Clifford Kenyon Explained

Clifford Kenyon
Office:Member of Parliament
for Chorley
Term Start:5 July 1945
Term End:18 June 1970
Predecessor:Douglas Hacking
Successor:Constance Monks
Birth Date:11 August 1896
Birth Place:Burnley, Lancashire, England
Death Place:Rawtenstall, Lancashire, England
Party:Labour
Education:University of Manchester

Clifford Kenyon (11 August 1896 – 29 April 1979) was a British farmer and politician.

Kenyon was educated at Brighton Grove College in Manchester, and the University of Manchester. He worked on his father's farm, Scarr Barn Farm at Crawshawbooth near Rossendale, which he eventually inherited.

In 1922 Kenyon joined the Labour Party and the next year was elected to Rawtenstall Council, of which he became Mayor from 1938 to 1942. He was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Lancashire in 1941. At the 1945 general election, Kenyon was elected as Labour Member of Parliament for Chorley.

Kenyon was a rare farmer on the Labour benches and often took up agricultural issues. He opposed agricultural subsidies and British membership of the European Economic Community. In 1950 he almost lost his seat to Andrew Fountaine, even though Fountaine's nomination by the Conservatives had officially been withdrawn. He remained a backbencher, and in the 1966 Parliament he was chairman of the Committee of Selection which chose members for other committees. The Liberal Party criticised him for picking only one Liberal MP to sit on the Standing Committee examining the 1968 Finance Bill.

At the 1970 general election, Kenyon retired; his seat went to the Conservative candidate Constance Monks.

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