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Phil Boswell

Phil Boswell
MP
Member of Parliament
for Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill
Assumed office
8 May 2015
Preceded by Tom Clarke
Majority 11,501 (23.69%)
Personal details
Born (1963-07-23) 23 July 1963 (age 53)
Coatbridge, United Kingdom
Political party Scottish National Party
Alma mater Glasgow Caledonian University
Website philboswellmp.scot

Philip John Boswell (born 23 July 1963) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician. He has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill since the general election in May 2015.

Boswell was raised in Coatbridge and worked there for a brief time as a policeman.

Boswell then found work in the oil industry, as a quantity surveyor and contracts engineer. He spent more than a decade in the oil and gas industry, with work taking him to Hong Kong, Egypt and the Falklands.

In December 2015 Boswell was criticised for having previously received an £18,000 interest-free loan from US energy company Phillips 66 while working for them as a contracts manager. Earlier in 2015, Boswell had tabled a motion in the House of Commons, calling for Chancellor George Osborne to close the "Mayfair tax loophole" tax avoidance scheme. An SNP spokesperson stated that Boswell had always declared his interests, and was committed to ending tax avoidance schemes.

In January 2016 it was announced that Boswell would be investigated by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards over the claim that he did not properly record his directorship of a company in the Commons Register of Members' Interests, thus breaching parliamentary procedure. He was registered with Companies House as the sole director of Boswell and Johnston Ltd. On 30 March 2016 it was reported that this complaint had been upheld, however the Standards Commissioner stated that Mr Boswell had made a "genuine mistake" and that she did not think this was done in an attempt to conceal his financial interests.

In May 2016 Boswell repaid £555 which he had previously claimed on parliamentary expenses against the costs of promotional videos, this followed the Independent Parliamentary Standards Association finding that they were not eligible because they did not relate to parliamentary activities.



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