Jonny Oates, Baron Oates
The Right Honourable The Lord Oates | |
---|---|
Official portrait, 2023 | |
Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 5 October 2015 Life Peerage | |
Personal details | |
Born | Jonathan Oates |
Political party | Liberal Democrats |
Spouse | David Hill [1] |
Occupation | Chief of Staff to Nick Clegg |
Jonathan Oates, Baron Oates (born 28 December 1969)[2] is a British Liberal Democrat politician and member of the House of Lords. A past chief of staff to the former deputy prime minister of the United Kingdom, Nick Clegg, he was previously the director of policy and communications at the Liberal Democrats.
Early life
Oates' father is the Reverend Canon John Oates, formerly rector of St Bride's Church on Fleet Street.[3]
Oates studied at Marlborough College and the University of Exeter.
Career
Oates began his career as an account manager at political and media relations firm Westminster Strategy. In 1994, he stood as a Liberal Democrat councillor for Grove ward in the Royal Borough of Kingston-upon-Thames. During his time as a councillor, he served as Deputy Leader, helped create a structure for giving power to local residents, and gained national exposure for proposing a conference motion on council control over the National Health Service.[4][5] Oates remained in local and national politics, serving as an election agent for Edward Davey, a winning candidate at the 1997 General Election.
In 1999, Oates took a position at the Westminster Foundation for Democracy where he was assigned to a role as a political and media adviser to the Inkatha Freedom Party in the South African Parliament, advising Home Affairs Minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Reverend Musa Zondi.
Oates returned to the UK in 2001 as a policy and communications co-ordinator at the Youth Justice Board, advising chairman Lord Warner. He also became an associate at Mark Bolland & Associates, the public affairs company set up by Deputy Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales, Mark Bolland. In 2004 Oates became a director at Bell Pottinger Public Affairs. He was later appointed as director of policy and communications for the Liberal Democrats and in 2009 was given the role of director of General Election communications for the 2010 General Election.[6]
After the formation of the coalition government, Oates was appointed deputy communications adviser to Prime Minister David Cameron and in August 2010 became Chief of Staff to Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.[7]
In 2010, Oates stood as a Liberal Democrat candidate for the safe Conservative seat of Coombe Hill on Kingston upon Thames Council and was rated by the Daily Telegraph in September 2010 as the fifth "most influential" Liberal Democrat.[8] He was created a life peer on 5 October 2015, taking the title Baron Oates, of Denby Grange in the County of West Yorkshire.[9]
Personal life
In 2006, Oates entered into a civil partnership with David Hill.[10]
References
- ^ Oates, Jonny (2020). I Never Promised You A Rose Garden. Biteback Publishing. ISBN 9781785905728.
- ^ "Biography for Lord Oates". MyParliament. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
- ^ "John Oates | Diocese of London". Diocese of London. Archived from the original on 31 May 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
- ^ Timmins, Nicholas (21 September 1995). "Health vote is branded 'mad' by MP". The Independent. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
- ^ "Revolt Gives Councillors Seats on NHS Bodies", The Guardian, p8, 21 September 1995
- ^ Watt, Nicholas (5 April 2010). "Election 2010: 10 key figures in each main party". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
- ^ "London's 1000 most influential people 2010: Politics". The Evening Standard. 26 November 2010. Archived from the original on 23 January 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
- ^ "Top 50 most influential Liberal Democrats: 25-1". The Daily Telegraph. 21 September 2010. Archived from the original on 24 September 2010. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
- ^ "notice 2413339". The London Gazette.
