Mr Gerald Fowler

January 1, 1935 - 1993
Summary information for Mr Gerald Fowler

Contributions

1975

12 speeches — DEVOLUTION Commons February 3, 1975

2 speeches — EEC MEMBERSHIP (REFERENDUM) Commons March 11, 1975

19 speeches — EEC MEMBERSHIP (REFERENDUM) Commons March 11, 1975

15 speeches — FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO OPPOSITION PARTIES Commons March 20, 1975

2 speeches — MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT (PAY AND CONDITIONS) Commons March 24, 1975

20 speeches — REFERENDUM BILL Commons April 10, 1975

6 speeches — REFERENDUM [MONEY] Commons April 10, 1975

4 speeches — REFERENDUM Commons April 14, 1975

DEVOLUTION Written Answers April 14, 1975

HOLDING OF REFERENDUM Commons April 22, 1975

2 speeches — REFERENDUM BILL Commons April 22, 1975

23 speeches — CONDUCT OF REFERENDUM Commons April 23, 1975

2 speeches — EXCLUSION OF LEGAL PROCEEDINGS Commons April 23, 1975

ADJOURNMENT OF PARLIAMENT Commons April 23, 1975

2 speeches — FORM OF BALLOT PAPER Commons April 23, 1975

3 speeches — VALIDITY OF THE TOTAL VOTE Commons April 24, 1975

4 speeches — HOLDING OF REFERENDUM Commons April 24, 1975

CONDUCT OF REFERENDUM Commons April 24, 1975

3 speeches — FORM OF BALLOT PAPER Commons April 24, 1975

3 speeches — CONDUCT OF REFERENDUM Commons May 7, 1975

11 speeches — REFERENDUM ORDER Commons May 13, 1975

3 speeches — VOTING RIGHTS (OVERSEAS CITIZENS) Commons May 19, 1975

5 speeches — REFERENDUM Commons May 19, 1975

National Representation Written Answers May 19, 1975

7 speeches — DEVOLUTION (LEGISLATION) Commons July 7, 1975

13 speeches — DEVOLUTION Commons July 31, 1975

SCOTTISH ASSEMBLY Written Answers October 22, 1975

13 speeches — EUROPEAN SECONDARY LEGISLATION Commons November 3, 1975

4 speeches — DEVOLUTION Commons November 24, 1975

3 speeches — HOUSE OF COMMONS (ADMINISTRATION) Commons December 4, 1975

Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.