Andrew Bridgen Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Salary

Andrew Bridgen

Read the complete write-up of Andrew Bridgen net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, MP, salary, party, education as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Andrew Bridgen is a British politician and businessman who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for North West Leicestershire since 2010. A member of the Conservative Party and a prominent figure on its right-wing, he is a long-term critic of the European Union (EU) and supported Brexit in the 2016 membership referendum.

Bridgen was a vocal supporter of the Eurosceptic pressure group Leave Means Leave, as well as a prominent critic of Theresa May during her time as Leader of the Conservative Party and Prime Minister. Bridgen supported efforts to remove Conservative Prime Ministers David Cameron, Theresa May and Boris Johnson from office.

Early life

NameAndrew Bridgen
Net Worth$5 million
Salary$1.5 million
OccupationPolitician
Age57 years
Height1.73m
Andrew Bridgen net worth 2022

Andrew James Bridgen was born on October 28, 1964 (age 57 years) in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire, United Kingdom. He attended Netherseal Junior School and then the state comprehensive school The Pingle School in Swadlincote, Derbyshire. He went on to study genetics and behaviour at the University of Nottingham, graduating with a degree in biological sciences. After graduating, Bridgen began training as an officer in the Royal Marines. In May 2009, he intervened in the “dirty tricks row” involving a councillor who had offered Conservative backing to ensure a village hall was built if an independent election candidate stood down.

Bridgen blamed the “intransigence of certain unelected individuals at the very top of the county council” rather than the individual councillors involved. Both Labour and Conservative council leaders criticized his intervention and the council solicitor wrote to ask for an explanation. A police investigation followed, and Cllr Nicholas Rushton temporarily stood down. Rushton denied wrongdoing and went on to become the leader of the county council.

Political career

Andrew Bridgen was elected as the Conservative MP for North West Leicestershire at the 2010 general election, becoming the first Conservative MP for the area in thirteen years. The seat had been vacant since the previous MP, David Taylor, had died of a sudden heart attack on Boxing Day 2009. Bridgen was re-elected at the 2015 general election and the 2017 general election.

Bridgen first became a member of the Regulatory Reform Select Committee in July 2010, a committee he has continued to serve on throughout his parliamentary career. He was a member of the Advisory Panel to Professor Ragnar Löfstedt’s report on Health and Safety and has served on the Draft Deregulation Bill (Joint Committee) and Liaison Committee (Commons).

On 9 June 2011, allegations of sexual assault were made against Bridgen, leading to his arrest in London by the Metropolitan Police and subsequent release on bail. A week later the allegations were retracted as untrue, and police said no further action would be taken against Bridgen, or the woman concerned, Annabelle Fuller, a former employee of UKIP. In a statement, Bridgen expressed his frustration that “such a ludicrous, false and unsubstantiated allegation” had received so much attention.

In January 2013, Bridgen, interviewed on BBC Radio’s PM programme, stated that good MPs were being put off by poor pay and were having to ask their families to make sacrifices. Bridgen stated he was one of the few MPs willing to speak publicly on the issue of MPs’ low pay. It was reported that Bridgen received additional income from his family vegetable firm, and he was criticized by local Labour politicians for being ‘out of touch’. In June 2015, following the announcement that MPs were to be awarded a 10% pay rise, Bridgen again spoke out, criticizing wealthier Cabinet Ministers for publicly turning down the additional money, which he said he would take himself.

In August 2014, AB Produce, of which Bridgen was director, was warned by the Environment Agency that it could lose its license if it did not remove a ‘urine-like’ smell from two “lagoons” of putrid vegetable matter on the site. The smell had reportedly been a source of complaints from neighbours for several years, and following the enforcement action, the issue was resolved.

In 2015, Bridgen sold his constituency house in Appleby Magna for £2 million, under a government High Speed 2 (HS2) compensation scheme as the house is 100 feet (30 m) from the proposed route. The sale was also reported to be linked to his divorce proceedings. He was criticized by local campaigners for selling at the early stage under an “exceptional hardship scheme”, but Bridgen argued he had lost more money than anyone else.

In March 2017, Bridgen apologized for failing to declare during an HS2 debate that his home was being bought by the high-speed rail link. He made the apology in the House of Commons after being found to have breached the rules governing MPs’ interests following an investigation by the Commons standards watchdog. However, Bridgen argued that he had been a consistent critic of High Speed 2, casting doubt on the economic benefits associated with the proposals, and the costs of the programme regardless of his property interests.

