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Matt Vickers
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Matthew Alexander Vickers[2] (born 24 September 1983)[3] is a British Conservative politician who serves as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Stockton West, Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party and Shadow Minister of State for Illegal Immigration, Crime, Policing and Fire. Prior to boundary changes, he had previously been the MP for Stockton South from 12 December 2019 to 30 May 2024.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Vickers was born in the University Hospital of North Tees to Hilary and Alexander Vickers, a hairdresser and builder.[4] He grew up in Stockton-on-Tees and has three brothers.[5] He studied law and business management at Teesside University,[6] and later studied at the University of Law. Vickers previously worked at Woolworths and Home Bargains including in a management role.[7][8][9]
Local political career
[edit]Vickers stood for election in the Norton West ward on the Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council in 2007 and 2011 losing to Labour Party candidates Ann and Dick Cains[10] and David and Norma Wilburn respectively.[11] In 2015 he stood for election in the Hartburn ward and became a councillor and leader of the Conservative group on the council from May 2015 until April 2021, when he stood down forcing a by-election.[12]
Between 2009 and 2019, he was the constituency agent for Richmond (Yorks). Vickers initially worked with William Hague. Following Hague's retirement, Vickers helped to run Rishi Sunak's successful general election campaigns in 2015 and 2017.[13]
Vickers stood as the Conservative candidate for Cleveland Police and Crime Commissioner in 2016 losing to Barry Coppinger after the second preference votes were counted with a 37.9% vote share.[14][15]
After being elected an MP in 2019, Vickers remained as a Councillor but did not claim any expenses and donated all his councillor salary to three local charities, which helped veterans, those suffering with dementia and homelessness in the constituency. Confirmed recipients included Teesside Dementia Link Services,[16] Don War Memorial Bar and the Moses Project, whose representatives wrote a letter in support of Mr Vickers in August 2020, arguing that 'since being elected, Matt Vickers has proved to be an immensely active and supportive MP', and criticising 'the coverage of a recent council meeting where negative comments were reported about local MP, Matt Vickers'.[17] At the time of his departure as a councillor, his allowance amounted to a minimum of £9,300 per year.[18][19]
Parliamentary career
[edit]In government: first term (2019–2024)
[edit]He was elected as MP for Stockton South at the 2019 general election with a majority of 5,260. The seat had previously been held by Labour's Paul Williams.[20] Vickers has served on a number of House of Commons Select Committees, including the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee,[21] the Home Affairs Select Committee, the Justice Select Committee, the Petitions Committee and the Committee on the Future Relationship with the European Union Committee.[21]
In June 2022, Vickers was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Home Office ministerial team, alongside Luke Evans.[22] A month later, he was promoted to Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party.,[23] serving in the role until 2024. Following the 2024 General Election, Vickers was appointed Shadow Shadow Minister of State for Crime, Policing and Fire.[24]
In Parliament, Matt Vickers has served as the Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Retail.[25] In 2023, Vickers led a campaign with the backing of over 39 other MPs to ask the Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to extend 75% Business Rates Relief for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses.[26][27] The campaign was successful, with Hunt announcing a year long extension in the November 2023 United Kingdom autumn statement,[28] praising Vickers for his 'tenacious campaigning on this issue'.[29]
Vickers been vocal on animal welfare issues. In July 2021, he led a debate in Westminster Hall on the protection of hedgehogs, arguing for urgent action following the loss of half the rural population of hedgehogs over two decades.[30] In 2022, Vickers also led a debate on ending cages for farmed animals, following a Parliamentary Petition signed by almost 110,000 people, arguing that "Great British Farmers already ensure our animals are kept to the highest of international standards and now we must work with them to strive for even better care."[31] Vickers also lobbied government in favour of the Pet Abduction Act, which was later introduced by Conservative MP Anna Firth. The Bill became law in August 2024.[32] Vickers also served on the Glue Traps (Offences) Bill Commons Committee.[33]
Vickers has campaigned extensively on protecting for shop workers and retail staff from assault, including campaigning to make assaulting a retail worker to be made a standalone criminal offence. In 2022, following a rebellion in which 36 MPs signed Vickers' amendment to the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022, the Secretary of State for Justice pledged to introduce measures to make assaults on those performing a duty to the public a statutory aggravating factor in the form of Lords Amendment 104. Vickers subsequently hailed this as "a landmark victory for shop workers and retail staff across the country".[34][35] In 2024, Vickers was praised by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak for his "longstanding campaigning on the issue" when the government announced the standalone criminal offence, with perpetrators sent to prison for up to 6 months, given an unlimited fine and banned from going back to the shop where they committed their crimes.[36]
