John Golding (British politician)
John Golding (9 March 1931 – 20 January 1999) was a Labour Party politician and trade union leader in the United Kingdom.
Biography
He was educated at
Golding was elected
Golding was a key figure in opposing the entryist Militant tendency, and especially in mobilising moderate trade union leaders to exercise their block votes to achieve this end. After he died, his writings were published under the title Hammer of the Left: My Part in Defeating the Labour Left, by John Golding and Paul Farrelly (see below).
In 1986, he left Parliament (by applying for the
After he vacated the Newcastle-under-Lyme seat, the resulting by-election was won by his wife Llin, who held the seat until retiring in 2001; her successor in the seat was Paul Farrelly.
John Golding's most unusual claim to fame is that he once made a speech in committee lasting eleven hours and fifteen minutes. It nominally concerned a small amendment to the bill to
Golding is also credited with having found a way to introduce the now typical unpredictability of
References
- ^ "What's the point of Prime Minister's Questions?". Politico. 15 July 2022.
External links
- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by John Golding
- Obituary - Right at the heart of Labour