Anthony Browne

Journalist

Popular As Anthony Browne (politician)

Birthday January 19, 1967

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England

Age 57 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#49012 Most Popular

1967

Anthony Howe Browne (born 19 January 1967) is a British politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for South Cambridgeshire since the 2019 general election.

He has served as Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Decarbonisation and Technology in November 2023.

He is a member of the Conservative Party.

Browne was previously a journalist at The Times, BBC and The Observer; an adviser to Boris Johnson when he was Mayor of London; chief executive of the British Bankers' Association and chairman of the UK Government's Regulatory Policy Committee.

He sat on the Boards of the International Banking Federation, the European Banking Federation and TheCityUK, and a range of financial technology companies.

As an MP, he has served as Chairman of the Regulatory Policy Committee and as the first Prime Minister’s Anti-Fraud Champion.

Browne was born in Mill Road Maternity Hospital in Cambridge to parents Patrick and Gerd Browne.

1988

He went to Fowlmere Primary School, fee-paying independent sector The Perse School and state sector Hills Road Sixth Form College in Cambridge, and then studied mathematics at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, receiving a BA (Hons) in 1988.

Browne began his career as a journalist.

1993

He worked for the BBC as a researcher for The Money Programme from 1993 to 1994, before becoming a broadcast journalist at Business Breakfast from 1994 to 1995.

He was business reporter and economics correspondent for the BBC (1993–1998); economics correspondent, health editor and environment correspondent for The Observer newspaper (1998–2002); and environment editor, Europe correspondent, and chief political correspondent for The Times (2002–2007).

When Europe correspondent for The Times, he covered the enlargement of the EU to Eastern Europe, and the appointment of Peter Mandelson as European Commissioner.

He also reported for The Times from Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Browne was a columnist for City AM and one of the founding columnists of the website ConservativeHome.

1999

As Environment Editor of the Observer, Browne broke the exclusive that 1999 was the hottest year of the second millennium.

2000

Labour called for Boris Johnson to reject him as a candidate after accusing him of displaying "disgusting racism" in his journalism in the early 2000s.

2001

Browne was in New York on 11 September 2001, and covered the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers for The Guardian and its sister paper, The Observer.

2003

Browne wrote in 2003 that immigration from Africa had become the main cause of new HIV infections in the UK.

In an article the Spectator he suggested that the government's policy of mass migration would claim lives due to "letting in too many germs" and that reducing immigration would have more of an impact on public health than recommending that people use condoms.

Browne was Director of Policy Exchange, the largest centre-right think tank in the UK, where he succeeded the founding director Nick Boles.

He ran Policy Exchange for eighteen months, during which time it doubled in size, but attracted criticism that it came too close to Conservative leader David Cameron.

Browne has written and contributed to various publications, including a book on whether Britain should join the European single currency, which entered the Sunday Times best-seller list; a pamphlet published by Civitas: The Institute for the Study of Civil Society discussing mass immigration which won Prospect magazine's think tank publication of the year award in 2003; and a Joseph Rowntree Foundation book on social evils; and a report for the think tank Open Europe supporting subsidiarity in the EU.

2008

Browne was Policy Director for Economic Development for Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, from 2008 to 2011.

He was in charge of economic and business policy for London, sitting on the board of the London Development Agency, as an observer on the London Skills and Employment Board, and TheCityUK, which represents UK financial services.

He was also chairman of the Mayor's Digital Advisory Board.

2011

Browne was the manifesto director for Boris Johnson's successful re-election campaign from 2011 to 2012.

2012

On 1 September 2012, he left Morgan Stanley to become chief executive of the British Bankers' Association, where he remained until 2017.

Browne was appointed to the BBA in June 2012, two weeks before the LIBOR scandal broke.

Marcus Agius, the chairman of the BBA who appointed Browne, promptly resigned.

2019

On 20 July 2019, Browne was announced as the Conservative parliamentary candidate for South Cambridgeshire.

In an interview with the Cambridge Independent on 24 July 2019 to discuss his selection, Browne sought to distance himself from the views he had expressed as a journalist, when he claimed in The Spectator that third world immigrants bring germs into the country.

When asked about the statements, he said "I went through a phase as a young journalist trying to get attention and it is not language I would use now. I regret saying it."

Browne was elected as member for South Cambridgeshire in December 2019 with a majority of 2,904.

2020

He was later elected as a member of the Treasury Select Committee and Chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Group of the Environment in 2020 and serves as a member of the a Public Accounts Commission.

In September 2022, he was appointed as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Department for Transport..

Following the publication of the UK Government’s Fraud Strategy in May 2023, Browne was appointed as the first Prime Minister’s Anti-Fraud Champion.

As part of the November 2023 British cabinet reshuffle, Browne was appointed as Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Roads and Local Transport on November 13, 2023.

His brief includes responsibility for electric cars, autonomous vehicles, active travel, space, sustainable aviation, maritime decarbonisation.

In March 2023, he was chosen as the Conservative Party Candidate for the new constituency of St Neots and Mid Cambridgeshire in the next general election and Chris Carter-Chapman will replace him as the Conservative PPC for South Cambridgeshire, who was selected in June 2023.

After working for Boris Johnson, Browne became Morgan Stanley's head of government relations for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.