David Evans (British politician)

David John Evans (23 April 1935 – 21 October 2008) was an English business executive and Conservative politician.

Biography

Born in Edmonton,[1] Evans came from a working-class background and attended Tottenham Technical College. As a youngster he showed promise as a footballer and cricketer and played for Aston Villa, although without making any first team appearances, between 1950 and 1954. An opening batsman, he also played for Gloucestershire CCC and Warwickshire CCC at cricket, although, again, without making any first team appearances.

In 1956 Evans married Janice Masters in Edmonton. They had three children, born later in 1956, in 1960 and in 1972. In 1960 Evans borrowed £500 to found his own industrial cleaning company, called Exclusive Office Cleaning, which later became Brengreen Holdings. He sold this for 32 million pounds in 1986. Four years later, in 1990, he formed Broadreach, another industrial cleaning company, which he was chairman of for 12 years.

From 1984-89, Evans was the chairman of Luton Town Football Club. The club played in the Football League First Division during Evans tenure as chairman, and he presided over a controversial membership-only scheme for fans under which only members were allowed to attend matches at the club's home ground and away supporters were banned from the stadium. Evans served on the club's board of directors from 1976 to 1990. Evans was also chairman of the Lord's Taverners, along with being a member of the Finance and Administration Sub-Committee (1981–1986) and a member of the General Committee (1985–1986) of Middlesex CCC. As a cricketer, he represented Hertfordshire in the Minor Counties Championship between 1967 and 1968, made two Gillette Cup appearances for the team in 1969, scoring ten runs on his debut but a duck in his second match. He also made two appearances for Club Cricket Conference, the first in 1973 and the second in 1974.[2]

Evans represented Welwyn Hatfield as the Conservative Member of Parliament from 1987, until he lost his seat at the 1997 general election.

Shortly before losing his seat, in early March 1997, he attracted controversy over unguarded remarks in an interview by sixth-formers for a school magazine in which he referred to his opponent as a "single girl" (she was 42 years old at the time) with "bastard children",[3] and claimed that the Birmingham Six were guilty and had "killed hundreds" before being caught, as well as making remarks considered racist, such as asking how the sixth-formers would feel if their daughter was raped by "Some black bastard". Twenty months before, in an interview with the Times, he admitted that he was racist.[4]

The Six won substantial damages from Evans in July 1998, who also apologised for what he said[5] and were even reported be to suing publications for reporting the slur.[6]

Evans sold his second industrial cleaning business in May 2002 and retired from the business world.

He died in Boston, USA, on 21 October 2008, of Lung Fibrositis.[7]

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References

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Christopher Murphy
Member of Parliament for Welwyn Hatfield
19871997
Succeeded by
Melanie Johnson