Roger Barton (politician) explained

Roger Barton
Office:Member of the European Parliament
for Sheffield
Term Start:15 June 1989
Term End:10 June 1999
Parliament:European
Predecessor:Bob Cryer
Successor:Constituency Dissolved
Birth Date:6 January 1945
Nationality:British
Party:Labour

Roger Barton (born 6 January 1945) is a British engineer and politician who served for ten years as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP). He was a leading member of the Labour Party in Sheffield and served on the City Council. After losing his seat in the European Parliament, he set up an organisation that offers llama trekking to young people in the city.[1]

Engineering

Barton was born in Sheffield and went to Burngreave Secondary Modern School. He went into work as an apprenticed engineering fitter in 1960.[2] In 1965 he obtained an Engineering Technician's Certificate from Granville College. Barton became active in the Labour Party and in 1971 was elected to Sheffield City Council.[3]

Party chairman

In 1974 Barton was chairman of Sheffield Brightside Constituency Labour Party when the party deselected its Member of Parliament, Edward Griffiths, by 40 votes to 10. When Griffiths claimed he was the victim of a "left-wing coup", Barton gave a list of ten reasons why the constituency association were unhappy with him, including reneging on a promise to move to the constituency.[4]

Local party secretary

In 1981 Barton left his job in engineering to be full-time Secretary of Sheffield Trades and Labour Council and Labour Party. During the 1983 leadership election of the Labour Party, Barton outlined the reason why the Sheffield Labour Party had sold cassettes of the four leadership candidates being cross-examined by Sheffield party members. He insisted that "we really do object to the media editing internal debates", and declared that he did not want to conduct debates through the newspapers because it would keep down the party's standing with the public.[5]

European Parliament

Barton offered himself for selection for the Labour nomination for the Sheffield constituency in the 1984 European Parliament election, as a left-wing opponent of British membership of the European Communities;[6] however he lost out to Bob Cryer, who had lost his Parliamentary seat the previous year. When Cryer was returned to the House of Commons in the 1987 general election he stood down from the European Parliament and Barton was selected for the 1989 election.

Political views

After winning the seat easily, Barton became identified with the left-wing in the European Parliament's Labour Group. He led the signatories of a letter calling for support for a Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament rally,[7] and signed an advertisement opposing changes to Clause IV when Tony Blair proposed to drop it.[8] Barton opposed a proposal from German Commissioner Martin Bangemann to restrict the sale of superbikes, and persuaded the European Parliament to vote against it.[9]

Defeat

In the 1999 election, Barton was placed in fourth place on the Labour Party's list for Yorkshire and the Humber. As the Labour Party won only three seats, Barton was defeated. For a time he was a Director of Insight Dynamics, an information technology company.

Llama trekking

Barton set up the Sheffield and Peak District Llama Trekking project in 2006, aiming to encourage young people from inner-city Sheffield to venture out into the countryside.[10] The project is based in the Mayfield Valley, but Barton brought his llamas to local festivals; he commented that many local children thought they were sheep. Barton has noted that although llamas are famous for spitting as a sign of aggression, there was only one occasion when he had intervened in a fight between them that he had been spat at.[11]

Notes and References

  1. News: Llama trekking and pack pony . . 29 August 2006 . 1 December 2012.
  2. "Dod's Parliamentary Companion, 1993", p. 1042.
  3. "Who's Who", A & C Black.
  4. "Mr Griffiths replies to his party's reasons for dismissing him", The Times, 16 September 1974, p. 4.
  5. "The Times Diary", The Times, 6 August 1983, p. 6.
  6. Julian Haviland, "Cryer seeks Euro-nomination", The Times, 9 January 1984; p. 2.
  7. "New treaty on nuclear weapons" (Letter), The Guardian, 29 October 1994.
  8. Michael White, Stephen Bates, "MEPs fight Blair reform", The Guardian, 10 January 1995, p. 1.
  9. "Motorbikes and Maastricht" (Letter), Independent on Sunday, 3 April 1994.
  10. "Llama trekking and pack pony", Yorkshire Post, 29 August 2006, p. 1.
  11. David Walsh, "Mayfest organisers count cost of washout", Sheffield Star, 29 May 2007.