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Official portrait of The Lord Moore of Etchingham

The Lord Moore of Etchingham

Non-affiliated Member of the House of Lords M
Lord Moore of Etchingham's full title is The Lord Moore of Etchingham. His name is Charles Hilary Moore, and he is a current member of the House of Lords.

Allowance claims · 2026

Data not yet released for 2026 — the Lords Finance Office publishes monthly CSVs ~6-8 weeks after month-end.

Lords votes · 2026

162 divisions 7 Content(4.3%) 2 Not-Content(1.2%) 153 didn't vote(94.4%)
2026-03-25
Content
306145 Content
2026-03-18
Content
68163 Not-Content
2026-03-18
Content
70166 Not-Content
2026-03-18
Not-Content
18058 Content
2026-03-18
Content
119191 Not-Content
2026-03-18
Content
148185 Not-Content
2026-03-10
Content
189157 Content
2026-03-10
Content
217170 Content
Source: lordsvotes-api.parliament.uk. "Result" shows the headline Content vs Not-Content tally (including tellers). The Lords doesn't publish a "didn't vote" attendance roll like the Commons, so the figure above conflates absence with abstention.

Recent Hansard contributions · latest 25

2026-04-24 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords—
2026-04-24 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
I accept that that is the argument made by the noble and learned Lord. However, the argument I am trying to make here in a limited time is about public opinion and its effect and how we should regard it. When the noble Lord, Lord Barber, said that we hav
2026-04-24 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
I begin by making apology to the most reverend Primate the Archbishop of Canterbury. When I was shouting to be heard, I did not realise that she was standing. I apologise for that. I would like to bring the debate back to the question of the process a
2026-04-24 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords—
2026-03-27 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I accept the spirit of the noble and learned Baroness, Lady Butler-Sloss, so I shall be very brief. I support the noble Baroness, Lady Fraser of Craigmaddie, in her amendment on the register. I understand that one of the things that we are try
2026-03-20 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I was deeply interested by the remarks of the noble Baroness, Lady Fraser, and her amendment. I would like to confirm from personal experience that a young man very well known to me can barely speak at all. He has therefore been effectively sil
2026-03-13 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
I am perhaps imagining the noble Baroness, Lady Fox, as a quivering wreck. If that is how she feels, you can imagine what it is like for most of us when we face our doctors, so the point was made very strongly. There are so many good amendments here a
2026-03-13 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
As I understand it, the noble Baroness is talking about various possible options. Would she think it a good idea if the doctor were free to advise the patient to stop eating?
2026-03-10 House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Bill
My Lords, I much admired the speech by the noble Earl, Lord Devon, but I must say that I did not agree with him. He spoke with his wonderful customary elegance and idiosyncrasy, but I did not agree with him when he criticised the nature of the deal that
2026-02-27 Arrangement of Business
My Lords, I take the point made by the noble Lord, Lord Rooker, and other noble Lords about courtesy in relation to our proceedings. It would be helpful for those of us who are trying to amend the Bill to be told at the time when we are filibustering, b
2026-02-26 Transnational Repression in the UK (JCHR Report)
My Lords, it is a pleasure to follow the noble Baroness, Lady Ludford. In the short time we have, I will take up and apply what she has been saying in relation to one country and one subject. The country is China and the subject is our universities. I
2026-02-06 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
Perhaps I may follow up on the very sad story from the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, of her mother and how she died. This would not be considered to be suicide under the law, as I understand it. As has been discussed quite a lot during this Bill, refusing
2026-02-06 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I of course agree with the noble Baroness, Lady Gerada, that there are many different motives for killing yourself, but we are talking about making a law here. It is very important that the natural and ordinary meaning of words is established a
2026-01-30 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I am glad that the noble Lord, Lord Pannick, said that this was at the heart of the Bill, in the sense that I think he is right; it illustrates one of the Bill’s great problems. It has emerged from this debate—the noble Baroness, Lady Finlay, m
2026-01-30 Arrangement of Business
My Lords, I am very grateful to the Chief Whip for his, as always, very kind and helpful explanations. I have a further point to raise, because I think it affects the proceedings of your Lordships’ House as we go on from today. Of course, I would defe
2026-01-23 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
The patient could say, if capable of action after having woken up from taking the poison, “I want more poison, give me some”. If that happened, what would the doctor’s duty be?
2026-01-23 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
Forgive me if I have misunderstood the noble and learned Lord, but what about the situation in which the patient does not die, is conscious and says, “I still want to die”? What is the doctor supposed to do at that point?
2026-01-23 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
The point that is being missed was made by the noble Lord, Lord Stevens, and it is the problem with what the noble Lord, Lord Winston, was saying. Can the noble Lord respond to it? We are talking about what the aim of this is, but it is not a health aim.
2026-01-23 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, the noble Lord, Lord Stevens, who speaks from great experience and professional knowledge, made a very clear case about how the assisted dying navigator is quite outside the normal purposes of the National Health Service. I guess it could be de
2026-01-23 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I 100% support the motive behind the amendment from the noble Baroness, Lady Berger, and what the noble Baroness, Lady Cass, and others have just said, but my question is this: will it make any difference? If you want an assisted death, would
2026-01-16 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I find it strange that the noble Baroness, Lady Royall, should be making the argument that the word “dying” tells us all that we need to know. If that were so, we would not need the Bill. The Bill is about a very specific thing, which is choos
2026-01-16 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I support the point about lasting power of attorney that the noble Baroness, Lady Coffey, has made and the noble Lord, Lord Harper, has reinforced, but I also want to look at it another way round. The fear—which is a very justified fear—is tha
2025-12-12 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
I am grateful to the noble Lord. As I said, I will come on to the amendment soon, but I want to emphasise this point because I think that it matters a lot in this debate and will matter in the coming weeks. A particularly virulent article in the Times, w
2025-12-12 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I support these amendments, particularly those relating to prisoners and, indeed, what the noble Baroness, Lady Fox, so eloquently expressed. Just before I do, I will also support something that the noble Lord, Lord Blencathra, who is now not i
2025-12-05 Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill
My Lords, I support the amendment from the noble Baroness, Lady Berger. It is reasonable to have these considerations about the different ways people think and feel at different times in their life. One of the big discussions we have more broadly about t
Source: hansard.parliament.uk via hansard-api. Snippets shown verbatim from the search API; click any debate title for the full record.