On 19 November 2020, Vickers backed the home secretary, Priti Patel, after a Cabinet Office inquiry found evidence that Patel had breached the ministerial code following bullying allegations, publicly supporting Patel: "[Patel] is one of the most hardworking Home Secretaries this country has had."[37]
Vickers, along with 22 other MPs, wrote to Attorney General Suella Braverman in August 2020 requesting that the killing of police officer Andrew Harper case, where the perpetrators were convicted of manslaughter, be referred to the Court of Appeal under the unduly lenient sentence scheme as he supported a life imprisonment.[38]
On 27 September 2021, Vickers wrote a letter to the House of Commons director of catering requesting that the Teesside dish the chicken Parmo be added to the menu. After a successful campaign, the Parmo was added to the menu for a short period of time.[39]
In June 2022, during the vote of no confidence in the Conservative Party leadership of Boris Johnson, Vickers publicly supported Johnson.[40]
Vickers led a debate in the House of Commons for tougher measures against off-road bikes and other anti-social behaviour in Stockton in July 2023 and continues to advocate for cooperation between local police and his constituents.[41][42]
In opposition: 2nd term (2024– )
[edit]In the 2024 general election, he was elected for Stockton West as the only Conservative MP in North East England.[43]
In August 2024, Vickers resigned as deputy chairman of the Conservative party in order to back Robert Jenrick in the 2024 Conservative Party leadership election.[44] Vickers backed Rishi Sunak in the previous two Conservative leadership elections in 2022.[45]
Following the 2024 Conservative Party leadership election, Vickers was appointed as Shadow Minister of State for Crime, Policing and Fire. In April 2025, Vickers gained the additional role of Shadow Minister of State for Illegal Immigration. In Kemi Badenoch's 2025 British shadow cabinet reshuffle, Vickers was promoted to the role of Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party, whilst retaining his previous shadow ministerial responsibilities. Vickers addressed the 2025 Conservative Party Conference prior to Leader Kemi Badenoch's speech, praising Councillors and activists for their work, whilst highlighting key Conservative policy announcements from the Conference.
In January 2025, Vickers was criticised in the House of Commons by Stockton North MP Chris McDonald for using social media to link local councillors to paedophiles, after they voted for a targeted inquiry into grooming gangs, rather than a national inquiry proposed by Conservative councillors.[46]
Electoral history
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | Matt Vickers | 27,764 | 50.7 | +3.9 | |
| Labour | Paul Williams | 22,504 | 41.1 | −7.4 | |
| Liberal Democrats | Brendan Devlin | 2,338 | 4.3 | +2.5 | |
| Brexit Party | John Prescott[48] | 2,196 | 4.0 | New | |
| Majority | 5,260 | 9.6 | N/A | ||
| Turnout | 54,802 | 71.3 | +0.1 | ||
| Conservative gain from Labour | Swing | +5.6 | |||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | Matt Vickers | 20,372 | 41.9 | −14.6 | |
| Labour | Joe Dancey | 18,233 | 37.5 | +3.6 | |
| Reform | Stephen Matthews | 6,833 | 14.0 | +9.3 | |
| Green | Anna-Maria Toms | 1,477 | 3.0 | +2.5 | |
| Liberal Democrats | Nigel Boddy | 1,203 | 2.5 | −1.9 | |
| Independent | Mohammed Zaroof | 263 | 0.5 | N/A | |
| Independent | Vivek Chhabra | 108 | 0.2 | N/A | |
| Independent | Niko Omilana | 106 | 0.2 | N/A | |
| Independents for Direct Democracy | Monty Brack | 45 | 0.1 | N/A | |
| Majority | 2,139 | 4.4 | |||
| Turnout | 48,640 | 69.8 | |||
| Conservative hold | Swing | -9.1% | |||
References
[edit]- ^ https://uk.news.yahoo.com/stockton-mp-matt-vickers-takes-155833193.html
- ^ "Members Sworn". UK Parliament. 18 December 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ Brunskill, Ian (19 March 2020). The Times guide to the House of Commons 2019 : the definitive record of Britain's historic 2019 General Election. HarperCollins Publishers Limited. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-00-839258-1. OCLC 1129682574.
- ^ "Matt Vickers". Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ GB News (2 November 2021). The Real Me: Matt Vickers, MP for Stockton South. YouTube. Event occurs at 00:33.
- ^ "Teesside University | 🎓 Always good to visit my former uni: Teesside University. It has gone through some big changes since my time there, ready to nurture and provide the... | By Matt Vickers MP | Facebook". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Brown, Mike (13 December 2019). "Who is Matt Vickers? Meet the councillor and Brexiteer who's the new MP for Stockton South". Teesside Live. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
- ^ Hill, Henry (2 November 2018). "Matthew Vickers selected for Stockton South". Conservative Home. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
- ^ Courtez, Jack (9 June 2021). "Conservative MP calls on government to back down and support new laws to protect shop workers". betterRetailing. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "Local Elections Archive Project - 2007 - Stockton-on-Tees". www.andrewteale.me.uk. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ "Local Elections Archive Project - 2011 - Stockton-on-Tees". www.andrewteale.me.uk. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Metcalfe, Alex (10 March 2021). "Teesside MP Matt Vickers to step down from role as councillor". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
- ^ "Join Rishi in saying farewell and thanks to Matt". Richmond (Yorks). Retrieved 23 October 2020.
