- Leslie Burgin
Edward Leslie Burgin (1887 – 1945) was a British Liberal National politician in the 1930s.
Burgin trained as a solicitor specialising in international law and served as principal and director of legal studies to the
Law Society . He contested Hornsey four times and East Ham North once, without success.In the 1929 general election Burgin was elected as Liberal
Member of Parliament for Luton. Along with other Liberal MPs he joined the Liberal Nationals in 1931 and was made aCharity Commission er. In 1932 he was appointedParliamentary Secretary to theBoard of Trade .In 1937 Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain appointed Burgin as Minister of Transport. Two years later he was appointed as the firstMinister of Supply in April 1939. As the post had not yet been established in law, he formally served asMinister without Portfolio for the first three months. His appointment was aimed to appeal to liberal minded opinion but was criticised as being inappropriate -A.J.P. Taylor described Burgin as being "another horse from Caligula's well stocked stables" (a follow-up to contemporary remarks about the earlier appointment of Sir Thomas Inskip asMinister for Coordination of Defence ). When Chamberlain was replaced byWinston Churchill , Burgin was replaced.References
*Rayment
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