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Stuart Bell
Stuart Bell
from Wikipedia

Sir Stuart Bell (16 May 1938 – 13 October 2012) was a British Labour Party politician, who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Middlesbrough from the 1983 general election until his death in 2012. He was known as the longest serving Second Church Estates Commissioner, serving in this role during the entire period of Labour government from 1997–2010.

Key Information

Early life

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Bell was born in County Durham in 1938, the son of a miner. He studied at the Hookergate Grammar School on School Lane in High Spen near Rowlands Gill, Gateshead. He later attended the Durham Pitmans College. He joined the Labour Party in 1964, and was called to the Bar at Gray's Inn in 1970. He worked as an international lawyer in Paris until 1977, representing large multi-national companies. He contested Hexham at the 1979 general election, but was defeated by the Conservative MP and former Cabinet Minister Geoffrey Rippon.

Parliamentary career

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Bell was elected to the City Council of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1980. In 1982, the Labour MP for Middlesbrough, Arthur Bottomley announced that he would step down at the next general election; Bell won the subsequent selection process to fight the seat at the 1983 general election. Bell comfortably held the seat, elected with a majority just short of 10,000 votes.

At Westminster, Bell became the Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Deputy Leader of the Opposition Roy Hattersley in 1983. He was promoted to the shadow frontbench in 1984 by Neil Kinnock as a Spokesman for Northern Ireland. However, he chose to resign his post after the Cleveland child abuse scandal which occupied two years of his life, after making unsubstantiated accusations of 'clinical error' against local paediatricians and child sexual abuse specialists. The paediatricians, Dr. Marietta Higgs and Dr. Geoffrey Wyatt, were later absolved and their forensic clinical work validated at a committee of inquiry overseen by Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss. The committee concluded that most of the diagnoses were incorrect.[1] As a result, 94 of the 121 children were returned to their homes.[1][2]

Following the 1992 general election and the election of John Smith as the Leader of the Labour Party, Bell returned to the shadow frontbenches as a spokesman for Trade and Industry. After the election of the Labour Government at the 1997 general election he was dropped from Labour's frontbench, but was appointed on the advice of Tony Blair as the Second Church Estates Commissioner, the spokesman for the Church of England in the House of Commons, a position he held from 1997 to 2010.

In 1998, Bell was one of 14 Labour MPs who voted against equalising the age of consent for homosexual activity.[3] From 2000 to 2005 he was the Chairman of the Finance and Services Committee, which manages the annual budget of the House of Commons and its many employees. In 2005 he became a member of the Finance and Services Committee until 2008 when he served as chairman until 2010. Relatedly, from 2000 until 2010 he was a member of the House of Commons Commission, which oversees the administration of the House and the Members Estimate Committee that sets MPs' pay and pensions. He was a member of the Liaison Committee between 2000–10. He was a member of the Ecclesiastical Committee from 1997.

Bell sat on the Members Estimates Committee at Parliament and was heavily involved representing MPs' interests in the MPs' expenses scandal of 2009. He was a member in Speaker's Committee for the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority between 2009–10. A founder member of the British-Irish Inter-Parliamentary Body, he was a Treasurer of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for the Promotion of First Past the Post.[4] and was Secretary of the Franco-British Parliamentary Relations Committee in the Commons. In February 2010 Bell was played by David Calder in the television film On Expenses.

Criticism and controversy

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In 2002 his son, Malcolm, was jailed after admitting to stealing £8,000 from his father's colleagues, while he worked in Parliament.[5]

On 13 October 2009, he claimed on the BBC Today programme that the investigation by Sir Thomas Legg into the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal was marked by "retrospectivity", as Sir Thomas had changed the rules on expenses after MPs' claims had been submitted.[6]

Stuart Bell featured in a film of the 2010 general election entitled ToryBoy The Movie made by John Walsh, which explored the candidate's selection process and the work that goes into an election campaign.[citation needed] Later in 2011, Neil Macfarlane, in a report for local newspaper Teesside Gazette, asked "Are Teessiders getting enough from Sir Stuart Bell?" when he failed to answer over 100 telephone calls made to his constituency office over three months.[7] The Gazette story was picked up by national newspapers. The Independent asked "is Sir Stuart Bell Britain's laziest MP?"[8][9] The Guardian fact-checked the "laziest MP" claim and found that:

"Bell has been an MP for nearly 30 years and has had a distinguished career in parliament as a frontbench spokesman on trade and industry in opposition and the spokesman for the Church of England in the House of Commons and member of the House of Commons commission until last year. He's part of a breed of politicians – also including the Tory Edward Leigh and Labour's Gerald Kaufman – who have been extremely active parliamentarians but not always maintained an office in their constituency. One measure of their parliamentary work is the proportion of votes they turn up to... Bell's record doesn't cover him in glory, discounting frontbenchers, Northern Irish MPs, the Speaker and his deputies, he has the 10th worst attendance record with a 65.4% absence rate."[10]

The Labour Party said it was looking into the allegations.[9][11]

Other interests

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Bell was a member of the French think tank, the Fondation pour l'Innovation Politique.[12] He was also a regular newspaper columnist for the Mail on Sunday and other publications.[12]

Personal life

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Insignia of Knight Bachelor

Bell was married in 1960 to Margaret Bruce and they had a son and a daughter. After his divorce, he married Margaret Allan in 1980 and they had a son.[13]

Honours

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Bell was knighted in 2004 for his "services to Parliament" and was appointed a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur, France's highest order, by President Jacques Chirac in 2006.[12]

Death

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Bell died on 13 October 2012, aged 74, after a short battle with pancreatic cancer.[14] A by-election was held in the Middlesbrough constituency.