- ^ "Barry Coppinger re-elected as Cleveland Police and Crime Commissioner". BBC News. 6 May 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
- ^ "Barry Coppinger re-elected as Cleveland Police and Crime Commissioner". BBC News. 8 April 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
- ^ "Teesside Dementia Link Services – Thank you Matt Vickers". tdls2016.org. 14 September 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
- ^ Nolan, Laura (19 August 2020). "MP speaks on decision to remain as a local councillor after criticism". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
- ^ "Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council – Annual Financial Statements 2020/21 (Members' Allowances 1 April 2020 – 31 March 2021)". Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- ^ "Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council Member Expenses for 2019–20 (Members' Allowances)" (PDF). Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- ^ "Stockton South parliamentary constituency – Election 2019". BBC News. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
- ^ a b "Parliamentary career for Matt Vickers". UK Parliament. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ Heale, James [@JAHeale] (13 June 2022). "-Luke Evans and Matt Vickers to the Home Office team" (Tweet). Retrieved 14 June 2022 – via Twitter.
- ^ Larman, Connor (12 July 2022). "Stockton MP Matt Vickers 'delighted' to be appointed deputy chairman of Conservative Party". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ "Conservative Party announces interim Opposition Front Bench". policymogul.com. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
- ^ Jahshan, Elias (2 September 2020). "Cross party parliamentary group formed to back retail industry". Retail Gazette. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
- ^ Lightfoot, Gareth (21 November 2023). "Business owners welcome MP's call for government to continue help with rates to avoid 'cliff edge'". Teesside Live. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ Vickers, Matt (22 November 2023). "Matt Vickers MP successfully campaigns for an extension to the 75% Business Rates Relief". Matt Vickers MP. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ Howlett, Elizabeth (22 November 2023). "Chancellor extends business rates discount for retail". Drapers Online. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ Jeremy Hunt (22 November 2023). "Autumn Statement". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 328.
- ^ "MPs to debate petition relating to protection of hedgehogs". 30 June 2021. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
- ^ Vickers, Matt (20 June 2022). "Matt to lead Westminster "End the Cage Age" debate to end the keeping of farm animals in cages". Matt Vickers MP. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
- ^ "The Pet Abduction Bill receives Royal Assent and becomes law thanks to MP Anna Firth's Private Members Bill #PetTheftReform". 23 May 2024. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
- ^ "Glue Traps (Offences) Bill". 23 February 2025. Retrieved 23 February 2025.
- ^ Vickers, Matt (6 July 2021). Very happy with the Government's commitment to legislate to protect retail workers following yesterday's debate. Twitter. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ "Matt Vickers applauds "fair and just" new measures in PCSC Bill to protect retail workers". Matt Vickers. 15 March 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
- ^ "Prime Minister launches retail crime crackdown". 10 April 2024. Retrieved 23 February 2025.
- ^ Scott, Jim (20 November 2020). "North-East MPs defend Priti Patel amid allegations of bullying". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ Vickers, Matt (5 August 2020). "Matt Vickers: The killing of Andrew Harper. Why I, alongside 22 other MPs, wrote to the Attorney General last Friday". Conservative Home. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
- ^ Dawson, Kirsty (27 September 2021). "Teesside MP calls for Parmos to be served in Parliament – but not everyone is impressed". Teesside Live. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
- ^ "Full list: the Tory MPs backing Boris Johnson". The Spectator. 6 June 2022. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
- ^ "Antisocial Behaviour and Off-road Bikes". Hansard. 11 July 2023. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
- ^ Lightfoot, Gareth (13 July 2023). "MP Matt Vickers leads off-road bikes debate in Parliament". Teesside Gazette. Teesside Live. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
- ^ "General election: Matt Vickers re-elected as last Conservative MP standing on Teesside". Yahoo News. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
- ^ Baker, Tim (19 August 2024). "Tory deputy chair resigns to back Robert Jenrick in Conservative leadership race". Sky News. Retrieved 23 May 2025.
- ^ Maidment, Jack (19 August 2024). "Tory deputy chairman quits to back Jenrick for leadership". Telegraph. Retrieved 23 May 2025.
- ^ "Points of Order Volume 761: debated on Tuesday 28 January 2025". Hansard. 28 January 2025. Retrieved 1 November 2025.
