Richard Patrick Tracey, (8 February 1943 – 19 March 2020), was a British Conservative Party politician, BBC news presenter, and public relations consultant. He was the Member of Parliament for Surbiton from 1983 to 1997, and served as Under-Secretary of State for Sport between 1985 and 1987. He was a Conservative Association campaigner across south-west London from 1978 and a leading figure for the party in the capital, representing the constituency of Merton and Wandsworth on the London Assembly from 2008 until his retirement in 2016. In his later years, he served as the Mayor of London's Ambassador for the River (from 2008), member of the Metropolitan Police Authority (2008–10), vice-chairman of the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority (2010–2012), and chairman of the London Waste and Recycling Board (2012–16).
He was the author of World of Motor Sport (with Richard Hudson-Evans), published in 1971, and Hickstead – The First Twelve Years (with Michael Clayton), published in 1972.
He ran the public affairs consultancy Tracey Communications between 1978 and 1983 (its activities included training senior bank executives, industrialists and Crown Agents for media appearances), and another public relations consultancy between 1997 and 2008.
He was the deputy chairman of the Greater London Area of the Conservative Party from 1981 to 1983, and at various times the president of the Conservative Association in Tooting. He joined the policy group on the abolition of the Greater London Council.
From 1985 to 1987, he served as the Under-Secretary of State for Sport in Margaret Thatcher's second government, combatting football hooliganism and opposing sports sponsorship by Tobacco industry. He was sacked following the 1987 general election over his conflict with the tobacco industry at the instigation of the PM's confidant Nicholas Ridley.
As a backbencher, he served on the Select Committee for Televising the House from 1987 to 1989, and on the Public Accounts Committee from 1993 to 1997. He chaired the London Conservative MPs Group from 1990 to 1997, and was a main supporter of the National Lottery from 1991 to 1992. At the 1997 general election, he unsuccessfully contested the newly created constituency of Kingston and Surbiton, losing to Ed Davey by 56 votes, which represented a 16.5% drop in support compared to the 1992 election.
In 2008, he was elected a member of the London Assembly representing Merton and Wandsworth, and in 2009 became the deputy leader of the Conservative Group and the Conservative lead on transport. He campaigned to outlaw strikes on the London transport system and celebrated the completion of the Overground rail line to Clapham Junction as well as striving to reduce pollution from buses and HGVs in Putney High Street and elsewhere. He also worked on extending the Wimbledon Tramlink to Morden and St Helier. He was Vice-Chairman of the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority (2010–2012), and Member of the Metropolitan Police Authority (2008–10). In 2008, he was appointed Mayor's Ambassador for the River by Mayor Boris Johnson, in which he pushed successfully to extend the fast river transport service upstream to Putney in 2013 and got new piers at Vauxhall, Battersea Reach and Battersea Power Station. He was Chairman of the London Waste and Recycling Board from 2012 to 2016, with strategies to increase London recycling. He retired in 2016, and his former Merton and Wandsworth seat was then won by Labour's Leonie Cooper.
Tracey was a Freeman of the City of London from 1984 onwards, a Freeman of the Company of Watermen and Lightermen, President of Kingston Regatta and Kingston Rugby Football Club, a Justice of the Peace in Wimbledon from 1977, and a Fellow of the Industry and Parliament Trust from 1985.
Tracey died peacefully at home on 19 March 2020, aged 77. Kathy Tracey died in 2021.
Political career
Conservative Party in London
Parliament
London Assembly
Controversies
Personal life
External links
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