Tony Wright | |
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Member of Parliament for Cannock Chase Cannock and Burntwood (1992–1997) | |
In office 9 April 1992 –12 April 2010 | |
Preceded by | Gerald Howarth |
Succeeded by | Aidan Burley |
Personal details | |
Born | Leicester,Leicestershire,England | 11 March 1948
Political party | Labour |
Spouse | Moira Wright |
Children | 3 sons,including Ben |
Alma mater | London School of Economics Balliol College,Oxford Harvard University |
Anthony Wayland Wright (born 11 March 1948) is a British Labour Party politician and author,who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Cannock Chase from 1997 to 2010. He was first elected in 1992 for Cannock and Burntwood.
Wright was educated at Desborough County Primary School,then Kettering Grammar School (now known as the Tresham Institute although the old building has been recently knocked down) on Windmill Avenue in Kettering. Wright was educated at the London School of Economics (gaining a First class honours BSc in government in 1970),Harvard University (where he was a Kennedy Scholar from 1970 to 1971),and Balliol College,Oxford,gaining a DPhil in 1973.
He was a lecturer in politics at the University College of North Wales,Bangor from 1973 to 1975. He was a lecturer in politics from 1975 to 1992 at the University of Birmingham (School of Continuing Studies),where he is now an honorary professor.
He contested the Kidderminster seat in 1979. He has a keen interest in constitutional affairs,and from 1999 to 2010 was chairman of the Public Administration Select Committee. He also chaired the Reform of the House of Commons Committee ("the Wright Committee") from 2008 to 2009. He has written or edited 21 books.
On 21 July 2008 Wright announced that,for health reasons,he would not stand again at the 2010 general election. [1]
On 10 May 2010,University College London announced that Wright had been appointed Professor of Government and Public Policy. [2] He joined the Department of Politics at Birkbeck College as a professorial fellow on 1 September 2010. [3]
He married Moira Phillips in 1973 in Oxford,and they have three sons,one of whom is BBC political correspondent Ben Wright. He has had leukaemia.
Anthony Neil Wedgwood Benn, known between 1960 and 1963 as Viscount Stansgate, was a British Labour Party politician who served as a Cabinet minister in the 1960s and 1970s. He was the Member of Parliament for Bristol South East and Chesterfield for 47 of the 51 years between 1950 and 2001. He later served as President of the Stop the War Coalition from 2001 to 2014.
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Anthony or Antony or Tony Wright may refer to:
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Social democracy originated as an ideology within the labour whose goals have been a social revolution to move away from purely laissez-faire capitalism to a social capitalism model sometimes called a social market economy. In a nonviolent revolution as in the case of evolutionary socialism, or the establishment and support of a welfare state. Its origins lie in the 1860s as a revolutionary socialism associated with orthodox Marxism. Starting in the 1890s, there was a dispute between committed revolutionary social democrats such as Rosa Luxemburg and reformist social democrats. The latter sided with Marxist revisionists such as Eduard Bernstein, who supported a more gradual approach grounded in liberal democracy and cross-class cooperation. Karl Kautsky represented a centrist position. By the 1920s, social democracy became the dominant political tendency, along with communism, within the international socialist movement, representing a form of democratic socialism with the aim of achieving socialism peacefully. By the 1910s, social democracy had spread worldwide and transitioned towards advocating an evolutionary change from capitalism to socialism using established political processes such as the parliament. In the late 1910s, socialist parties committed to revolutionary socialism renamed themselves as communist parties, causing a split in the socialist movement between these supporting the October Revolution and those opposing it. Social democrats who were opposed to the Bolsheviks later renamed themselves as democratic socialists in order to highlight their differences from communists and later in the 1920s from Marxist–Leninists, disagreeing with the latter on topics such as their opposition to liberal democracy whilst sharing common ideological roots.