- ^ "Stockton South Parliamentary constituency". BBC News. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
- ^ Not the Labour member of the House of Lords
- ^ "Stockton North and West 2024 Parliamentary Election Results". Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
- ^ "Stockton West results". BBC News. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
External links
[edit]Matt Vickers
View on GrokipediaMatt Vickers (born 1983) is a British Conservative politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Stockton West since the 2019 general election.[1][2]
Born and raised in Stockton-on-Tees, he was educated locally and held various working-class jobs, including shelf stacker, bar worker, and bricklayer, before entering politics as a constituency agent for figures such as William Hague and later helping to run Rishi Sunak's office as MP for Richmond (Yorks).[3][4][5]
Elected as a councillor for Hartburn Ward in 2015, Vickers led the opposition on Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council and focused on issues like curbing overdevelopment and supporting local high streets.[3]
In his parliamentary career, he has been noted for high activity in tabling questions and contributions, and currently holds the roles of Shadow Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire and Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party, positions that underscore his rapid ascent within the party structure.[1][6][3]
Early life and background
Upbringing and family
Matthew Vickers was born on 24 September 1983 at North Tees Hospital in Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England.[7][3] He grew up locally in a working-class family, as the son of a builder father and hairdresser mother, which exposed him to the economic realities of the Teesside region during his formative years.[3][8][9] Vickers' early experiences in Stockton included manual labor such as stacking shelves, working in pubs, and bricklaying, reflecting the area's industrial and service-sector employment patterns that shaped his perspective on local community challenges like job security and retail work conditions.[3][2] These roots in a post-industrial northern English town underscored persistent regional issues of employment and economic stagnation, influencing his later focus on grassroots advocacy without formal higher education in politics at that stage.[8]Pre-political career and influences
Before entering politics, Matt Vickers held various roles in the retail sector, including frontline and management positions at Woolworths and Home Bargains in Stockton.[10] These experiences involved tasks such as stacking shelves, providing him with direct exposure to operational challenges in discount retail environments amid economic pressures on high streets.[3] Vickers has referenced these jobs in parliamentary contributions to highlight vulnerabilities in retail work, such as periodic customer abuse, which he contrasted with escalating incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic that doubled assaults on shop workers.[10] He advocated for stronger protections, drawing on firsthand observations of how such roles often employ vulnerable workers like students or semi-retired individuals topping up incomes.[11] Complementing retail, Vickers worked in construction, laying bricks, and hospitality, pulling pints in local establishments, fostering practical understanding of labor-intensive sectors susceptible to regional economic fluctuations in post-industrial Teesside.[2][3] These positions in Stockton, an area marked by the decline of heavy industries like steel and chemicals since the late 20th century, underscored the causal links between deindustrialization, job precariousity, and the demand for targeted local regeneration over abstract interventions.[3]Local political involvement
Council elections and roles
Matt Vickers was elected as a Conservative councillor for the Hartburn Ward on Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council in the local elections held on 7 May 2015. Representing a primarily residential area in southern Stockton, he received 2,323 votes, capturing 61.1% of the valid votes cast, ahead of Labour's Chris Coombs (1,257 votes, 33.0%) and Mazi Maroof (722 votes), with the Liberal Democrats' Kenneth Peace polling 224 votes (5.9%). His Conservative colleague Lynn Hall secured the ward's second seat with 2,309 votes.[12][13] Vickers retained his seat in the 2019 local elections on 2 May, continuing to represent Hartburn Ward's residents on issues such as planning, community services, and infrastructure until his resignation in March 2021, prompted by his parliamentary duties.[14][15] During his tenure, he participated in council proceedings to advocate for ward-specific priorities, including local development and resident welfare, without holding formal executive positions on the Labour-led authority.[3]Opposition leadership and local initiatives
Vickers assumed leadership of the Conservative opposition group on Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council in May 2015, following his election as a councillor for the Hartburn ward, and held the position until April 2021.[3] In this role, he scrutinized Labour-led council decisions, focusing on preventing unsustainable development that exacerbated local congestion and strained infrastructure.[3] A key initiative involved campaigning against overdevelopment in Yarm and surrounding villages, where the Labour council approved thousands of homes on greenfield sites, leading to what Vickers described as "packing, stacking, and racking" without adequate supporting amenities. He advocated prioritizing brownfield sites for housing to preserve green spaces and reduce pressure on existing communities.[3] [16] This opposition included public consultations and resident surveys to build evidence against proposals, such as plans for 600 additional homes in Yarm, which faced significant local backlash.