Home NET WORTH Geoffrey Cox Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Salary

Geoffrey Cox Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Salary

Geoffrey Cox

Read the complete write-up of Geoffrey Cox net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, salary, MP, party as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Geoffrey Cox is a British Conservative Party politician and barrister serving as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Torridge and West Devon since the 2005 general election. Cox worked as a barrister from 1982 onwards and was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 2003, two years before his election to Parliament. He served as Attorney General for England and Wales and Advocate General for Northern Ireland under Prime Ministers Theresa May and Boris Johnson from 2018 to 2020.

Early life

NameGeoffrey Cox
Net Worth$5 million
Salary$1 million
OccupationPolitician, Barrister
Age62 years
Height1.75m
Geoffrey Cox net worth 2022

Sir Charles Geoffrey Cox QC MP was born on April 30, 1960 (age 62 years) in Wroughton, Wiltshire, United Kingdom. He is the son of Michael Cox (a Royal Artillery Officer) and Diane Cox. He was educated at King’s College, Taunton, an independent school in Somerset. He studied law and classics at Downing College, Cambridge.

Career

Geoffrey Cox started practice as a barrister after he was called to the bar at the Middle Temple in 1982. In 1992 he co-founded Thomas More Chambers, as it’s Head of Chambers. He was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 2003. For part of his career as a barrister, Cox was Standing Counsel to the government of the Indian Ocean island nation of Mauritius. His cases have included “civil fraud and asset recovery, commercial, human rights, defamation, and judicial review actions”.

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Cox has appeared as leading counsel in the Supreme Court or the Privy Council, and he was increasingly instructed to lead in commercial actions and arbitrations overseas, appearing in the DIFC, Mauritius, and the Cayman Islands. His criminal cases have included the Jubilee line corruption trial; representing Virendra Rastogi the owner of RBG Resources, and successfully defending a member of the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment who had been accused of war crimes related to the death of Baha Mousa.

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In 2014, Cox successfully defended the former Premier (and current Speaker of the Legislative Assembly) of the Cayman Islands, McKeeva Bush, on charges of corruption and misuse of office. In March 2015, Cox successfully defended the Deputy Editor of The Sun, Geoff Webster, in a trial of four journalists resulting from Operation Elveden. The jury had to decide at what point the behavior of those on trial could be considered a criminal rather than a serious disciplinary matter; even the lawyers found this difficult to define. Cox subsequently publicly criticized the vagueness of the law and its disproportionate use that had led to the prosecution.

Parliamentary career

Geoffrey Cox was first elected to stand for Parliament in 2000 by the Torridge and West Devon Conservatives. In the following 2001 general election, he came second to incumbent Liberal Democrat John Burnett by 1,194 votes. After the 2001 election, Cox was reselected. Burnett announced in 2003 that he would not contest the seat again, and at the 2005 general election, Cox defeated the new Liberal Democrat candidate, David Walter, gaining a majority of 3,236. Cox made his maiden speech in the House of Commons on 28 June 2005.

Cox was re-elected as MP for Torridge and West Devon at the 2015 general election with an increased majority of 18,403 votes (32.5%). This majority increased by over 2,000 votes in the 2017 election to 20,686 (34.7%). However, in January 2016, it was reported he had a number of office expense claims for items, such as a 49p pint of milk, rejected by the Commons authorities. He was criticized for this as at the time Cox was Britain’s highest-paid MP. In response, Cox said that his staff had been unaware of a recent change in the rules for office expenses, which no longer permitted office hospitality items such as tea, coffee or milk to be claimed.

In January 2016, Cox was one of 72 MPs who were themselves, landlords, who derived an income from a property and who backed the Conservative Government in voting down an amendment in Parliament on rental homes being “fit for human habitation”. The Government argued that the law already provided more effective remedies for tenants to report homes in bad repair to local authorities who then had a statutory duty to inspect them and to take action against the landlord and that the previous Labour Government had for the same reason rejected the proposal.