Andrew Bridgen was criticized in May 2016 for claiming nearly £25,000 on expenses in a single year for staying in hotels in London. He stated that his use of hotels was cheaper than having a flat and was a short walk from Parliament when it finished late at night. During this time, he did not allow staff to claim expenses for hotel stays, saying “they come down and work for me two days in London, stay at their own expense down here, and then go back and then work in the constituency the rest of the time”.

In March 2018, Bridgen stated in Parliament that there were ‘no rough sleepers’ in North West Leicestershire. Mark Grant, the manager of Leicester-based charity Action Homeless, responded that despite what official figures show, North West Leicestershire was a part of the county where the charity had most people presenting from. He added: “We know rough sleepers from North West Leicestershire migrate to Leicester to get access to services there that aren’t available where they are from.” Bridgen disputed the response and pointed to Government investment in the area.

Andrew Bridgen has been accused by Pink News of making homophobic statements. He has also been accused of anti-semitic statements at various points in his Parliamentary career. He has denied each allegation. On 7 August 2018, Bridgen supported comments made by Boris Johnson, regarding the wearing of burkas by some Muslim women in Britain.

On 14 October 2018, on the Stephen Nolan Show on BBC 5 Live radio, Bridgen, during a discussion of Brexit, incorrectly said that he and any British citizen was entitled to an Irish passport as part of a special arrangement with the Republic of Ireland. According to Stephen Nolan, Bridgen then hung up the phone during the break for the news bulletin and then could not be contacted to clarify his confusing remarks.

Andrew Bridgen endorsed Boris Johnson during the 2019 Conservative leadership election. In November 2019, Bridgen apologized after defending Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg’s comments suggesting that Grenfell Tower fire victims should have concluded that the ‘stay put’ advice given by the London Fire Brigade was incorrect. Bridgen suggested on BBC Radio 4 that Rees-Mogg would have made a better decision than the authority figures who gave the flawed advice. Bridgen later said: “I do not want to add in any way to the pain that this tragic event has caused. I apologize.”

Bridgen was found by a High Court judge to have lied under oath in relation to claims that he made in court about his family business, AP Produce. It was found that he encouraged a police inspector to investigate his brother, a director of the company, on false allegations of fraud. He also made false allegations about the reasons why he had left the company.

Andrew Bridgen called for legislation to ensure Britons travelling abroad have adequate medical insurance following a very serious injury to a constituent in July 2011. Bridgen also sought to highlight the risks of head injuries associated with sporting injuries. He is a supporter of reform of the pub industry, supporting moves to introduce a Market Rent Option for tied tenant publicans. Bridgen is a supporter of the “Fair Deal For Your Local” campaign. Bridgen has supported calls for reform to the NHS. In June 2011, Bridgen attacked critics of Andrew Lansley’s proposed NHS reforms, saying that they comprised “Stalinist protectionist elements”.

Bridgen forced a Government U-turn in 2013 over plans for military intervention in Syria after he organized a letter to the Prime Minister signed by 81 fellow Conservative MPs, demanding Parliament be given a vote on whether the UK should send military assistance to anti-government Syrian rebels. Bridgen later stated his support for air strikes against ISIS terrorists in Iraq. Bridgen successfully lobbied the Government to cut Air Passenger Duty for children in 2014, a move backed by travel operators and supported by a 2013 study report.

In 2014, Bridgen voted to recognize the State of Palestine. Bridgen asked: “Does my honorable Friend agree that, given that the political system of the world’s superpower and our great ally the United States is very susceptible to well-funded powerful lobbying groups and the power of the Jewish lobby in America, it falls to this country and to this House to be the good but critical friend that Israel needs, and this motion tonight just might lift that logjam on this very troubled area?”.

In 2014, Bridgen led calls to have non-payment of the TV license fee made a civil rather than a criminal matter. The legislation in force “is effectively criminalizing them for being poor”, he told The Times and “most of those sent to prison as a result of non-payment are the elderly and women”. The Government later adopted Bridgen’s proposal, which was also supported by the Labour Party, though the BBC said the potential loss of £200m could lead to the closure of channels.

Andrew Bridgen has joined fellow local Conservative MP Heather Wheeler in campaigning for the return of passenger rail services on the Burton-to-Leicester railway line – the Ivanhoe Line – and has campaigned for the electrification of the Midland Mainline.

