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Alan Haworth, Baron Haworth

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Alan Robert Haworth, Baron Haworth (born 26 April 1948, Blackburn) is an English Labour Party politician.

Early life

Alan Haworth was educated at St Silas, CoE School, Blackburn and Blackburn Technical & Grammar School. He attended the University of St Andrews to study medicine, but left after one year's study. He then studied for a BSc Hons (London external) degree in sociology at North East London Polytechnic, from which he graduated in 1971.

Parliamentary career

Haworth was appointed to the staff of the Parliamentary Labour Party in 1974, and was Secretary of the PLP from 1992 to 2004.[1] He was elevated to the House of Lords on 28 June 2004 as a life peer taking the title Baron Haworth, of Fisherfield in Ross and Cromarty.[2]

In December 2009 Lord Haworth was accused by a newspaper of earning £100,000 in expenses by pretending that his main home was a cottage in Scotland [citation needed]. Following an investigation by the senior accounting officer in the House of Lords - the Clerk of the Parliaments - Lord Haworth was completely cleared of any wrongdoing in February 2010.[3]

Writings

He is the author of 113 obituaries of former Labour MPs, some published in Politico's Book of the Dead 2003, and the joint editor (with Diane Hayter) of Men who Made Labour, obituaries of the first 29 Labour MPs elected to Parliament in 1906.

References

  1. ^ 'Lord Haworth', The John Smith Memorial Trust
  2. ^ "No. 57342". The London Gazette. 1 July 2004.
  3. ^ http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/ComplaintsResponse010209.pdf Letter from the Clerk of Parliament to complainants, 9 February 2010