Publications

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  • Bell, Stuart (1973). Paris Sixty-Nine. Consett/Ramsden Williams Publications.
  • Bell, Stuart (1981). How to abolish the Lords. Fabian Society.
  • Bell, Stuart (1988). When Salem Came to the Boro: The True Story of the Cleveland Child Abuse Crisis.
  • Bell, Stuart (2000). Tony Really Loves Me. SpenView Publications. ISBN 0-9538638-1-6.
  • Bell, Stuart (2002). Pathway to the Euro. SpenView Publications. ISBN 0-9538638-2-4.
  • Bell, Stuart (2002). The Honoured Society. SpenView Publications. ISBN 0-9538638-4-0.
  • Bell, Stuart (2002). Binkie's Revolution. SpenView Publications. ISBN 978-0-9538638-3-9.
  • Bell, Stuart (2007). An Ever Closer Union. SpenView Publications. ISBN 978-0-9538638-5-3.
  • Bell, Stuart (2007). The Ice Cream Man and Other Stories. SpenView Publications. ISBN 978-0-9538638-4-6.
  • Bell, Stuart (2010). The Ice Cream Man and Other Stories (second ed.). SpenView Publications. ISBN 978-0-9538638-4-6.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Stuart Bell was a British Labour Party politician known for his long tenure as Member of Parliament for Middlesbrough from 1983 until his death in 2012. He served as Second Church Estates Commissioner representing the Church of England in the House of Commons from 1997 to 2010 and chaired the Finance and Services Committee during the 2000s. Bell gained prominence for his outspoken defense of constituents during the 1987 Cleveland child abuse scandal, where he campaigned against what he saw as flawed handling by authorities, leading him to resign from the opposition front bench to focus on the issue. Born on 16 May 1938 in High Spen, County Durham, to a coal-mining family, Bell pursued a diverse career before entering politics. He worked as a journalist, qualified as a barrister at Gray's Inn in 1970, and built a successful international law practice in Paris specializing in trade and tariffs for major corporations. He also published novels, short stories, and political works, including an early semi-autobiographical novel in 1973. After contesting Hexham in 1979 and serving on Newcastle City Council, he won the Middlesbrough seat in 1983, holding it through multiple elections. In Parliament, Bell held shadow roles on Northern Ireland (1984–1987) and Trade and Industry (1992–1997), and later took on influential administrative positions in the Commons, including membership on the House of Commons Commission and the Speaker's Committee for the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority. Knighted in 2004 and awarded the Légion d'Honneur in 2006 for services to British-French relations, he remained a moderate, pro-European voice in the Labour Party. Bell died of pancreatic cancer on 13 October 2012.

Early life

Birth and family

Stuart Bell was born on 16 May 1938 in High Spen, County Durham, to a coal-mining family. Before entering politics, Bell worked as a journalist and qualified as a barrister at Gray's Inn in 1970. He built a successful international law practice in Paris, specializing in trade and tariffs for major corporations. He also published novels, short stories, and political works, including an early semi-autobiographical novel in 1973. No further details on his education or upbringing are elaborated in the primary sources.

Career

Early career

Born into a coal-mining family in High Spen, County Durham, Stuart Bell worked as a journalist before qualifying as a barrister at Gray's Inn in 1970. He established a successful international law practice in Paris, specializing in trade and tariffs for major corporations. Bell also pursued writing, publishing novels, short stories, and political works. His first semi-autobiographical novel appeared in 1973. Before entering national politics, he contested Hexham in the 1979 general election and served on Newcastle City Council.

Parliamentary career

Bell was elected Member of Parliament for Middlesbrough in 1983, holding the seat until his death in 2012. He served as Shadow spokesman on Northern Ireland from 1984 to 1987 but resigned from the opposition front bench to campaign on behalf of constituents during the 1987 Cleveland child abuse scandal, criticizing the authorities' handling of cases. From 1992 to 1997, he was Shadow spokesman on Trade and Industry. After Labour entered government in 1997, Bell became Second Church Estates Commissioner, representing the Church of England in the House of Commons until 2010. He also chaired the Finance and Services Committee during the 2000s and served on the House of Commons Commission and the Speaker's Committee for the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority. Bell was knighted in 2004 and awarded the Légion d'Honneur in 2006 for services to British-French relations. He remained a moderate, pro-European figure within the Labour Party. No film credits in the camera, electrical, visual effects, or any other production departments are associated with Sir Stuart Bell, the British Labour politician and MP. The previously listed credits pertain to a different individual named Stuart Bell.
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