Paul Boateng


 
 

The Right Honourable Paul Yaw Boateng (born June 14, 1951), is a British Labour Party politician and became the UK's first black Cabinet minister in May 2002 when we was appointed as Chief Secretary to the Treasury. He was MP for Brent South from 1987 to 2005, and is the current British High Commissioner to South Africa.

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Boateng was born in Hackney, London of mixed Ghanaian and Scottish heritage, but lived in Ghana, where his father became a cabinet minister under Kwame Nkrumah, until the 1966 coup that ousted Nkrumah. The family moved to Hemel Hempstead where he attended Apsley Grammar School. After graduating from the University of Bristol he became a lawyer (originally a solicitor, though he later retrained as a barrister) specialising in civil rights cases. He was elected to the Greater London Council in 1981 as a member of Labour's left wing and a supporter of Ken Livingstone. As chair of the GLC's police committee, he was an outspoken critic of police relations with ethnic minorities. He stood as a candidate for Hemel Hempstead in the 1983 election, but was defeated.

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In the 1987 general election he was elected to the House of Commons for Brent South, famously declaring "Today Brent South, tomorrow Soweto!". Like many other members of the 1980s left he became more moderate under the leadership of Neil Kinnock, who made him a junior spokesman in 1989. In 1992 he became shadow minister for the Lord Chancellor's department, a post he held until the 1997 general election.

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With Labour's victory, Boateng became the UK's first black government minister, as Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department of Health (UK). In 1998 he became a minister at the Home Office and subsequently Deputy Home Secretary. Now a loyal supporter of the New Labour project, he defended the police and criticised his former GLC colleague Ken Livingstone's mayoral campaign.

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In 2001 he was made Financial Secretary to the Treasury, and stepped up to become Chief Secretary and so a member of the Cabinet in May 2002. He had been senior to Charles Clarke when both were at the Home Office, though Clarke was appointed Home Secretary when David Blunkett resigned.

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In March 2005 he announced that he would not stand for re-election as an MP in the May 2005 general election. Labour having won the election in May 2005, he is expected to become the next High Commissioner to South Africa, replacing Ann Grant. Dawn Butler was selected by the local Constituency Labour Party to replace him and was elected by a comfortable margin.

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He was featured on an episode of The Day Today, in which Chris Morris complained to him about the explicit content in music by fictional artists such as 'Herman the Tosser'.

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June 14: June 14 is the 165th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (166th in leap years), with 200 days remaining....

1951: 1951 was a common year starting on Monday; see its calendar....

British: The word British has several different uses. See the article on Britain for more details on the development and use of the word Britain....


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Introduction
External links
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Home Office (2) - Home Secretary (2) - June 14 (2) - Department of Health (UK) (1) - 2001 (1) - Mayoral (1) - New Labour (1) - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (1) - 1989 (1) - Neil Kinnock (1) - Soweto (1) - 1997 general election (1) - Lord Chancellor (1) - 1992 (1) - Financial Secretary to the Treasury (1) -
 

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