In February 2016, Cox told the House of Commons that he had concluded, after examining the published renegotiation proposals, that the case for leaving the EU was now overwhelming and that he would vote to do so in the forthcoming referendum. However, on 9 July 2018, Cox was appointed to the Cabinet as Her Majesty’s Attorney General for England and Wales and Advocate General for Northern Ireland. In the House of Commons, he has sat on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select committee, the Committee on Standards and the Committee on Privileges. Cox resigned from the latter role in 2016 after registering more than £400,000 of outside earnings within the time limit. In the 2019 general election, Cox was re-elected with 60.1% of the vote and a majority of 24,992 (41.8%).

Attorney General

On 9 July 2018, Theresa May appointed Geoffrey Cox as Attorney General taking over from Jeremy Wright following a Cabinet reshuffle, prompted by the resignations of David Davis and Boris Johnson. On 1 December 2018, The Sunday Times newspaper reported the leaked contents of a recent Geoffrey Cox letter to Cabinet Ministers detailing the Attorney General’s legal advice on Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

The newspaper reported that his legal advice declared the Withdrawal agreement’s backstop protocol would mean the UK being indefinitely locked into a customs union with the EU if future negotiations collapse and that the only way the UK could leave the Backstop would be the signing of a future trade deal which could take many years to complete. The former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab and three serving Cabinet members confirmed the contents of the letter to the Sunday Times.

In February 2019, Theresa May placed Geoffrey Cox in charge of negotiating changes to the Northern Ireland backstop in the EU withdrawal agreement. On 24 September 2019, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ruled unanimously that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s prorogation of parliament was unlawful, overturning the High Court’s judgment, given by the Lord Chief Justice, in the government’s favour. On the same day, minutes of a conference call between cabinet ministers (which included Cox) were leaked to Sky News. The minutes of the call, which took place after the prorogation had been approved by the Queen, detailed that Cox briefly told the cabinet at that time that in his view the prorogation was lawful and constitutional and that any accusations of unlawfulness “were motivated by political considerations”.

Geoffrey Cox’s full advice to the Government has not been published, as per precedent to protect government legal advice from being prone to influence. The next day Cox appeared in the House of Commons to answer an urgent question on the Government’s legal advice and on the implications of the Supreme Court’s decision. Cox rebutted calls for him to resign and criticisms of the Government’s position, stating that senior and distinguished judges had agreed with the Government’s view that the issue was not justiciable and chiding MPs for refusing to agree to a means of the UK leaving the EU while repeatedly preventing the House of Commons from dissolving for an election.

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In February 2020, Cox said the public is concerned about the creeping “judicialization of politics” and said people were right to worry that unelected officials were making decisions that ought to be taken by Parliament. He promised there would not be radical reforms. He stated his opposition to the highly politicized US selection process of the Supreme Court and suggested he preferred the Canadian system.

Geoffrey Cox said that “there’s a case for looking at how supreme court judges are appointed… There’s a committee of the Canadian parliament that carries out interviews of candidates.” However, on 13 February 2020, in a Cabinet reshuffle, Cox was dismissed as Attorney General, at the request of the Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, and replaced by Suella Braverman. He was knighted in the 2021 New Year Honours for parliamentary and political service.

Outside work whilst an MP

Geoffrey Cox has continued to practice as a Queen’s Counsel whilst an MP. According to The Daily Telegraph, based on the declarations in the Register of Members’ Interests, Cox’s extra-parliamentary work was worth £820,867 in 2014, or 12 times his annual MP salary, while the total time on extra-parliamentary work that was registered in 2014 (although the register shows the hours were worked over 3 years) was 1,954 hours. According to the Register as of 2 July 2018, his extra-parliamentary earnings in the 12 months from July 2017 to June 2018 were £487,043; the time expended totaled 1,070 hours, carried out over several years.

Cox has previously defended his outside work, pointing out that MPs of all parties have practiced as QCs over the years, and that the Attorney General and Solicitor General are normally chosen from their ranks. He has argued that he has always been used to long hours, 70 and 80-hour weeks were quite normal at the Bar, and that the Nolan report concluded that Parliament needed people with current experience of a wide range of professional and other backgrounds.

