The Lord Hacking | |
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Member of the House of Lords | |
as a hereditary peer 7 November 1971 – 11 November 1999 | |
Preceded by | The 2nd Baron Hacking |
Succeeded by | Seat abolished |
as an elected hereditary peer 19 November 2021 | |
By-election | 19 November 2021 |
Preceded by | The 3rd Viscount Simon |
Personal details | |
Born | 17 April 1938 |
Political party | Labour (1998-2003, since 2021) Crossbench (2009-2014) Conservative (until 1998) |
Alma mater | Clare College, Cambridge Inns of Court School of Law |
David Hacking, 3rd Baron Hacking (born 17 April 1938), is a British arbitrator, barrister and hereditary peer.[1]
Education and military career
He was educated at Aldro preparatory school, Charterhouse and Clare College, Cambridge, from where he graduated BA in 1961; he received his MA in 1968. His professional education was at the Inns of Court School of Law. He served in the Royal Naval Reserve from 1954 to 1964, seeing active service 1956-8 and reaching the rank of Lieutenant.
Career in law
Hacking is a qualified barrister and solicitor in England and Wales as well as an Attorney in the United States. He has worked for over 40 years as an international arbitrator and mediator of commercial disputes.
House of Lords
Having inherited the title Baron Hacking from his father in 1971, Hacking sat in the House of Lords for over 20 years, contributing to reform of arbitration law and related areas. Having sat as a Conservative, in 1998 he defected to Labour over the European and law and order policies of then party leader William Hague.[2] He lost his automatic right to a seat under the House of Lords Act 1999. He sought to return to the House in the by-election caused by the death of Lord Milner of Leeds in 2003.[3] From 2009 to 2014, he stood in several subsequent by-elections as a crossbencher, but only succeeded in 2021 as a Labour candidate to replace Viscount Simon, 47 years after he first entered the Lords in 1974. He took the oath again on Thursday, 2 December 2021, Lord Hacking made his second maiden speech on 7 February 2022, reflecting on the number of Baronesses in the Lords compared to when he left in 1999, remembering his first maiden speech which he nearly made 50 years ago, on 26 April 1972 & the amount of amendments on legalisation going through the Lords. Lord Hacking is the oldest hereditary peer to have been elected during hereditary peers by elections.
Arms
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References
- ↑ Farrell, Sean (10 January 2000). "David Hacking". The Lawyer. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
- ↑ "Conservative peer defects to take seat on Labour benches". Independent.co.uk. 14 June 1998. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
- ↑ "United Kingdom Election Results - House of Lords Act: Hereditary Peers Elections (scroll down page to section headed 'Labour')". Archived from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
- ↑ Burke's Peerage. 1949.