Balfour was born on 12 August 1944 in Lima, Peru, where his father was a merchant and a polo player.[1] He is the son of Archibald Roxburgh Balfour of Dawyck (1883–1958), a member of the Scottishlanded gentry, and his second wife, Lilian Helen (née Cooper) Balfour (d. 1989).[2][3][4] His father, who was awarded the Military Cross, was a Captain in the Lothians and Border Horse Yeomanry.[2] His older brother Christopher Roxburgh Balfour was born in 1941, and his sister Janet Roxburgh Balfour (b. 1943) married David John Cecil Berens.
Balfour‘s paternal grandparents were merchant and shopowner Alexander Balfour of Dawyck and Janet Roxburgh, the sister of Archibald Roxburgh and an aunt of J. F. Roxburgh.[5] His maternal grandfather was Maxwell Dennison Cooper.[3]
In 1968, he was admitted to Middle Temple and became entitled to practise as a barrister.
Balfour was the Conservative Party candidate for Chester-le-Street at a by-election in March 1973, a seat that the party had little chance of winning. Balfour was candid about his chances but hoped to come a strong second, despite his campaign being based in a caravan in a garden. In the event, the Conservative vote collapsed to the Liberals and he lost his deposit; the Labour campaign accused the Liberals of dirty tricks but regarded Balfour as an honourable opponent.[citation needed]
In the European Parliament, Balfour concentrated on trade policy. He attacked member state governments for lacking any will to remove state aids to industry and to institute free trade. As budget spokesman for the Conservative MEPs, he attacked the European Community's budgeting process but, in October 1981, joined with other Conservative MEPs in signing a letter calling on the UK to join the European Monetary System. In December 1982, he made an impressive speech attacking the MEPs voting to withdraw a budget rebate for the United Kingdom that had been accepted by the European Council. However, the next year, he led a more moderate group in supporting a short freeze in payment of the rebate because he worried that opposing it would lead the Parliament to vote to stop payments altogether.[citation needed]
Ryedale
Balfour stood down at the 1984 European Parliament election. He had been appointed Chairman of the York Trust Ltd in 1983, which later became York Mount Group. However, he did not give up Parliamentary ambitions. John Spence, the Conservative MP for Ryedale (part of his former European Parliament constituency), died in 1986, and Balfour was selected to defend the seat in a by-election.[7]
The by-election took place at a time when the Conservatives were unpopular and the Liberals nominated a popular local teacher, Elizabeth Shields. On polling day, Shields won the seat comfortably.[7] Balfour returned to merchant banking, and from 1991 was Chairman of Mermaid Overseas Ltd. In 1999 he became involved with the emerging Polish market as a Director of Mostostal Warszawa SA, serving as Chief Executive Officer from 2000 to 2002.[citation needed]
Policy stance
In 2000 he wrote a letter to The Spectator in which he declared "as a committed Europhile" that the best solution would be to allow Britain to opt into EU laws it liked, and supported the call from Conrad Black for Britain to negotiate membership of the North American Free Trade Agreement.[citation needed]
On November 4, 1978, he married Serena Mary Spencer-Churchill Russell, who was engaged to Broadway producer Michael Santangelo in 1964 [9] before marrying commodities broker Robert Salant in 1966, then Neil McConnell, a grandson of Avon Products founder David H. McConnell, in 1968.[citation needed] Serena was the daughter of American newspaper publisher Edwin F. Russell and Lady Sarah Consuelo Spencer-Churchill,[10] daughter of John Spencer-Churchill, 10th Duke of Marlborough.[11] Serena's wedding to Salant was famously upstaged by her parents, who were in the process of an acrimonious divorce.[12]