- ^ Oates, Baron, (Jonathan Oates). Oxford University Press. 1 December 2018. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U254174. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
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Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by | Gentlemen Baron Oates | Followed by |
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- Brian Abel-Smith
- Joe Haines
- John Harris
- Brian Abel-Smith
- Joe Haines
- Jack Straw
- Roger Liddle
- Tom McCaffrey
- Jack Straw
- Guy Black
- Chris Butler
- Michael Dobbs
- Andrew Dunlop
- Brian Griffiths
- Jonathan Hill
- John Hoskyns
- Bernard Ingham
- Henry James
- Tony Kerpel
- Oliver Letwin
- Peter Levene
- David Lidington
- Warwick Lightfoot
- Ferdinand Mount
- The Lord Norton
- Michael Palliser
- Jack Peel
- John Redwood
- Norman Stone
- Sir Cyril Taylor
- Anthony Teasdale
- Nicholas True
- Alan Walters
- David Willetts
- John Whittingdale
- David Wolfson
- John Bercow
- Norman Blackwell
- Jonathan Caine
- David Cameron
- Judith Chaplin
- Greg Clark
- Sir Peter de la Billière
- Daniel Finkelstein
- Jonathan Hill
- Sarah Hogg
- Tony Kerpel
- Warwick Lightfoot
- Christopher Meyer
- Gus O'Donnell
- George Osborne
- Patrick Rock
- David Ruffley
- Sir Cyril Taylor
- Anthony Teasdale
- Nicholas True
- Gerald Warner
- Peter Wyman
- Andrew Adonis
- Tim Allan
- Jonathan Ashworth
- Ed Balls
- Hilary Benn
- David Bennett
- Tom Bentley
- Andy Burnham
- Alastair Campbell
- Matt Cavanagh
- Paul Corrigan
- Patrick Diamond
- Jo Dipple
- Michael Dugher
- Stephen Hale
- The Lord Hart of Chilton
- David Hill
- Anji Hunter
- Tom Kelly
- Liz Kendall
- Peter Kyle
- Sophie Linden
- Spencer Livermore
- Liz Lloyd
- Blair McDougall
- Pat McFadden
- John McTernan
- David Miliband
- Ed Miliband
- Jo Moore
- Sally Morgan
- Geoff Mulgan
- Martin Narey
- Susan Nye
- Jonathan Powell
- Lance Price
- James Purnell
- Emma Reynolds
- Ed Richards
- Conor Ryan
- Godric Smith
- Owen Smith
- Simon Stevens
- Sir Cyril Taylor
- Matthew Taylor
- Shriti Vadera
- Charlie Whelan
- Sam White
- David Whitton
- Jonathan Ashworth
- Polly Billington
- Nick Butler
- Stephen Carter
- Matt Cavanagh
- Dan Corry
- Tony Danker
- Jo Dipple
- Michael Dugher
- Michael Ellam
- Ayesha Hazarika
- Jeremy Heywood
- Joe Irvin
- Simon Lewis
- Blair McDougall
- Damian McBride
- John McTernan
- David Muir
- Martin Narey
- Maajid Nawaz
- Susan Nye
- Tom Scholar
- Geoffrey Spence
- Sam White
- Stewart Wood
- Shaun Bailey
- Gabby Bertin
- Helen Bower
- Jonathan Caine
- Camilla Cavendish
- Ryan Coetzee
- Andy Coulson
- Dominic Cummings
- Oliver Dowden
- Catherine Fall
- Simone Finn
- Sam Freedman
- Julian Glover
- Julia Goldsworthy
- Jean-Christophe Gray
- Rupert Harrison
- Arminka Helic
- Nick Hillman
- Steve Hilton
- Richard Holden
- Jo Johnson
- Daniel Korski
- Edward Llewellyn
- Poppy Mitchell-Rose
- Martin Narey
- Henry Newman
- Jonny Oates
- Neil O'Brien
- James O'Shaughnessy
- Craig Oliver
- Stephen Parkinson
- Richard Reeves
- Willie Rennie
- Patrick Rock
- Elizabeth Sanderson
- Nick Seddon
- Salma Shah
- Eleanor Shawcross
- Sarah Southern
- Philippa Stroud
- Liz Sugg
- Alison Suttie
- Carrie Symonds
- Nick Timothy
- James Wild
- Graeme Wilson
- Sean Worth
- Helen Bower
- Jonathan, The Lord Caine
- Nick de Bois
- David Frost
- Robbie Gibb
- Paul Harrison
- Fiona Hill
- Richard Holden
- Paul Holmes
- Charlotte Ivers
- Stewart Jackson
- James Kent
- Danny Kruger
- Lizzie Loudon
- Anthony Mangnall
- James Marshall
- Jamie Njoku-Goodwin
- Stephen Parkinson
- Joanna Penn
- Katie Perrior
- John, The Lord Randall of Uxbridge
- Elizabeth Sanderson
- Salma Shah
- Carrie Symonds
- Will Tanner
- Nick Timothy
- Will Walden
- James Wild
- Craig Williams
- Steve Barclay
- John Bew
- Liam Booth-Smith
- Lee Cain
- David Canzini
- Peter Cardwell
- Henry Cook
- Dominic Cummings
- Nikki da Costa
- Jack Doyle
- Simone, The Baroness Finn
- Benjamin Gascoigne
- Andrew Griffith
- Guto Harri
- Andrew Hood
- Simon Jupp
- Ross Kempsell
- Katie Lam
- Oliver Lewis
- Edward Lister
- Munira Mirza
- Tim Montgomerie
- Henry Newman
- Jamie Njoku-Goodwin
- Ed Oldfield
- Charlotte Owen
- Rob Oxley
- Dan Rosenfield
- James Slack
- Allegra Stratton
- Cleo Watson
- Shelley Williams-Walker
- John Bew
- David Canzini
- Mark Fullbrook
- Ross Kempsell
- Ruth Porter
- Adam Jones
- Charlotte Owen
- Matthew Sinclair
- Reuben Solomon
- John Bew
- Liam Booth-Smith
- Nerissa Chesterfield
- Amber de Botton
- James Forsyth
- Andrew Hood
- Henry Newman
- Eleanor Shawcross-Wolfson
- Will Tanner