[17] Vickers also led efforts to secure suitable parking provisions amid council policies that threatened local high streets, drawing on his retail background to argue for measures protecting businesses from reduced footfall.[3] These campaigns contributed to heightened scrutiny of Labour's planning processes, fostering policy adjustments through opposition pressure, including demands for better consultation before approving contentious schemes like Yarm High Street alterations, which were later paused amid resident opposition.[18] In constituency service, Vickers' group pushed back against service cuts, successfully campaigning to maintain the No. 17 bus route vital for rural connectivity and advocating tougher local enforcement against off-road bikes disrupting communities.[19] These actions demonstrated effective opposition by leveraging council scrutiny committees to highlight empirical shortfalls, such as inadequate infrastructure funding relative to housing approvals, ultimately aiding in reversals or mitigations that preserved local economic viability.[3]Parliamentary career
2019 general election and initial term
Matt Vickers was selected as the Conservative candidate for the marginal Stockton South constituency ahead of the 2019 United Kingdom general election, held on 12 December 2019. He secured 27,764 votes, representing 50.7% of the valid votes cast, defeating the sitting Labour MP Paul Williams who polled 22,504 votes (41.1%), achieving a majority of 5,260 votes.[20][21] This result marked a notional swing of approximately 7.8 percentage points to the Conservatives from Labour, reflecting regional gains in Teesside and the North East driven by commitments to complete Brexit implementation, reversing Labour's hold on the seat since the 2017 election.[22] Upon election, Vickers took his seat in the House of Commons, focusing initial efforts on constituency representation amid the transition to the new parliamentary term. His maiden speech occurred on 11 March 2020 during debate on the Spring Budget resolutions, following two postponements due to parliamentary business; in it, he acknowledged local economic challenges and praised the contributions of predecessor MPs.[23][24] Early parliamentary involvement included scrutiny of post-Brexit arrangements as a member of the Committee on the Future Relationship with the European Union from late 2019 through 2021, where he participated in examinations of trade and cooperation negotiations with the European Union.[25] The initial term coincided with significant disruptions, including the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, which shifted much Commons business to virtual and hybrid formats, adapting new MPs like Vickers to remote voting and limited physical attendance. Boundary revisions finalized in the 2023 periodic review abolished the Stockton South constituency effective for the 2024 election, reforming it into Stockton West with adjusted wards primarily from the prior seat, enabling Vickers to continue representing core areas of his original electorate.[26]Government positions (2019–2024)
In July 2022, Vickers was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the Home Office ministerial team, a role he held until the Conservative government's defeat in the July 2024 general election.[27][28] As an unpaid junior aide, he supported Home Secretary Priti Patel and subsequent secretaries, including Suella Braverman and Chris Philp, by attending cabinet committees, liaising with stakeholders, and assisting on departmental correspondence related to policing, immigration enforcement, and national security.[29] This position provided Vickers with direct involvement in implementing policies such as increased police recruitment targets and the Emergency Workers (Offences) Act 2018's extension to protect officers from assaults. Vickers contributed to Home Office initiatives by advocating for enhanced local policing resources, drawing on his prior experience as a Stockton-on-Tees councillor. In his parliamentary interventions, he pressed for targeted funding to address violent crime in Cleveland Police's jurisdiction, including £3.5 million allocated in 2022 for a regional violence reduction unit and £1.4 million for enforcement operations.[30] These efforts aligned with broader government aims to recruit 20,000 additional officers by 2023, though national shortfalls persisted due to training and retention challenges. A key outcome of Vickers' advocacy was the opening of a new community police base in West Stockton on 6 February 2024, repurposing a former Labour-closed facility at Stockton Sixth Form College to serve areas including Elm Tree, Fairfield, Hartburn, and Bishopsgarth.[31][32] The base, secured through Vickers' sustained pressure on Cleveland Police and local partners, aimed to reduce response times and increase visible patrols, directly addressing resident concerns over crime hotspots; critics noted its limited amenities but acknowledged improved officer presence.[33] This achievement exemplified how his Home Office access facilitated coordination between national policy and constituency-level implementation.Post-2024 election roles and opposition activities
