Andrew Mitchell
Andrew Mitchell
Andrew John Bower Mitchellis a British Conservative Party politician who has been the Member of Parliamentfor Sutton Coldfield since 2001. He was the MP for Gedling from 1987 to 1997. He served in the Cabinet as Secretary of State for International Development from 2010 to 2012, and then briefly as Government Chief Whip in the House of Commons until he resigned after losing the confidence of many of his colleagues following an alleged altercation with a police officer...
NationalityBritish
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth23 March 1956
Jennifer always plays hard. But tonight she stayed focused for 40 minutes. Any time she does that she can put up those type of numbers.
Over the long term some form of consolidation seems very likely. Most exchange managers think it is the way to go.
It is conflict overall that mires people in poverty. That is the first law of development.
My top priority will be to secure maximum value for money in aid through greater transparency, rigorous independent evaluation and an unremitting focus on results.
This will be our biggest marketing expense of the year.
Michael Gove is an incredibly talent guy and a Brexiteer. But he has been telling all of us for the last five years that he doesn't want to [be the Prime Minister] and he doesn't think he's got it in him to do it so his conversion on the road to Damascus has come pretty late.
They say, 'Pull yourself up by your bootstraps.' They don't realize that not everybody's bootstraps are the same length.
Britain is doing brilliant things around the world and that is why I described as a 'superpower on development'.
Libyans have to work together for a new Libya. They should keep in place the sinews of security.
There don't seem to be any surprises in here.
I have a liking for totally unaffordable 1950s sports cars.
We've been playing well enough to win all year. We know we can play with everybody. We've only been blown out a couple of times.
Britain, today, educates 4.8 million primary school children in Britain. And we educate five million primary school children around the developing world, at a cost of 2.5 per cent of what we spend on British children.
Shareholders will not be happy with anything close to the current offer.