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Joe Benton

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Preceded by
  
Michael Carr

Religion
  
Party
  
Labour Party

Political party
  
Labour

Spouse
  
Doris Wynne (m. 1959)


Nationality
  
British

Role
  
British Politician

Majority
  
21,181 (51.3%)

Name
  
Joe Benton

Succeeded by
  
Joe Benton i3liverpoolechocoukincomingarticle6949409ece

Born
  
28 September 1933 (age 90) Bootle, Lancashire, England (
1933-09-28
)

Joseph Edward Benton (born 28 September 1933) is a British Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Bootle from 1990 to 2015.

Contents

Early life

Benton was born in Bootle, Merseyside and was educated at the St Monica's Roman Catholic Primary School on Aintree Road and Secondary School in Bootle and the Bootle Municipal Technical College (now part of the Hugh Baird College of Further Education).

On leaving school in 1949 he received an apprenticeship as a fitter and turner. He entered National Service in 1955 with the RAF. In 1958 he joined the Pacific Steam Navigation Company as a personnel officer, remaining in this position until 1981. In 1982 he became a personnel manager with Girobank.

He has been a Justice of the Peace on the Bootle Bench since 1969. He was elected to serve as a councillor on Bootle County Borough council in 1970, moving to Sefton Borough Council after local government reform in 1973 and serving until his election to Parliament in 1990. Benton was member for the Derby ward from 1970 to 1991 and Leader of the Council from 1985 before being succeeded by Peter Dowd. Dowd also succeeded Benton as MP for the Bootle constituency in May 2015.

Parliamentary career

Bootle saw the death of two young Labour MPs in 1990. Allan Roberts died on 21 March after a long battle with cancer; Benton was on the shortlist to follow him but lost out to Mike Carr who won the by-election on 24 May. Carr died on 20 July as a result of a heart attack just 57 days after his election. Benton won the selection to fight the second by-election in Bootle. He was elected comfortably on 8 November, obtaining 78% of the vote and nearly ten times that of his nearest rival, the Conservative James Clappison. Following the 2001 General Election, he held the safest Labour seat in the country.

Benton was appointed as an opposition whip by John Smith in 1994, but was not given a government post by Tony Blair after the 1997 General Election.

Benton voted to restrict the availability of abortion, and opposes embryo research and euthanasia. He was also one of fifteen Labour MPs to oppose the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Bill which equalised the age of consent for homosexual and heterosexual sex. In February 2012, Benton signed a petition sponsored by the Coalition for Marriage which states "I support the legal definition of marriage which is the voluntary union for life of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others. I oppose any attempt to redefine it."

On 12 June 2014 Benton announced that he would not be standing again at the next election. This was after a vote taken by his constituency Labour party which opted to open the selection process and not to automatically re-select Benton. His absence from the constituency, and frequent work abroad were all cited as reasons for members failing to support him.

Personal life

He married Doris Wynne in 1959 in Bootle and they have four daughters. The tip of Benton's index finger was bitten off by a dog while out campaigning on 6 May 2010 in his Bootle constituency. He was hospitalised and could not vote in the General Election as a result.

On 21 June 2014, Pope Francis conferred a Knighthood of the Pontifical Equestrian Order of St Gregory the Great (KSG) upon Benton in recognition for the contribution he has made to ecclesiastical and civic life on a local and national level.

References

Joe Benton Wikipedia