Vickers retained his seat in the Stockton West constituency at the 4 July 2024 general election, securing 20,372 votes (41.9% of the valid vote share) against Labour candidate Joe Dancey's 18,233 votes, achieving a majority of 2,139.[34] This result bucked the national trend of substantial Conservative losses, with Vickers becoming the sole Conservative MP representing Teesside constituencies.[35] Following the Conservative Party's transition to opposition, Vickers was appointed Shadow Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire on 19 July 2024, tasked with scrutinising the Labour government's home affairs policies.[36] In this role, Vickers critiqued Labour's approach to sentencing and prison management, arguing in September 2025 that proposed reforms under the Sentencing Bill would result in more criminals, including those convicted of serious offences, being released earlier than under prior Conservative measures.[37] He further opposed elements of Labour's criminal justice agenda in October 2025, highlighting votes that he claimed would enable reductions in prison terms for offenders such as rapists and stalkers.[38] Vickers expanded his opposition remit with promotion to Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party on 22 July 2025, a position involving party organisation and strategy in opposition.[39] Locally, he intervened against Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council's housing plans, condemning in June 2025 what he described as a "reckless housebuilding rush" in Yarm that prioritised excessive development on greenfield sites without adequate infrastructure or consultation.[40] A survey he commissioned, with nearly 1,000 respondents, indicated 97% dissatisfaction with consultation processes for such proposals.[41] Vickers was reappointed as Shadow Minister of State at the Home Office in November 2024, continuing oversight of policing and immigration enforcement amid ongoing scrutiny of Labour's early-release schemes and deportation policies.[42]Policy positions and contributions
Stances on crime, policing, and immigration
Vickers has consistently criticized reductions in police officer numbers under the Labour government, noting that despite promises to increase street-level policing, officer counts have declined as of July 2025.[43] In his role as Shadow Minister for Crime, Policing, and Fire since July 2024, he has pushed for reallocating police focus away from non-crime hate incidents, arguing these divert resources from actual offenses and erode public confidence, as evidenced by surveys showing over half of the public viewing them as ineffective in 2024.[44] [45] In his Stockton West constituency, Vickers has linked local anti-social behavior and crime—issues he attributes to long-term neglect by the Labour-led council—to the need for enhanced enforcement, organizing crime surgeries with police and council representatives in July 2025 and campaigning for dedicated crackdowns.[19] [46] He has supported parliamentary measures for tougher sentencing, including mandatory life terms for those causing the death of emergency workers, stricter penalties for knife possession, and escalated punishments for tool theft, which occurs every 12 minutes nationally with low conviction rates.[36] [47] [48] Regarding immigration, Vickers advocates for stringent border controls to bolster public safety, endorsing the Conservative Deportation Bill introduced in May 2025 for automatic removal of illegal entrants and opposing Labour's amendments that would hinder deportation of foreign national offenders.[49] [50] He has highlighted local strains in Stockton from what he describes as a disproportionate allocation of asylum seekers relative to the area's capacity, a claim contested by the council leader as misleading in June 2025, arguing uncontrolled inflows exacerbate community pressures including safety concerns.[51] Vickers frames these positions as data-informed responses to embedded criminal networks exploiting lax systems, prioritizing enforcement over leniency to prevent repeat offenses.[52]Economic, local development, and welfare issues
Vickers has consistently opposed rapid housing development in his constituency, particularly in Yarm, arguing that local councils under Labour have approved excessive builds without adequate infrastructure support, leading to increased congestion and strain on services. In June 2025, he criticized plans for 600 new homes near Yarm as "utterly barmy," highlighting how recent approvals have "packed" the area without corresponding improvements to roads or amenities. By July 2025, he objected to the proposals, describing them as exacerbating "unsustainable and biased overdevelopment" in the town, where over 180 objections were lodged against the scheme. In September 2025, Vickers further condemned a bid for nearly 500 homes as "completely inappropriate," warning it would worsen existing problems rather than address them. He advocates for housing plans that prioritize community needs over developer interests, emphasizing better integration with local transport and facilities to avoid ill-thought-out expansions that burden residents. On welfare and worker protections, Vickers has drawn from his background in retail to champion measures against abuse faced by shop workers, pushing for stronger legal safeguards amid rising incidents of violence. A 2021 British Retail Consortium report cited by Vickers documented 455 daily occurrences of violence and abuse toward retail staff across the UK, prompting his early parliamentary advocacy for dedicated protections. In December 2021, he welcomed government steps to enhance these safeguards, and by April 2024, he celebrated the introduction of a standalone offense for assaulting retail workers, viewing it as a deterrent to ongoing criminality despite persistent shoplifting trends. Vickers has emphasized that such violence, witnessed by over a third of consumers per polling, undermines frontline workers and requires robust enforcement to restore safety in retail environments. For local economic development, Vickers supports initiatives to bolster high streets and access to essential services in Teesside, including the establishment of banking hubs to counter branch closures. In October 2025, he launched a petition and raised the issue in Parliament for a hub in Yarm, absent physical banks for over two years, calling it a "lifeline" for residents and businesses reliant on cash access and counter services to sustain high street vitality. He has led debates on revitalizing UK high streets, critiquing the 2025 Budget for failing to support retail, hospitality, and leisure sectors through measures like business rates relief, which he argues could free up small businesses amid economic pressures. Vickers promotes community-owned assets as drivers of local growth, estimating their annual £220 million contribution to the economy, and has urged action to prevent further decline in areas like Stockton West by fostering hybrid commercial-social enterprises.Other priorities including technology and animal welfare
