John Grant (British politician)

John Grant
Under-Secretary of State for Employment
In office
14 April 1976  4 May 1979
Prime Minister James Callaghan
Preceded by Harold Walker
Succeeded by Patrick Mayhew
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Overseas Development
In office
18 October 1974  14 April 1976
Prime Minister Harold Wilson
Preceded by William Price
Succeeded by Frank Judd
Member of Parliament
for Islington Central
Islington East (1970–1974)
In office
18 June 1970  9 June 1983
Preceded by Eric Fletcher
Succeeded by Constituency abolished
Personal details
Born (1932-10-16)16 October 1932
Finsbury Park, England
Died 29 September 2000(2000-09-29) (aged 67)
Political party Labour (Before 1981)
Social Democratic (1981–1989)
Alma mater Stationers' Company's School

John Douglas Grant (16 October 193229 September 2000) was an MP of the United Kingdom parliament from 1970 to 1983. He was as a member of the Labour Party until he left in 1981 to join the new Social Democratic Party (SDP). He represented Islington East from 1970 to 1974 and Islington Central from 1974-1983.

Early life

Grant was born in Finsbury Park, North London. He attended the Stationers' Company's School in Hornsey before beginning a career as journalist. He worked for several regional newspapers before he managing to secure a post at the Daily Express in 1955 where he covered the trades unions, rising to become the Chief Industrial Correspondent in 1967.

Parliamentary career

Grant combined his career in journalism with an interest in politics and secured the Labour nomination for the Conservative seat of Beckenham which he lost by 13,000 votes in the 1966 General Election. However, for the 1970 General Election, Grant managed to secure the selection for the safe Labour seat of Islington East and was comfortably elected to Parliament.

Grant soon acquired a reputation as an accomplished parliamentarian with particular expertise in trade union matters which he acquired through his many years as an industrial correspondent and his close personal relationships with many of the trade union leaders whom he had covered. Grant served as a minister through the second Wilson and Callaghan governments. After a brief tenure as a Parliamentary Secretary at the Civil Service Department, he was promoted to be Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department of Overseas Development. In 1976, Grant moved laterally to the Department of Employment where he served with great distinction and received much praise for his work helping the disabled.

SDP

Although Grant was not one of the 14 MPs who initially joined the SDP, he was growing increasingly uncomfortable with the Labour Party. In addition, he was harried in his Constituency Labour Party in Islington which was embroiled in fighting between Labour left and right wings in the local party. After great hesitation, due to his loyalty to his union, the Electrical Trades Union, Grant finally left the Labour Party in late 1981.

Grant joined the SDP to immediately become embroiled in intra-party conflict over the Tebbit Bill. Although a majority of SDP MPs thought that the party should vote in favor of the second reading of the Tebbit Bill to emphasize the party's distance from Labour and the Trades Union Congress and then offer its own amendments. Grant, along with several other newcomers to the SDP, objected to the bill which he thought would damage industrial relations and would diminish the party's appeal to trade unionists. Grant rebelling against the party whip and leading four other MPs into the 'no' Lobby. Although this had no lasting impact on Grant's standing in or relations with other members of the part, it did hurt public perceptions of the SDP's unity.

After boundary changes in which Islington's three constituencies were combined into two a further inter party dispute occurred as all three Islington MPs had moved from Labour to the SDP. Grant's Islington Central seat was abolished and he sought the nomination for the revised Islington North seat, being selected over sitting MP Michael O'Halloran. However O'Halloran left the SDP and, after a failed attempt to rejoin Labour, stood against Grant as an Independent Labour. This greatly divided Grant's potential vote and prevented him from offering himself as a viable tactical option to Conservative voters who wished to keep the left-wing Labour candidate, Jeremy Corbyn, out of Parliament. Grant finished third with 8,268 votes, 1,000 votes behind the Conservative candidate and 6,500 votes behind Corbyn.

After Parliament

After losing his seat, Grant became the head of communications for the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union. He contested the safe Conservative seat of Carshalton and Wallington for the SDP in 1987 where he finished second. During the merger negotiations between the SDP and the Liberals, Grant served on the SDP's negotiating team before he resigned in frustration with the Liberals whom he regarded as "not ready to move from the politics of protest towards power."

Return to Labour

After the merger, Grant eventually returned to the Labour fold with the rise of Tony Blair and New Labour. He was a significant influence on Blair's pledge to increase funding for cancer research at the Brighton Labour Party Conference in 2000. Grant had become a vigorous campaigner for cancer research after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. Just over a week after Blair's announcement, Grant died of the disease in 2000 at the age of 67.

Grant wrote two books:

Member of Parliament, 1974 Blood Brothers: 1992

References

    • "John Grant". The Times. 3 October 2000. Retrieved 2009-10-12. 
    • Dalyell, Tam (3 October 2000). "John Grant". The Independent. Retrieved 2009-10-12. 
    • Pearce, Edward (4 October 2000). "John Grant". The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-10-17. 
    Parliament of the United Kingdom
    Preceded by
    Sir Eric Fletcher
    Member of Parliament for Islington East
    1970Feb 1974
    Constituency abolished
    New constituency Member of Parliament for Islington Central
    Feb 19741983
    Constituency abolished
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