Peter Bradley

Peter Charles Stephen Bradley (born 12 April 1953) is an English Labour Party politician. He was the Member of Parliament (MP) for The Wrekin from the 1997 election until the 2005 election, when he lost his seat to Mark Pritchard of the Conservative Party.

He was co-founder and is currently (from 2007) director of Speakers' Corner Trust, a registered charity promoting free expression, public debate and active citizenship as a means of revitalising civil society in the UK and supporting its development in emerging democracies.

Born in Erdington, Birmingham, Bradley was educated at Abingdon School and Sussex University. Before entering Parliament, he was managing director of Millbank Consultants Ltd (1993-7) and previously a director of Good Relations Ltd (1986–93) prior to which he was the research director at the Centre for Contemporary Studies (1979–86). He is married with a twin son and daughter.

As a member of Westminster Council and deputy Leader of the Labour Group, he was a leader of the campaign to expose the 'Homes for Votes' scandal which led eventually to the surcharging of the former Conservative Council Leader Shirly Porter and colleagues.

In Parliament, he founded the Rural Group of Labour MPs which played a major part in shaping the Government’s Rural White Paper (2000) and was subsequently appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to Alun Michael. His involvement in the bill to ban hunting led to his targeting by the Countryside Allianceat the 2005 election. He was also a target of the strategy led by Lord Ashcroft to concentrate resources on marginal seats which saw £50,000 donated to the Conservative campaign to unseat him.

Known for his campaigning commitment and skill - and once described by the Mail on Sunday (25 July 1999) as, with Peter Stothard, editor of The Times, and Peter Mandelson, one of "three men with a formidable combination of power and influence" - he secured a saving of £240 million in the annual NHS drugs budget following a successful campaign to regulate pharmaceutical company practices (2001). He also promoted the Members of Parliament (Employment Disqualification) Bill which sought to prevent MPs from neglecting their Parliamentary duties in pursuit of parallel careers (2002) and the Right to Reply & Press Standards Bill (2005) which, with the support of the NUJ, MediaWise and the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom attempted to provide stronger protection to members of the public affected by misrepresentation in the press and to introduce controls on journalists' excesses. In 2011, he submitted evidence to the Leveson Inquiry based on the substance of the Bill. With Alan Whitehead MP, he was also credited with negotiating the restoration of the student grant through the Higher Education Act (2004). He was a member of the Public Administration Select Committee, 1997-9, which played a major role in the development and passage of the Freedom of Information Act 2000.

Since leaving Parliament, he was a member of the Affordable Rural Housing Commission (2005-6) and subsequently of the Government’s Rural Housing Advisory Group (2007-8).

His essay AntiSocial Britain and the challenge of citizenship, published in 2007 by the Social Market Foundation summarised up his political experience and philiosophy and called for a return to the values of cooperation.

He is honorary patron of AFC Telford United FC.

Famous quotes containing the words peter and/or bradley:

    It is a necessary condition of one’s ascribing states of consciousness, experiences, to oneself, in the way one does, that one should also ascribe them, or be prepared to ascribe them, to others who are not oneself.... The ascribing phrases are used in just the same sense when the subject is another as when the subject is oneself.
    —Sir Peter Frederick Strawson (b. 1919)

    We have grasped the mystery of the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount.... The world has achieved brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    —Omar Bradley (1893–1981)