Vickers serves as chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Blockchain Technologies, established to enhance parliamentary understanding of blockchain, cryptoassets, and Web3 ecosystems through regular meetings and inquiries.[53] In this role, he has promoted the integration of blockchain for secure, trusted financial systems, arguing in a September 2025 opinion piece that the UK should leverage standards like the Common Domain Model to standardize digital transactions and position itself as a leader in financial innovation.[54] He has also raised parliamentary questions on artificial intelligence intellectual property protections and defence innovation funding for universities and small-to-medium enterprises, reflecting a focus on fostering technological advancement.[55] On animal welfare, Vickers has supported legislative measures to strengthen enforcement and protections. During the February 2022 second reading of the Animals (Penalty Notices) Bill, he endorsed provisions enabling on-the-spot fines of up to £5,000 for minor animal welfare offenses, complementing broader reforms like the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill targeting puppy smuggling and live exports.[56] In June 2022, he led a Westminster Hall debate calling for the phase-out of cages for farmed animals, such as farrowing crates for sows, aligning with commitments under the 2021 Action Plan for Animal Welfare to improve standards without undermining farming viability.[57] In the wake of the Conservative Party's 2024 general election defeat, Vickers has contributed to internal renewal by prioritizing youth engagement. In October 2025, he opened a Young Conservatives debate on strategies to regain support among younger voters, emphasizing policy appeals on borders and economic growth.[58] He has publicly urged young people to join the party, highlighting its role in advancing conservative principles amid opposition scrutiny.[59]Controversies
Social media and public statements
In January 2025, Labour MP Chris McDonald wrote to Matt Vickers, criticizing his social media posts for allegedly inciting harm against local councillors through rhetoric linking constituency crime issues to immigration patterns, following an attack on a Stockton councillor.[60][61] McDonald demanded that Vickers condemn the incident, remove the posts, and support the affected councillor, arguing the content contributed to misinformation and real-world targeting of elected officials.[62] Vickers' posts in question highlighted empirical disparities in crime rates, such as a April 22, 2025, statement asserting that offenses committed by migrants exceed those by British citizens by factors up to 30 times in certain categories, framed as addressing community concerns in Stockton West.[63] These communications drew on local policing data and national statistics to underscore patterns of asylum-related offenses and illegal migration's impact on public safety, positioning them as "hard truths" rather than inflammatory opinion.[64] Opponents, including McDonald, contended the emphasis on immigration-crime correlations fosters division and endangers representatives, potentially overlooking broader socioeconomic factors in crime.[65] Vickers countered by defending the posts' basis in verifiable evidence over concerns of political correctness, maintaining that candid discussion of data-driven issues serves constituents facing tangible local challenges like elevated migrant-linked crimes.[66] This approach aligns with his broader online advocacy for prioritizing factual accountability in policy discourse.[67]Planning and constituency disputes
In December 2021, the Planning Inspectorate approved a developer's appeal to build 300 homes on greenfield land in Yarm, part of Vickers' Stockton South constituency at the time, overriding Stockton Borough Council's initial refusal. Vickers publicly condemned the decision as "disgraceful and wholly misguided," arguing it would exacerbate local overdevelopment without adequate infrastructure upgrades, and pledged to raise the issue with the Housing Minister.[68] He highlighted empirical strains on existing services, including overburdened schools and roads in Yarm, Kirklevington, and surrounding areas, where prior approvals had already added thousands of homes on greenfield sites under the Labour-led council.[40] Critics, including local outlet Tees Valley Monitor, accused Vickers of failing to intervene timely during the appeal process, noting that his restated opposition came after the horse had "bolted," potentially allowing the development to proceed unchecked despite his vocal stance against property developers overriding community concerns.[69] This lapse drew scrutiny over his effectiveness in safeguarding constituency interests, particularly as the inspectorate prioritized national housing targets over local capacity limits, such as insufficient GP appointments and school places already reported in the area.[70] Vickers has countered such criticisms by maintaining a record of advocating for community assets, including successful pushes against further proposals like 246 homes in Yarm in 2022 and 600 additional units in 2025, where he mobilized resident objections citing unsustainable growth on infrastructure ill-equipped for rapid expansion—evidenced by Stockton's approval of over 5,000 homes since 2015 without proportional investment in amenities.[71][72] These efforts underscore his prioritization of localized empirical limits over unchecked national mandates, though outcomes remain contested amid ongoing appeals and council decisions.[73]Voting record and ideological criticisms
