Former
shadow chancellor of the exchequer Ed Balls is the new Norwich chairman
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Former Shadow Chancellor
Ed Balls has been named as the new chairman of Norwich. The 48-year-old, a
lifelong Canaries fan, will take up the non-executive role with immediate
effect, the Barclays Premier League club have announced. Majority
shareholders Delia Smith and Michael Wynn Jones said Balls would bring
considerable economic knowledge and experience to the position.
A
statement read: "We're absolutely delighted to confirm that Ed Balls is
the new chairman of Norwich City.
Press Association report continues:
"His
economic know-how and experience, coupled with his passion for all things
Norwich City, will be a major asset for the board and we're excited about
working closely together with Ed, David McNally and the other directors in this
new era for the club.
"Ed
will work closely with all of us on the short, medium and long-term strategy to
shape the future of this great football club."
Balls
was born in Norfolk and worked in financial journalism before moving into
politics. He served as a Labour MP for 10 years from 2005 and was a minister
from 2007-10. He was a Shadow Home Secretary and Shadow Chancellor of the
Exchequer before losing his seat in parliament at this year's general election.
He
is now a senior fellow at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and
a visiting professor at King's College, London. He will work unpaid at Carrow
Road and will continue with his existing academic, commercial, charitable and
media activities.
Balls
said: "It's an honour and a privilege to be asked to join the board of
directors at Norwich City as chairman.
"From
the moment my dad first took me to watch City from the terraces at Carrow Road
in 1973, my earliest ambition was to play for the club I loved. But the next
best thing is to become chairman of Norwich City and do what I can off the
pitch to help City succeed on the pitch.
"The
club's immediate priority and focus is, of course, the retention of our
hard-earned Premier League status, and the hard work of my fellow directors and
all of my colleagues at the club means Norwich City is in great shape on and
off the pitch going into 2016.
"With
that foundation, the challenge for all of us at Norwich is to go from the
up-and-down fortunes I have known since I was a boy to an era of sustained
success, and I will be proud to play my part in that."
Norwich were promoted back
to the top flight under manager Alex Neil last season. They are currently 17th
having moved out of the relegation zone last week with a 2-1 win at Manchester
United, their first victory at Old Trafford since 1989.
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