


Klaus Armstrong-Braun Tel. 01244 538638
Amazonia, 8 Eaton Close, Broughton, Chester, CH1 0RF, U.K.


Klaus Armstrong-Braun (born 13 December, 1940)
Klaus Armstrong-Braun is an environmental campaigner and UK politician.
He currently
lives in Broughton (near Chester) in Flintshire, Wales, where he was a councillor
for the Green Party on the Broughton and Bretton Community Council between 1991 and
1995 and on Flintshire County Council between 1995 and 2004 (when he lost his seat
to Labour). He is the only county councillor ever elected for the Wales Green Party
and has now been reelected as a Councillor for Flintshire County Council. He remains
on Saltney Town Council.
In March 2005, he changed his political allegiance to Forward Wales and stood in
the May general election in Alyn and Deeside as a parliamentary candidate.
Klaus spends much of his time campaigning to save the habitats and lives of endangered
species, particularly those that the government and civil society have shown little
interest in protecting. Most notably the EU-protected great crested newt. In common
with London mayor, Ken Livingstone, his passion for newts has resulted in ad hominem
remarks from rival politicians.
He has an interest in environmental and planning law,
and has instigated or taken many legal cases against various governments to the European
Court. As a runner in his spare time, he has taken part in 100 mile ultra marathon
and 24-hour races.
Early History
Klaus was born in Krakow, Poland in 1940. He was orphaned and moved to Germany before
finally moving to Ireland as a refugee in 1944 where he was brought up.
He was educated
in Britain where he qualified as an engineer on the railways. He studied at the Chester
College of Further Education, Liverpool Polytechnic, Manchester Metropolitan University
and University College Chester (now the University of Chester).
He spent over 25
years in the railway industry as a maintenance supervisor for locomotives and wagons;
a stores controller, and, later, a divisional cripple-wagon controller with the now
defunct British Rail. He also served for over 25 years in the Reservists Section
of the Royal Engineers and Royal Corps of Transport, becoming a Staff Sergeant.