Bridgen is a long-term critic of the European Union. In February 2016 he criticized the BBC for selecting pro-EU guests for the BBC Newsnight and BBC Radio 4 Today programmes. He also stated that the BBC should not claim that Britain enjoyed a special status as David Cameron’s EU renegotiations had not changed anything. He supported Leave in the 2016 referendum, going on to back the group Leaves Means Leave after the Brexit vote, and signing a letter to the Prime Minister in September 2017. Bridgen was one of the 28 so-called Tory “Brexit Spartans” who voted against Theresa May’s Brexit deal all three times it was put to the House of Commons.

He was a critic of the former Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron. After calling for him to be replaced in 2013, Bridgen withdrew a letter of no confidence in 2014 after he failed to attract the support of enough colleagues to trigger a vote of no confidence. Three weeks before the EU referendum in 2016 he declared that Cameron’s position was untenable and he would have to be replaced, possibly immediately after the vote.

In July 2018, Andrew Bridgen wrote a letter of no confidence in relation to Theresa May, who had replaced David Cameron as Prime Minister, in which he argued she should be replaced as leader of the Conservative Party as her “promises over leaving the EU are all a pretense and a charade intended to dupe the electorate which is an insult to their intelligence.”

Bridgen raised concerns in 2010 to the Conservative whips’ office about the behaviour of fellow Conservative MP Dan Poulter with women MPs. The Sunday Times published these allegations, that Poulter had put his hand up the skirts of at least three female MPs, during the MeToo scandal in late 2017, and in November 2017 Bridgen reported Poulter to the Conservative Party’s newly established disciplinary committee. No female MP had made any complaint about Poulter, and he was subsequently cleared of inappropriate behaviour claims in March 2018.

Poulter took legal action for libel against The Sunday Times, whose defense was that it was simply reporting accusations made by others against Poulter. However, the High Court ruled that the stories implied guilt of sexual assault, causing The Sunday Times to admit that the claims were false and it should not have published them, and pay substantial libel damages to Poulter.

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Andrew Bridgen has been an outspoken critic of the former Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow. In March 2018 he suggested Bercow should resign, and also reported him to the parliamentary commissioner for standards, to investigate whether he had broken the MPs’ code of conduct. An inquiry into allegations that Bercow had bullied members of staff was subsequently blocked by MPs and he remained in post. Bridgen repeatedly called for disciplinary action and the resignation of Labour MP Keith Vaz over a range of different issues.

In March 2019, Andrew Bridgen clashed with Conservative MP Ken Clarke in the House of Commons over the nature of representative democracy. However, in January 2022, he submitted a letter of no confidence in Boris Johnson having previously backed him for a leader in the 2019 leadership election, citing a “moral vacuum” at the heart of Government in relation to the lockdown parties, explaining his reasons for doing so in an article for The Telegraph.

Family legal dispute

Andrew Bridgen has been involved in a long legal battle against his own family’s potato and vegetable business, AB Produce, stating the firm treated him unfairly and forced him out, while the business was suing him over claims he has failed to pay rent on a £1.5 million property owned by the firm. In April 2022 High Court Judge Brian Rawlings ruled against Bridgen, stating that he “lied under oath and behaved in an abusive, arrogant and aggressive manner”, was “an unreliable and combative witness who tried to conceal his own misconduct”, and “gave evasive and argumentative answers and tangential speeches that avoided answering the questions”. After losing the case Bridgen stated that “in actuality, I won the case and my brother will be compelled by the Court in due course to repay considerable sums of money back to the businesses”, adding “if courts always got everything correct the first time there would be no need for appeal mechanisms”.

Wife

Andrew Bridgen is married to Nevena Pavlovic, they had their wedding in 2017. His wife is an opera singer and he has three children. However, Bridgen was married to his first wife Jackie in 2000 and they had two sons together. His ex-wife Jackie was a Conservative councillor for the Oakthorpe and Donisthorpe ward of North West Leicestershire District Council from 2007 until losing her seat in 2011. Bridgen divorced his wife Jackie in 2012 and then married the Serbian opera singer Nevena Pavlovic in 2017. As of mid-2022, Andrew Bridgen and his wife Nevena Pavlovic are still married and they have a child together.

Andrew Bridgen net worth

How much is Andrew Bridgen worth? Andrew Bridgen net worth is estimated at around $5 million. His main source of income is from his career as a politician. Bridgen salary per month with other career earnings is over $1.5 million annually. He is one of the richest and most influential politicians in the United Kingdom. Andrew Bridgen stands at an appealing height of 1.73m and has a good body weight which suits his personality.