David Blunkett (born June 6, 1947) is a British Labour Party politician and has been Member of Parliament for Sheffield Brightside since 1987. Blind since birth and from a poor family, he became Education Secretary from 1997 to 2001, and then Home Secretary from 2001 to 2004, when he resigned after a scandal. Following the 2005 General Election he was appointed Secretary of State for Work and Pensions but was again forced to resign on November 2, 2005 after a series of reports about his external business interests during his brief time outside the cabinet.
At the 1987 general election he was elected MP for Sheffield Brightside with a large majority in a safe Labour seat. He became a party spokesman on local government, joined the shadow cabinet in 1992 as Shadow Health Secretary and became Shadow Education Secretary in 1994. Combining reforming zeal with social conservatism, he became a favourite of new party leader Tony Blair.
Appearing to be tough on immigration and asylum was important for Blunkett during his time at the Home Office. In December 2001, he controversially called for immigrants to develop a greater "sense of belonging" to Britain. In April 2002, he proposed new powers which he claimed would curb illegal immigration and unfounded claims for political asylum. Meanwhile, his department in Sheffield was accepting immigration applications with only cursory security checks. When a whistle-blower made this public, both the whistle blower and one of Blunkett's subordinates lost their posts but Blunkett survived"Whistleblower fears he will lose job", Jason Beattie, The Scotsman, 2 April 2004.
Another controversial area for Blunkett was civil liberties (which he famously described as "airy fairy""Airy fairy libertarians: Attack of the muesli-eaters?", BBC, 20 November, 2001); as Education Secretary, he had repeatedly expressed the intention that, were he to become Home Secretary, he would make the then-incumbent Jack Straw, who had been criticised for being hard-line, seem overly liberal.
On 15 January, 2003, he was at the centre of controversy again when at a gathering of Asian and Black Home Office Employees in London he made a joke: "Colin Jackson succeeded, despite being Welsh". The comment caused great controversy amongst senior Welsh Nationalists but the Labour party rallied around Blunkett and the matter was quietly dropped.
In 2003, he announced an extension of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, which critics condemned as a "snoopers' charter". His Criminal Justice Act 2003 reduced legal safeguards such as the right to trial by jury and double jeopardy rules. He also attempted to introduce compulsory national identity cards (initially called "entitlement cards", though this euphemism was later dropped). The aftermath of terrorist attacks in the USA was offered as a justification to pass this controversial legislation, though no compulsion to carry identity cards was envisaged and so the terrorists were highly unlikely to be carrying them anyway.
These measures earned him the nickname Big Blunkett from parts of the tabloid press, a reference to the Orwellian concept of Big Brother but ironic since he is slight of build.
Blair regarded it proper for Blunkett to remain Home Secretary while pursuing his pregnant former lover in the courts to ascertain paternity of her unborn child and that Blunkett was also in the process of introducing compulsory national identity cards may, by comparison, seem irrelevant. However, at the end of November 2004, it was alleged that Blunkett abused his position to assist his ex-lover's Filipina nanny, Leoncia "Luz" Casalme, by speeding up her residence visa application and later using his influence to ensure that she successfully obtained an Austrian tourist visa. An investigation into these allegations was launched, led by Sir Alan Budd. Shortly before Sir Alan was due to report his findings, an email emerged headed "no special favours, .. but a bit quicker". Though there was no evidence Blunkett was responsible for the email or its title, he resigned as Home Secretary on 15 December 2004, saying that questions about his honesty were damaging the government. Sir Alan's final verdict, delivered on 21 December 2004, concluded that "I believe I have been able to establish a chain of events linking Blunkett to the change in the decision on Mrs Casalme's application."
Budd admitted that the investigation was "not a straightforward matter", because few involved in it could recall the details. His report says:
I believe there are two broad possibilities: Mr. Blunkett was seeking special help for Mrs Quinn's nanny (or) he was raising the case as an example of the poor performance of the Immigration and Nationality Directorate (IND). I do not have direct evidence that allows me to choose between the two possibilities.
A fax from Blunkett's office to the IND had not been found during the inquiry but Sir Alan found no evidence of an attempt to conceal or destroy evidence. Following the report's publication, he told reporters: "I have been unable to link Mr. Blunkett to the sending of faxes to the IND. There must have been such a link but I have been unable to discover what its nature was."
Blunkett resigned as Home Secretary after being told in advance of Budd's findings. He said: "I want to make it clear that I fully accept the findings of Sir Alan's report, where his findings differ from my recollections this is simply due to failure on my part to recall details."
On the day that Sir Alan delivered his report, a parliamentary standards committee led by Sir Philip Mawer also upheld a complaint against Blunkett for giving Mrs Quinn a taxpayer-funded railway ticket (reserved for MPs' spouses) to the value of £179. Blunkett had already admitted that he had broken the rules, saying that he had made an honest mistake, and repaid the sum in question.
Blunkett was not helped by a series of stinging criticisms of his Cabinet colleagues, made by Blunkett to his biographer, which became public days before he resigned. His increasingly public paternity battle (see Private life) was also believed by many to be harming his position. However, many believed that he would be able to salvage his political career.
