David Blunkett

British politician
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Also known as: David Blunkett, Baron Blunkett of Brightside and Hillsborough in the City of Sheffield
Quick Facts
In full:
David Blunkett, Baron Blunkett of Brightside and Hillsborough in the City of Sheffield
Born:
June 6, 1947, Sheffield, England (age 77)
Also Known As:
David Blunkett, Baron Blunkett of Brightside and Hillsborough in the City of Sheffield
Political Affiliation:
Labour Party

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Lord Blunkett injured after falling through gap on Tube Nov. 16, 2024, 10:04 PM ET (BBC)

David Blunkett (born June 6, 1947, Sheffield, England) is a British Labour Party politician who served as home secretary (2001–04) and secretary of work and pensions (2005) in the Labour government of Tony Blair.

Blunkett, who was blind from birth, was brought up in poverty after his father died in an industrial accident at work. He was educated at schools for the blind, but he turned down a course in training to be a piano tuner and insisted on a wider education. He studied part-time at a technical college and did well enough on his exams to win a place at the University of Sheffield, where he studied politics. In 1970 Blunkett’s passion for politics led him to contest and win a seat on Sheffield’s city council, making him the youngest ever city councillor in Sheffield. He rose to become the council’s leader in 1980. Blunkett belonged to Labour’s left wing, an affiliation that helped in his election to the party’s national executive in 1982.

At that time Labour, having lost power nationally in 1979, was badly divided (in 1981 a moderate faction broke away to form the Social Democratic Party). In the 1980s these divisions came to a head when party leader Neil Kinnock sought to expel a group of hard-line left-wingers. Blunkett sided with Kinnock on this and on a wider strategy for modernizing the party. In 1987 Blunkett was elected a member of Parliament for the safe Labour constituency of Sheffield Brightside. In 1994 Labour’s new leader, Tony Blair, appointed him the party’s shadow minister, or spokesman, on education. It was a key appointment, as Blair announced that on becoming prime minister he would make his three top priorities “education, education, education.”

When Labour won the 1997 general election, Blunkett became education secretary and was tasked with raising school standards to match those of other prosperous countries. Blunkett introduced a number of reforms, including requiring schools to provide children up to age 11 with a daily “literacy hour” and a “numeracy hour” in order to improve basic skills. Blunkett frequently cited his own disability and impoverished background to argue that all children had the potential to succeed and that no school should be allowed to use the fact that its children came from deprived or broken families as an excuse for bad results. Blunkett’s tough strategy was widely praised, although he was not always popular with teachers’ unions. Following Britain’s 2001 general election, Blair appointed Blunkett to be home secretary, with a brief to be equally tough in tackling crime, disorder, and threats to internal security. It was Blunkett’s reward for having been one of the most successful cabinet ministers during Blair’s first term in office.

After the terrorist attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001, Blunkett’s job looked to be an even bigger challenge than anticipated. His response to the attacks included a tightening of immigration law and a proposal that all British citizens be required to carry state identification cards. He also worked aggressively toward prison reform and the strengthening of antiterrorism legislation.

In December 2004, following a paternity scandal stemming from his relationship with a married woman, Blunkett resigned as home secretary. After Blunkett played a key role in Labour’s May 2005 election victory, however, Blair immediately appointed him secretary of work and pensions. Blunkett was forced to resign yet again in November 2005, when questions were raised regarding his business affairs during his time out of office. In 2007, while remaining on the backbenches of the House of Commons, Blunkett took a position with U.S.-based security firm Entrust, which expressed interest in the identification card program he had originally proposed in 2001. Blunkett dropped his support for that program in 2009, however, citing the expense involved and calling instead for mandatory passports. He stood for reelection in the general election of 2010, easily winning the redrawn Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough constituency. In 2015 he stepped down from Parliament. Shortly thereafter he became chair of the University of Sheffield’s law school. Later in 2015, Blunkett became a life peer.

Blunkett was the author of several books, including On a Clear Day (with Alex MacCormick; 1995), an autobiography, and The Blunkett Tapes: My Life in the Bear Pit (2006), a diary of his life in the cabinet.

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