Juan Watterson

Summary

Juan Paul Watterson FCA CMgr FCMI FRSA SHK (born 1980)[1] is a Manx politician, who is Speaker of the House of Keys, and a member for Rushen, in the Isle of Man.[1]

Juan Watterson
Speaker of the House of Keys
Assumed office
27 September 2016
Preceded bySteve Rodan
Minister for Home Affairs
In office
13 September 2011 – 27 September 2016
Preceded byJohn Shimmin
Succeeded byJohn Shimmin
Member of the House of Keys for Rushen
Assumed office
23 November 2006
Personal details
Born1980 (1980) (age 44)
Isle of Man
Spouse
Helena Perry
(m. 2010)
[1]
EducationRushen Infants School
Rushen Junior School
Castle Rushen High School
Alma materUniversity of Lincoln
OccupationPolitician, chartered accountant

Early life edit

Born in 1980 to John and Alison Watterson, he was educated at Rushen Infants School, Rushen Junior School and Castle Rushen High School.

Qualification and professional memberships edit

Watterson attended the University of Lincoln (University of Lincolnshire & Humberside) where he graduated in 2001 with a First Class BA (Hons) in Management. He joined international accountancy firm KPMG where he qualified as a Chartered Accountant in 2005. He was the ICAEW Chairman of the National Student Council, and later served on the institute's Young Professionals Advisory Board, Public Sector Advisory Board and Members and Commercial Board of the Institute as well as having been part of its 90-member governing ICAEW Council.[2]

Career edit

Watterson was first elected to the House of Keys in 2006 aged 26 years 142 days, making him the second youngest ever elected MHK. He was appointed a political member of the Department of Local Government and the Environment and Chairman of the island's Planning Authority.[3] Until May 2009, he had special responsibility as a "political member" for Housing (DoLGE) and Social Security within the Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS), these roles being the Manx equivalent of a junior minister in the UK. After 10 months as Chairman of the Planning Committee, he was appointed to the Department of Economic Development[4] with special responsibility for the island's financial services sector.

He was re-elected in the 2011 General Election with 3,080 votes, the highest number of votes in the island, and the largest in Rushen since the 1986 boundary changes. He was appointed the Minister for Home Affairs, Chairman of the Communications Commission, and in 2012 became the island's first Armed Forces Champion. At 31 years 102 days, he became the youngest ever member of the Council of Ministers on his appointment as Minister for Home Affairs on 14 October 2011.

  • 2006: elected to House of Keys with 2,430 votes.
  • 2011: re-elected to the House of Keys, with 3,080 votes, the largest received by any candidate since 1981.
  • 2011: appointed Minister for Home Affairs and Chairman of the Communications Commission.
  • 2016: Chartered Manager and Fellow of the Chartered Management Institute.
  • 2016: re-elected after boundary changes with 2,087 votes, the third largest total on the island.
  • 2016: elected unopposed to the position of Speaker of the House of Keys.[5]
  • 2021: re-elected to the House of Keys with 2,384 votes, the largest total on the island, and re-elected unopposed as Speaker.

Watterson joined the Armed Forces Parliamentary Scheme where he is a postgraduate (2012) and Honorary Commander (RN). On 1 August 2016 he was appointed Hon. Colonel of the Isle of Man Army Cadet Force.[6]

Election results edit

2006 edit

2006 Manx General Election: Rushen[7]
Party Candidate Votes %
Independent Juan Watterson 2430 23.53%
Independent Phil Gawne 1794 17.37%
Independent Quintin Gill 1689 16.36%
Independent Philip Crellin 1432 13.87%
Independent John Rimington 1048 10.15%
Independent Anthony Wright 1000 9.68%
Independent Adrian Tinkler 934 9.04%
Total valid votes 10327
Rejected ballots 4 0.1%
Registered electors 6,199
Turnout 4,017 64.8%

2011 edit

2011 Manx General Election: Rushen[8]
Party Candidate Votes %
Independent Juan Watterson 3080 29.57%
Independent Laurence Skelly 2021 19.40%
Independent Phil Gawne 1942 18.64%
Independent Quintin Gill 1722 16.53%
Independent John Orme 1195 11.47%
Independent David Jones 457 4.39%
Total valid votes 10417
Rejected ballots 12 0.32%
Registered electors 5,789
Turnout 3,749 64.76%

2016 edit

In 2014, Tynwald approved recommendations from the Boundary Review Commission which saw the reform of the island's electoral boundaries.

Under the new system, the island was divided into 12 constituencies based on population, with each area represented by two members of the House of Keys.

As a result of these changes the constituency was reduced in size and lost one of its three MHKs.[9]

2016 Manx General Election: Rushen[10]
Party Candidate Votes %
Independent Juan Watterson 2087 36.19%
Independent Laurence Skelly 1212 21.02%
Independent Mark Kemp 1104 19.14%
Independent James Hampton 1033 17.91%
Independent Leo Cussons 331 5.74%
Total valid votes 5767
Rejected ballots 13 0.41%
Registered electors 5,446
Turnout 3,173 58.26%

2021 edit

2021 Manx General Election: Rushen[11]
Party Candidate Votes
Independent Juan Watterson 2384
Independent Michelle Haywood 1386
Independent Mark Kemp 1163
Manx Green Party Andrew Langan-Newton 1109

Personal life edit

Watterson has been married to Helena (née Perry) since March 2010, they have a daughter and son together and live in Port St. Mary, Isle of Man.

In December 2011 he infamously vomited on a public bus after attending his Department's (Department of Home Affairs (Isle of Man)) Christmas party, shortly after giving a talk about a need for a "responsible attitude" towards drinking over the festive period. This was featured in a January 2012 edition of Private Eye, as a nominee of the "Don't Do What I Do, Do What I Say" Rotten Borough award. He later apologised for his "lapse of judgement" in "getting a little bit drunk".[12]

Publications edit

Tynwaldballs and Tynwaldballs 2, two collections of quotes and gaffes from the Manx parliament.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 February 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "Watterson, Juan". icaew.com. Archived from the original on 20 October 2018.
  3. ^ "Political Members - Isle of Man Government Department of Local Government and the Environment". Archived from the original on 3 March 2010. Retrieved 6 November 2009.
  4. ^ "Isle of Man Government - Enterprise".
  5. ^ "Watterson elected Speaker - Isle of Man Today". Archived from the original on 28 September 2016.
  6. ^ "No. 61767". The London Gazette (Supplement). 22 November 2016. p. 24715.
  7. ^ "House of Keys 2006 General Election Results" (PDF). gov.im.
  8. ^ "House of Keys 2011 General Election Results" (PDF). gov.im.
  9. ^ "Representation of the People (Amendment) Act 2014: Map No. 12, RUSHEN CONSTITUENCY" (PDF). gov.im.
  10. ^ "2016 General Election - Constituency Results" (PDF). gov.im.
  11. ^ "General Election 2021: Rushen Result". the Sound. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  12. ^ "Private Eye highlights Minister's "lapse of judgement" | Isle of Man News :: isleofman.com".