- John Forman
John Calder Forman (1884 –
14 April ,1975 ) was a British insurance agent and politician.Municipal life
Forman began his political career on
Glasgow Corporation in 1928. He was appointed aBaillie and was Chairman of the Public Assistance Committee; in 1935 he was appointed to a Scottish Office committee investigating the operation of thePoor Law . He also served on Rent Tribunals under the Rent of Furnished Houses Control (Scotland) Act 1943, determining the fair rent for private tenancies.Election to Parliament
At the 1945, Forman was elected as a Labour and Co-operative
Member of Parliament for Glasgow Springburn. After he had taken the oath, it was noticed that his position on the Rent Tribunals was remunerated and that he therefore might hold an 'office of profit under the Crown' which would disqualify him from election. A Select Committee was set up which reported that his election was invalid; a Bill was rushed through validating it and indemnifying him from the consequences of acting as an MP while disqualified.Political stance
Forman was on the left of the Labour Party and was a consistent opponent of
conscription andNational Service . Over theSuez canal in 1954, Forman was one of six Labour MPs who voted with the Conservative government to support the dismantling of the British base in Suez; the unofficial leader of this group,Emrys Hughes , declared that he agreed that the base was obsolete in the age of the hydrogen bomb. He was a member of the Parliamentary Temperance Group and in 1957 supported restrictions on access to clubs selling alcohol for children.Later career
After the 1959 general election, Forman's attendance declined. He was one of the Members of Parliament mentioned on BBC Television's "
That Was The Week That Was " onJanuary 19 ,1963 as having made no speeches in Parliament since the general election. He retired at the 1964 general election.References
*Rayment
*M. Stenton and S. Lees, "Who's Who of British MPs" Vol. IV (Harvester Press, 1981)
*Philip Norton, "Dissension in the House of Commons 1945-74" (Macmillan, 1975)
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