Bernie Grant
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Bernard Alexander Montgomery Grant (17 February 1944 – 8 April 2000), known simply as Bernie Grant, was a politician in the United Kingdom, and was Labour member of Parliament for Tottenham at the time of his death.
He was born in Georgetown, Guyana, and took up the British government's offer to let people from colonies move to the UK to do blue-collar work, in 1963. In the mid-1960s he was for a period a member of the Socialist Labour League. He quickly became a trade union official, and moved into politics, becoming a Labour councillor in the London Borough of Haringey in 1978. He became its leader in 1985, but provided the borough with little prudent control. He notoriously took control of the Alexandra Palace rebuilding project which had £15 million in cash. Lack of financial control saw this surplus turn into deficit and interest payments eventually took the debt to a total of £80 million.
He soon aroused controversy for his anti-establishment views. Following the Broadwater Estate riots of 1985, during which a policeman was hacked to death, he was quoted as saying that the police had been given "a bloody good hiding." His vilification in the media did not prevent his becoming MP for Tottenham in the 1987 election, one of only three black MPs at the time.
He was associated with the Socialist Campaign Group, and spoke out against police racism. Following his death from a heart attack, his widow Sharon Grant, was on the shortlist to succeed him as Labour candidate for Tottenham, but was beaten by the then-27-year-old David Lammy, who won the by-election.
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Norman Atkinson |
Member of Parliament for Tottenham 1987–2000 |
Succeeded by David Lammy |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from February 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Labour MPs (UK) | UK MPs 1987-1992 | UK MPs 1992-1997 | UK MPs 1997-2001 | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from English constituencies | Councillors in Greater London | UK Workers Revolutionary Party members | Immigrants to the United Kingdom | Guyanese trade unionists | Guyanese politicians | People from Tottenham | 1944 births | 2000 deaths | Guyanese-English people