He was elected as the chairman of the Guildford Conservative Association from 1976 to 1982. In 1977 he became a senior partner in Curchod & Co Chartered Surveyors, where he remained until 1992. He was the director of ISLEF Building and Construction Ltd from 1985 to 1991 and the Pavilion Services Group from 1992 to 1994.
It came as a great surprise when Bill Pitt won the seat for the Liberal Party, on a 24% swing and with a majority of 3,254. He was subsequently chosen to contest the south-coast seat of Bournemouth West on the retirement of the veteran MP John Eden. Butterfill won the seat at the 1983 general election with a majority of 13,331 and remained the MP until 2010.
Butterfill served on many select committees during his more than 20-year Westminster career. He was responsible for introducing many acts of Parliament including the Registered Homes (Amendment) Act 1991,[1] the Insolvency Act 1994,[2] and the Policyholders Protection Act 1997.[3]
In 1995, he entered a bill to place the UK in Central European Time. It was opposed by many Scottish MPs.[4]
In May 2009, as part of the Daily Telegraph's publication of details, the newspaper revealed that for five years, Butterfill owned a six-bedroom country house in Woking, Surrey, 80 miles from his constituency. At the time, he designated a small flat in his Bournemouth constituency, bought for £56,000, as his "main home". Said by Butterfill to have been purchased as a wreck, he submitted regular claims under the second home allowance for the cost of running the Woking house, which had a swimming pool and extensive grounds. This included £17,000 on servants' quarters alone, contributing up to £1,778 a month towards the mortgage interest, and was also reimbursed for council tax bills for the "staff annex", where his housekeeper and odd-job man lived.[5]
Butterfill repaid £17,479 in discretionary repayments to the government related to the expenses row. However, Butterfill was only over-paid by a total of £2,032.47 for mortgage interest (£1,408 in 2006–07 and £625 in 2008–09). He was also overpaid by a total of £332 for council tax in 2005–06 (of which £47.66 was due to payments not being reduced for dissolution and £284.00 due to an incorrect adjustment when moving house). The total repayment recommended was £2,364.[6]
Butterfill was one of the MPs named in a 2010 sting operation. Butterfill allegedly told an undercover reporter that he would lobby to benefit a fictitious company and use his political connections for a payment of £35,000 a year.[7][better source needed] Butterfill was also seen on the Dispatches programme saying he had been one of the four people who persuaded David Cameron to stand for leader of the Conservative Party and that it was likely that he (Butterfill) would be made a peer and go to the House of Lords. The following day the Conservative Party leader David Cameron said: "I can tell you that is not going to happen."[8]
In the final report of the Standards Commissioner, it was deemed that Butterfill did not breach parliamentary rules:
The Commissioner does not consider that any of the statements made by Sir John during the course of his meeting with the undercover reporter or any of the actions he took as a Member referred to in his statements were in breach of the rules of the House. He has not, therefore, upheld the allegations against Sir John.[9]
^House of Commons Members Estimate Committee (4 February 2010). Review of past ACA payments(PDF) (First Report of Session 2009–10). London: The Stationery Office. Archived(PDF) from the original on 14 February 2010. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
^Butterfill, Pamela (11 November 2021). "BUTTERFILL Sir John Valentine". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 November 2021. Retrieved 24 November 2021.