In 2016, the House of Commons Standards Committee of which Geoffrey Cox was a member found that he had committed a serious breach of a House of Commons rule, designed to make transparent an MP’s financial interests, after failing to register £400k of outside earnings (11 payments) for legal work within the permitted 28-day period.

Geoffrey Cox registered the payments late, variously between two and seven months after the deadline; he said that he had omitted to prioritize the rule in the midst of an intense political and professional schedule. When first registering the payments, in September 2015, Cox drew attention to and apologized to the Registrar for his omission, referring himself to the Parliamentary Commissioner, and stepped down from the committee.

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The Commissioner and the Committee accepted that the payments had not in fact given rise to any conflicts of interest and that the failure to register the payments within 28 days had thus had no practical effect. Alistair Graham, the former Chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, criticized the lack of punishment and called for a complete reform, while Martin Bell said the Committee on Standards had a long history of inflicting light punishment, which showed that the House was incapable of regulating itself.

On 9 July 2018, Geoffrey Cox gave up all private practice upon his appointment as Attorney General but resumed sometime after being sacked in February 2020, working as “consultant global counsel” to the international law firm Withers LLP. He earned “£468,000 a year for 48 hours of work per month” including over £150,000 for advising the government of the British Virgin Islands about alleged corruption in a case bought by the Foreign Office. Beginning on 26 April 2021, Cox spent one month in the Caribbean and with the permission of the chief whip, continued to vote in Parliament via proxy due to the coronavirus lockdown.

Attorney for suspect in tax fraud case

On 10 December 2019, Danish media claimed that Geoffrey Cox, as a leading barrister and based on his financial interest declaration to Parliament, had earned £380,000 (3.4 million DKK) in legal fees during the years 2015–2017 for representing Sanjay Shah, a Dubai-based British businessman and prime suspect in what is reported to have been the largest tax fraud case Denmark has ever seen. Shah and his legal team asserted that he only exploited legal loopholes that Denmark had failed to close.

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Preben Bang Henriksen, chairman of the legal affairs committee of the Danish Parliament, claimed that Geoffrey Cox’s engagement with Shah poses a conflict of interest or disqualification issue because the Danish investigation is dependent on British assistance. Henriksen feared that the ties between Shah and Cox “might discourage British authorities from investigating the case as thoroughly as it evidently needed to be”. A spokesman for Cox rejected that Cox had influenced the investigation in Britain or Denmark since a system at the Attorney General’s office would prevent conflicts of interest because Cox would not take part in any decisions within cases where he had previously been involved as a lawyer.

Tax avoidance allegations

In September 2014, it was reported that Geoffrey Cox was one of a number of individuals investing in the Phoenix Film Partners LLC scheme run by Ingenious PLC which HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) had alleged to be a tax avoidance scheme. Ingenious has contested the allegation and claimed the scheme had been submitted to HMRC for pre-approval and that HMRC had not raised any objections.

Cox has said that if the scheme was a tax avoidance scheme, it would have contradicted his instructions to his financial advisers, that he did not wish to be involved in aggressive tax avoidance. Following a string of court victories against the schemes, HMRC has since sought to settle disputes with those involved in the tax avoidance, with an agreed re-payment package. In January 2016 Ingenious PLC was reported to still be disputing the claims.

Wife

Geoffrey Cox is married to Jeanie MacDonald, they had their wedding in 1985. His wife is a private person and they have one daughter and two sons together. Cox lives in rural West Devon, near Tavistock, and London. As with the majority of MPs who do not represent a constituency close to Parliament, he maintains accommodation on expenses in London for when he is working there. As of mid-2022, Geoffrey Cox and his wife Jeanie MacDonald are still married and are living happy life.

Geoffrey Cox net worth

How much is Geoffrey Cox worth? Geoffrey Cox net worth is estimated at around $5 million. His main source of income is from his career as a politician and barrister. Cox’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $1 million annually. He is one of the richest and most influential politicians in the United Kingdom. Cox stands at an appealing height of 1.75m and has a good body weight which suits his personality.

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