Two weeks before the 2005 general election he took up a directorship in a company called DNA Bioscience, a company he held shares in.
On 31 October 2005 Mr Blunkett was asked to explain why he had not consulted the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments regarding the directorship. Having placed the shares into an independent trust, "Mr Blunkett said he had asked his three grown-up sons from his first marriage to authorise trustees to "dispose of" the shares. They agreed to the request."
Mr Blunkett's political opponents claimed that a conflict of interest was created by him having been director of and holding shares in a company proposing to bid for government contracts to provide paternity tests to the Child Support Agency - part of the Department for Work and Pensions, of which he was Secretary of State.
An investigation by Cabinet secretary Sir Gus O'Donnell - asked for by Prime Minister Tony Blair - found that although Blunkett had not broken the Ministerial Code by becoming a director of or buying shares in the company, he should have consulted the Advisory Committee before doing so.
However, it was revealed on 1st November that Lord Mayhew of Twysden - who chairs the Advisory Committee - had sent three letters to Blunkett reminding him to seek the committee's advice on his involvement with DNA Bioscience, which he ignored. On the same day, Sir Alistair Graham, chairman of the committee on 'Standards in Public Life', said Blunkett had breached ministerial rules.
Blunkett declared that he would not be resigning saying to a newspaper "I have done nothing wrong." A statement by Downing Street said that the prime minister did not believe that Blunkett's mistake should stop him doing his job.
It also became public that Mr Blunkett had taken two other paid jobs, one with the international charity World ORT "U.K.'s Blunkett Ignored Request to Take Advice on Charity Job", Robert Hutton, Bloomberg, 1 November 2005, and the other with Indepen Consulting without consultation with the Advisory Committee.
On November 2 Lord Nolan, a former Chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life and architect of the code of conduct, was reported as having said in an interview with the Yorkshire Post "I think he's more or less admitted that he should have followed the rules. But I think it's the fault of the Government that he has been allowed to see if he can get away with it." Lord Nolan was reported to have continued: "Blair should insist on Ministers all round obeying the rules. I think that if anyone breaks the rules they should be disciplined, otherwise there's no point having the rules." Lord Nolan agreed that this meant that Blunkett should have been dismissed or demoted by the Prime Minister"Labour 'may lose votes over Blunkett'", Simon McGee, Yorkshire Post, 2 November 2005.
On the same day, November 2, a scheduled appearance before a House of Commons Select Committee was cancelled at the last minute and Blunkett was summoned to a meeting at Number 10. Later that morning, a spokesman for Prime Minister Tony Blair confirmed Mr Blunkett had resigned at the meeting, stating that his position had become untenable. In a statement, Mr Blunkett claimed that the 'lies' of those such as Max Clifford would one day be 'dealt' with.
John Hutton MP was appointed as David Blunkett's successor that day. Blunkett's children's trustees decided not to sell the DNA shares after all but on December 10 it was reported in the Daily Telegraph that the company faces insolvency, resulting in Blunkett's shares being worth very little.
Despite his resignation from the cabinet in November 2 2005, Blunkett continued to enjoy rent-free accommodation in Belgravia, London, at tax-payers' expense until he found new accommodation in mid March 2006. He also rents a cottage on the estate of Chatsworth House"Blunkett still hangs on at 'disgrace and favour' pad", Guy Adams, The Independent, 20 January 2006. The controversy gained further press coverage later in 2006, when Tory MP Philip Davies asked when Blunkett was due to vacate the residence"Now Tories ask when Blunkett will move home", Guy Adams, The Independent, 10 March 2006. Ironically this was published only the day before the same newspaper broke the story about him vacating the house, which will now stand empty and be maintained by the government at the tax-payers expense until such time another cabinet minister requires an official residence.
Blunkett's guide dogs — Ruby, Teddy, Offa, Lucy, and most recently Sadie — have become familiar characters at Westminster, inspiring occasional witty comments from Blunkett and his fellow MPs on both sides of the house. In one memorable incident, Lucy vomited in Parliament during a speech by opposition member David Willetts. On occasion when Blunkett is being guided by Tony Blair the wry comment has been made: "who is guiding whom?" However, Blunkett's blindness does not generally arouse much comment.
2005 saw speculation about Mr. Blunkett's private life regarding a young woman and for not disclosing free membership to an exclusive London nightclub (Annabel's). The matter with the young women has been cleared up following a full apology from the newspaper who printed the orignal story and the membership at the nightclub has been resigned
A character based on Blunkett appeared in the Canadian cartoon series Bromwell High and a club-night called Electric Blunkett, held at the Sheffield Blind Institute, began in the summer of 2005, although its name was swiftly changed to Electric Blanket
Linda Smith once described Blunkett as "Satan's bearded folk singer"."Radio comedian Linda Smith dies", Adam Sherwin, The Times, 1 March 2006.
He is the topic of a song by Manchester group The Fall called Blindness.
Resignation as Home Secretary
Further political trouble
Pay off for leaving the Cabinet - then coming back...
Paternity battle
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