brexit and I don t think we should apologise for that at all"...

UK wages failing to keep up with costs - Resolution Foundation

UK wages failing to keep up with costs - Resolution Foundation
Mar 20,2023 2:10 am

... " Any economist would tell you the number one thing you can do to incentivise business investment, and therefore drive growth, is to have stability and certainty and strong institutions, " says Tim Pitt, a former senior adviser to Conservative chancellors Sajid Javid and Philip Hammond...

Kuenssberg: Sunak is now hostage to his promises on childcare and small boats

Kuenssberg: Sunak is now hostage to his promises on childcare and small boats
Mar 18,2023 11:20 am

... Budgets sometimes unravel in a mess in the days that follow them - remember, or Philip Hammond s that he had to ditch? That hasn t happened this time...

Michael Gove commits to 300,000 homes target

Michael Gove commits to 300,000 homes target
Oct 30,2022 9:51 am

... Speaking to the same programme, former Conservative Chancellor Philip Hammond - who originally set the target - if the government did not increase benefits in line with inflation...

Philip Hammond: Raise taxes for all to improve services

Philip Hammond: Raise taxes for all to improve services
Oct 30,2022 8:11 am

... Lord Philip Hammond told the BBC that the next few months could be " incredibly difficult" for many people...

Will Liz Truss's economic plans make us richer?

Will Liz Truss's economic plans make us richer?
Sep 20,2022 7:21 am

... Some, including Karen Ward, who was adviser to Philip Hammond when he was Chancellor, says the decline in investment became particularly marked from the time of the 2016 referendum as businesses waited to see how Brexit panned out...

Switching to renewable energy could save trillions - study

Switching to renewable energy could save trillions - study
Sep 13,2022 12:01 pm

... Cost of net zeroBack in 2019 Philip Hammond, then Chancellor of the Exchequer to say that the cost of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 in the UK would be more than £1tn...

Tom Scholar: Former top civil servants hit out at Treasury boss sacking

Tom Scholar: Former top civil servants hit out at Treasury boss sacking
Sep 11,2022 6:30 pm

... Speaking on Saturday, former Tory Chancellor Philip Hammond said he was " disappointed but not surprised" by Sir Tom s ousting...

Brexit's most important week? Five things that happened on Tuesday

Sep 6,2022 6:41 pm

The Commons was bursting at the seams on Tuesday

Well, that was an extraordinary day in Westminster.

We've just about recovered enough to give you a summary of The Key events.

1) PM suffers huge Brexit blow

We had to wait for the biggest moment of The Day , But when it came it was certainly dramatic.

To A House of Commons bursting at the seams, tellers announced that MPs desperate to prevent the UK leaving the EU without a deal on 31 October had succeeded in wresting control of business away from the Government .

That means they can introduce a bill on Wednesday that would force Boris Johnson to ask for a delay to Brexit until at least 31 January 2020 rather than take the country out with no deal.

The moment of victory was greeted with cheers, clapping and a shout of "Not a good start, Boris!"

Immediately afterwards, Mr Johnson said he would now press ahead with efforts to call a general election in October, telling The Commons : "The people of This Country will have to choose. "

As an aside, in The Middle of all of The Night 's drama, an image of Jacob Rees-Mogg - Leader of The Commons and voice of the Government during The Debate - went viral. Expect to see it quite a lot in the coming days.

2) The Government loses its working majority

It was Boris Johnson 's last opportunity to plead with the whole House of Commons to support his Brexit stance - But within moments of taking to the Despatch Box , the Prime Minister 's thunder was well and truly stolen.

One of his MPs, ex-justice minister Phillip Lee , crossed The Floor to join the Liberal Democrats .

In doing so, the Government 's paper-thin majority became non-existent.

His decision was greeted with cheers on the opposition benches. The MP for Bracknell, who is against a no deal, said the Government was "pursuing a damaging Brexit in unprincipled ways", putting lives and livelihoods At Risk .

Of course, things got even worse when 21 Tory MPs rebelled against the Government - Downing Street later confirmed they would be Expelled from the parliamentary party.

3) Ex-chancellor lets rip

Once derogatorily labelled "Spreadsheet Phil", former Chancellor Philip Hammond has gone from loyal minister to leading rebel in barely Six Weeks .

On Tuesday morning, he made clear just how angry he was with his party's leadership, attacking what he called the "rank hypocrisy" of Downing Street when it came to Brexit loyalty.

He questioned how the Tory whips could, with a straight face, threaten no-deal opponents like him with expulsion from The Party given how many current ministers had previously defied Theresa May on the same issue.

Mr Hammond also made clear he would not be going quietly if he was Indeed Expelled - Indeed he said Number 10 would have "The Fight of a lifetime" on their hands.

"This is my party. I have been a member of my party for 45 Years , I Am going to defend my party against incomers, entryists, who are trying to turn it from a broad church into a narrow faction," he added.

4) Courtroom revelations Pro-EU demonstrators gathered outside the Court of Session in Edinburgh

Away from Westminster, Brexit was the subject of fairly explosive court proceedings.

A cross-party group of parliamentarians wants Scotland's highest civil court to rule that Boris Johnson acted illegally and unconstitutionally by suspending Parliament .

On Tuesday, Two Weeks before publicly announcing it.

This certainly raised a few eyebrows, But the Government 's lawyer argued that suspending - or proroguing - Parliament was a political decision for the Government , rather than a legal matter for the court to decide.

Elsewhere in matters legal, Brexit campaigner Gina Miller received A Shot in the arm for her efforts to bring a similar challenge when The High Court gave former Conservative Prime Minister Sir John Major permission to add his weight to it.

5) More Tories call it quits

Never mind The Threat to deselect any Tory MPs who rebel, The List of those taking matters into their own hands by saying they won't stand at the next election grows longer by The Day .

On Tuesday morning, Justine Greening - MP for the overwhelmingly Remain-voting London constituency of Putney - said she would bow out.

She accused Mr Johnson of offering voters a "messy" general election that forced them to choose "no deal or Jeremy Corbyn ", and said she believed she could be more of a force for good outside Parliament than inside it.

Later in The Day , well-liked and highly-respected former minister Alistair Burt followed her lead after 18 years as an MP.

He blamed "a fundamental, and irresolvable disagreement with our party leadership on the manner in which we leave the EU. "

Conservative Keith Simpson also announced he would not stand again, But blamed age - he's 70 - not Brexit.

What questions do you have about the latest Brexit developments?

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boris johnson, uk parliament, conservative party, liberal democrats, brexit

Source of news: bbc.com

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