Register of Interests · 7 entries on file

Declarations under the Lords Code of Conduct. Free text — no monetary values, no hours worked. A declaration that an interest exists, not a claim about its size.

Category 1: Remunerated employment etc.

  • Head of Thatcher strand, The Future of the Right Project, Policy Exchange (interest ceased 31 December 2025)
    registered 2025-03-05 · amended 2026-01-02
  • Consultant to AC Chapter One (production company) for television drama series on Baroness Thatcher
    registered 2024-10-09 · amended 2025-04-05
  • Chairman, The Spectator, and director, Old Queen Street Ventures Ltd
    registered 2024-10-07 · amended 2025-04-05
  • Book royalties from Thatcher biography from Penguin / Allen Lane
    registered 2023-04-19 · amended 2025-04-05
  • Freelance columnist for The Spectator
    registered 2020-11-12 · amended 2025-04-05
  • Staff columnist for The Daily Telegraph
    registered 2020-11-12 · amended 2025-04-05

Category 5: Overseas visits

  • Visit to Bahrain, 19 to 22 October 2025, to visit governmental and cultural institutions; travel and accommodation costs met by government of Bahrain
    registered 2025-10-27
Source: UK Parliament Members API (Lords register). Refreshed weekly. Read the full Lords Code of Conduct for what each category covers and the disclosure thresholds.

Party history

2020-09-17present
Non-affiliated current

Government posts

None recorded.

Opposition posts

None recorded.

Committee memberships

None recorded.

Contact

Parliamentary office
contactholmember@parliament.uk
020 7219 5353 · House of Lords, London, SW1A 0PW

APPGs (2026) · 0 active officership(s)

No APPG officerships found for this peer. (Officer matching is by name — if the parliamentary register lists them under a slightly different form, the join may miss; check /appgs directly.)

Written parliamentary questions · 2026

No written questions tabled in 2026.

Bills sponsored & supported · 2026

0 bills 0 as lead sponsor 0 as supporter
No bills sponsored or supported in 2026.
Source: UK Parliament Bills API. "Lead" sponsor is the primary mover (sortOrder = 1); "Supporter" rows are members of either House who backed the bill at introduction. Year is the bill's first-reading date.

Historic bills (all-time)

0 bills 0 as lead sponsor 0 as supporter
No bills sponsored or supported on record.
Same source as the year-scoped panel above, but unconstrained by year. The "Sponsored" tag = lead sponsor; "Supported" = backed at introduction. Sorted newest first.
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