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Eric Forth - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eric Forth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rt Hon. Eric Forth

Member of Parliament
for Bromley and Chislehurst
In office
2 May 1997 – 17 May 2006
Preceded by None
Succeeded by Bob Neill

Member of Parliament
for Mid Worcestershire
In office
9 June 1983 – 2 May 1997
Preceded by None
Succeeded by Peter Luff

Born 9 September 1944(1944-09-09)
Died 17 May 2006 (aged 61)
Glasgow, Scotland
Nationality British
Political party Conservative
Spouse Carroll Forth
Residence University of Glasgow

Eric Forth (9 September 194417 May 2006) was a British politician. He was the Conservative Member of the European Parliament for Birmingham North, then Member of Parliament for Worcestershire Mid and finally Bromley and Chislehurst at his death. He served as a junior minister in the governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major between 1988 and 1997. In his obituaries, he was described as "colourful", "flamboyant", "provocative" and a "right-wing libertarian". He was noted for his colourful ties and waistcoats, sideburns, and jewellery.

Contents

[edit] Early and private life

Forth was born in Glasgow, Scotland. His father was a harbourmaster. He was educated at the Jordanhill College School and the University of Glasgow, where he was awarded a master's degree in politics and economics. Before entering politics, he worked in junior managerial roles at Xerox, Rank and Ford Motor Company before becoming a management consultant with Deloitte and Dexion.

He was married to Linda St. Clair in 1967 and they had two daughters before their divorce in 1994; he re-married in 1994, to Carroll Goff, gaining a stepson. Forth died in Charing Cross Hospital from cancer on May 17, 2006.

[edit] Political career

After standing as a communist at a mock school-election and flirting with distributism at university, Forth developed conservative libertarian leanings. Forth was elected as a councillor for the Pilgrims Hatch ward on the Brentwood Urban District Council from 1968-72. He contested the safe Labour seat of Barking at both the February and October 1974 general elections, where on both occasions he was defeated by Labour's Jo Richardson. He was the secretary of Llandeilo Conservative Association from 1975-7, and chairman of the Ross-on-Wye Conservative Political Committee from 1978-9.

He was elected to the European Parliament as the member for Birmingham North in 1979. He remained in Brussels and Strasbourg until 1984, where he founded and chaired the backbench committee of the European Democratic Group. Originally in favour of membership of the European Economic Community, he would eventually become a Eurosceptic.

He was elected to the House of Commons at the 1983 general election with a majority of 14,205 votes for the new seat of Mid-Worcestershire. His political views were apparent from his maiden speech, in which he attacked the Sex Equality Bill, and he was an early member of the No Turning Back group. Following boundary changes to his constituency, he was not selected to fight the new seat with the same name, losing out to the sitting MP for Worcester, Peter Luff. Forth found a safe seat in the Outer London suburbs for Bromley and Chislehurst in the heart of the large London Borough of Bromley. He was elected to represent the seat in 1997, 2001 and 2005.

In Parliament, he served on the Employment select committee in 1986 until later in the year when he was appointed as the Parliamentary Private Secretary to Angela Rumbold at the Department for Education and Science. He entered the government of Margaret Thatcher when she appointed him as the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for Trade and Industry in 1988, as minister for consumer affairs. He was moved by John Major in 1990 to the same position at the Department for Employment and then the Department of Education following the 1992 general election, taking responsibility for schools. He was promoted to become Minister of State for higher education at the Department for Education and Employment in 1995 and became a member of the Privy Council in 1996, shortly before leaving office in 1997.

[edit] The awkward squad

Forth had hoped to support Michael Portillo for the leadership of the Conservative Party, to follow Major, but Portillo famously lost his seat in the 1997 general election. Forth was then Peter Lilley's campaign manager until the latter withdrew, then supported John Redwood, and finally backed eventual winner William Hague. Forth refused the offer of a place in the Conservative shadow ministerial team and instead became a leading backbench irritant to the Labour government, engaging in "a Parliamentary form of guerrilla warfare".[1] Initially acting as a loner and concentrating on Private members bills to which he objected, Forth soon gathered a small group around him known as "the awkward squad".

In 1997, with senior Conservative MPs David Maclean and Patrick McLoughlin, he established the Parliamentary Resource Unit, a subscription briefing service available to any MP as a means of countering the briefings that government ministers receive from the Civil Service.

Disliking e-mail, he would send brief written notes to like-minded MPs to say "I am given to understand that the Powers That Be think that Wednesday's business will go through easily", and his group would ensure that Wednesday's business did not go through easily.[2] Forth's speciality was the filibuster: as Labour MPs found themselves often required to remain in Parliament past midnight, they called him "Bloody Eric Forth" (a reaction Forth welcomed). However, longer-serving Labour MPs who remembered the 1970s -- when all-night sittings were common -- acknowledged that they would have done the same under reversed circumstances, and grudgingly admired Forth for his disruptive ability.

Iain Duncan Smith appointed Forth as Shadow Leader of the House of Commons in 2001. Forth backed David Davis to replace Duncan Smith in 2003: Davis refused to stand, and Forth was dismissed from his front-bench position by Michael Howard. He served on many Parliamentary committees and his last role was chairing the statutory instruments committee. He was a member of the Speaker's Panel of Chairmen.

He was a very strong Commons orator who knew the minutiae of Parliamentary procedure, and throughout the course of his career he would win several media awards for his performances in the Commons. He was in favour of capital punishment, opposed to equal opportunities legislation and anti-racist regulations for the police (believing that he represented the "white, Anglo-Saxon and bigoted" majority), and was sympathetic to the apartheid regime in South Africa. He opposed the BBC's spending money on a Nelson Mandela concert in 1988, saying "those who want the arts and who support them should pay for them themselves"[1]. He also opposed the government spending on AIDS treatment, saying that the disease was “largely self-inflicted”[2]. He was a fan of Elvis Presley, and treasurer of the all-party Music Appreciation Group.

[edit] Publications

  • Regional Policy: A Fringe Benefit? by Eric Forth, 1983, Conservative Central Office, ISBN CCO508912

[edit] References

  1. ^ Philip Cowley, "Revolts and Rebellions" (Politicos Publishing, 2002), p. 198
  2. ^ Cowley op cit, p. 199

[edit] External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
(new constituency)
Member of Parliament for Mid Worcestershire
19831997
Succeeded by
Peter Luff
Preceded by
(new constituency)
Member of Parliament for Bromley and Chislehurst
19972006
Succeeded by
Bob Neill


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