Matt Vickers has maintained a high degree of alignment with the Conservative Party's positions in parliamentary divisions, recording a 99% agreement rate with fellow Conservative MPs across 301 votes analyzed in the preceding parliamentary session.[74] This consistency extends to social policy matters, where his votes have opposed measures perceived by critics as broadening equality provisions beyond established biological or legal boundaries, such as the Draft Equality Act 2010 (Amendment) Regulations 2023, which he supported to permit the exclusion of trans women from certain women-only spaces, aligning with 464 other MPs in favor against 11 opposed.[75] On end-of-life issues, Vickers voted against the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill at its second reading on November 29, 2024, joining a minority of Conservatives in opposing legalization of assisted dying for terminally ill adults, citing risks to vulnerable populations and the sanctity of life as core principles underpinning such opposition.[76] [77] These positions reflect a pattern of rejecting expansions into areas where empirical evidence on policy outcomes—such as safeguards against coercion in assisted dying jurisdictions like Canada, where expansions have led to over 13,000 cases annually by 2023—suggests potential unintended causal harms outweighing intended benefits.[74] Left-leaning commentators and advocacy groups have critiqued Vickers' record as ideologically rigid or "anti-equality," particularly on votes resisting progressive reforms, with local activist forums accusing him of prioritizing fiscal restraint over social welfare extensions, such as his opposition to broadening free school meals in 2020-2021 divisions.[78] [79] Such characterizations often emanate from sources with documented progressive biases, including regional outlets and social media aggregates that frame conservative fiscal conservatism as indifference to disadvantage, despite Vickers' votes supporting targeted welfare measures like the 2021 Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill's emphasis on victim protections over expansive procedural equalities. These criticisms overlook the causal linkages in data showing that unchecked expansions in equality mandates can strain public resources without proportional improvements in outcomes, as evidenced by stagnant social mobility metrics under prior Labour administrations.[74]Electoral history
Parliamentary elections
Matt Vickers first contested the Stockton South constituency in the 2019 United Kingdom general election held on 12 December, securing a Conservative gain from Labour with 27,764 votes, representing 50.7% of the vote share and a 3.8 percentage point increase from 2017.[20] [80] His majority stood at 5,260 votes (9.6% of the valid vote) over Labour candidate Paul Williams, who received 22,504 votes (41.1%, a 7.1 percentage point decline).[20] [80] Turnout was 71.3% among an electorate of 76,870.[80] The result reflected a two-party swing of 5.5% from Labour to Conservative, contributing to national Conservative advances in former Labour "Red Wall" seats amid voter priorities on Brexit completion and economic stability in post-industrial areas.[20] [81] Following the 2023 boundary review, which abolished Stockton South and created Stockton West as its principal successor, Vickers was re-elected in the 2024 United Kingdom general election on 4 July.[82] He retained the seat for the Conservatives with 20,372 votes (41.9%, a 14.6 percentage point drop from notional 2019 results adjusted for boundaries), achieving a majority of 2,139 votes (4.4%) over Labour's Joe Dancey, who polled 18,233 votes (37.5%, up 3.6 points).[34] [83] Turnout fell to 67.7% from an electorate of 71,868.[83] Amid a national swing of over 10% to Labour and widespread Conservative losses, including all other Teesside seats, Vickers' hold aligned with localized emphasis on economic recovery and community security in a constituency facing industrial transition challenges.[84] [85]Local election outcomes
Matt Vickers was first elected as a Conservative councillor for the Hartburn ward of Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council in the local elections on 7 May 2015, securing 2,323 votes (61.1% of the vote share) in a two-member ward contest alongside fellow Conservative Lynn Hall.[86] This victory contributed to broader Conservative gains across the council, where the party increased its representation from 15 to 20 seats amid challenges to Labour's long-standing dominance, though Labour retained overall control with 31 seats.[3] Vickers' substantial margin over the second-placed Labour candidate, Chris Coombs (1,257 votes, 33.0%), highlighted strong local support in Hartburn, a suburban ward with relatively high turnout compared to urban Labour strongholds.[86] He was re-elected on 2 May 2019 with 1,545 votes (68.6%), further widening the Conservative lead against Labour's Shakeel Hussain (407 votes, 18.1%), reflecting sustained voter preference for Conservative representation in the ward despite national and local shifts.[86] Vickers served until April 2021, when he resigned following his election as MP for Stockton South, triggering a by-election on 6 May 2021 that the Conservatives retained with Niall Innes winning 1,999 votes (73.2%) against Labour's 620 (22.7%), underscoring the ward's resilience as a Conservative outpost in a Labour-majority council.[86][87]| Election Date | Candidates (Party) | Votes | Vote Share (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 May 2015 | Matthew Vickers (Con) | 2,323 | 61.1 |
| Lynn Hall (Con) | 2,309 | - | |
| Chris Coombs (Lab) | 1,257 | 33.0 | |
| Mazi Maroof (Lab) | 722 | - | |
| Kenneth Peace (LD) | 224 | 5.9 | |
| 2 May 2019 | Matt Vickers (Con) | 1,545 | 68.6 |
| Lynn Hall (Con) | 1,516 | - | |
| Shakeel Hussain (Lab) | 407 | 18.1 | |
| Christopher Coombs (Lab) | 390 | - | |
| John Leishman (UKIP) | 300 | 13.3 |
