- Simon Mahon
Simon Mahon (
4 April 1914 –19 October 1986 ) was a British Labour Party politician.Simon Mahon was born into an Irish
Roman Catholic family inBootle that was immersed inLiverpool Labour politicsFact|date=May 2008. His father,Alderman Simon Mahon (1886-1961), was a well-known local politician, who also stood unsuccessfully for Parliament. His brother, Peter Mahon, was elected MP for Preston South in 1964.Mahon was educated at St. Joseph's
Irish Christian Brothers school and at St. James' School,Bootle ,Liverpool . He became a general contractor. He was commissioned in theRoyal Engineers duringWorld War II and served with theIndian Army in theFar East .In 1941 he married Veronica Robertshaw. There were no children.
Mahon was a councillor and later an
alderman ofBootle Borough Council and was chairman of the housing committee andMayor of Bootle from 1962 to 1963. He was chairman of BootleTrades Council and Labour Party.Mahon was
Member of Parliament for Bootle from 1955 to 1979. He served as an opposition whip from 1959 to 1961.In 1968, Mahon and his brother, Peter, together with Catholic Labour MP
Walter Alldritt , threatened to resign the Whip. They had taken exception to remarks made byDouglas Houghton , Chairman of theParliamentary Labour Party , that large families were a form of "social irresponsibility." Only a midnight meeting withPrime Minister Harold Wilson and a written statement that Houghton's views were not party policy dissuaded the MPs from carrying out their threat.In 1969 Mahon was created a Papal Knight. On returning from his investiture
Mass to the House of Commons, he was prevented from entering the Chamber by theSergeant at Arms until he divested himself of his cermonial sword.In 1978 Mahon wrote a letter of protest to
Ladbrokes , complaining of their "appalling taste" in opening a book on the successor to PopePaul VI .After his retirement, Simon Mahon moved to live in Crosby, where he died in 1986.
References
*"Times Guide to the House of Commons October 1974"
*rayment
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