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Dominic Carman

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Residence
  
London, England, UK

Education
  
Durham University

Parents
  
George Carman


Alma mater
  
Durham University

Role
  
Journalist

Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Dominic Carman

Party
  
Liberal Democrats

Dominic Carman httpsiytimgcomviSpRE6NraUyAhqdefaultjpg

Born
  
23 August 1961
Hale, Cheshire, England, UK (present-day Hale, Greater Manchester, England, UK

Books
  
No Ordinary Man: A Life of George Carman, QC, Heads Up: The Challenges Facing England's Leading Head Teachers

Grandparents
  
Alfred George Evelyn Carman

Political party
  
Liberal Democrats

Occupation
  
Journalist, politician

Max clifford admits to covering up child abuse in hidden camera interview with dominic carman


Dominic Carman (born 23 August 1961) is a British journalist, writer and Liberal Democrat politician.

Contents

Dominic Carman Dominic Carman

Family

Dominic Carman was born on 23 August 1961 in Hale, Cheshire (present-day Hale, Greater Manchester). Educated at Manchester Grammar School and Durham University, Carman is the son of barrister George Carman. He wrote a biography of his father, No Ordinary Man: A Life of George Carman, which was published in 2002.

Politics and anti-BNP campaigner

When he was sixteen, Carman spent three weeks as a member of the National Front in September 1977. Writing about this in The Guardian in 2010, he commented "Becoming a member was done rashly, angrily, without any thought of what it meant, or of the consequences. It was a stupid decision, undertaken with one purpose: to annoy my father." He also said "When I eventually sat down and opened National Front News, my sense of euphoric defiance ended – very abruptly", as it was filled with "hate-filled articles" about Jewish people, Holocaust denial and black and Asian immigration into Britain. "Disgusted and shocked, my stomach churned, my thoughts ran wild. So this is what they believed. Oh God, what had I done? ... I immediately resigned from the NF, less than a month after joining." In 2005, he took part in ITV's Vote for Me television programme in which the public selected an individual to stand at the next general election, losing in the final to Rodney Hylton-Potts.

Carman researched an unofficial biography of British National Party leader Nick Griffin, but this has not been published. Carman's research has been used to criticise Griffin on a number of occasions.

Carman used his research to support his campaign as the Liberal Democrat candidate in Barking at the 2010 General Election, where he stood against Griffin.

He contested the 2011 Barnsley Central by-election for the Liberal Democrats, coming in sixth place and losing his deposit, an unusual occurrence for a candidate of a major political party in the UK.

In an article in the Daily Mail, Carman was critical of some of the Barnsley electorate, stating that "diversity and difference are not welcome here", he defended his comments, when interviewed by Andrew Neil on the BBC's The Politics Show

Elections contested

UK Parliament Elections

References

Dominic Carman Wikipedia