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Tony Worthington obituary

about 2 hours ago
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The Labour MP Tony Worthington, who has died aged 84, served as a minister in the Northern Ireland Office at a crucial time – in the run-up to the Good Friday agreement – and won widespread respect for his campaigning on behalf of victims suffering from asbestos-related diseases.Having been an opposition spokesperson under Mo Mowlam, he was appointed to her ministerial team when Labour came to power in 1997, with community relations as part of his portfolio.With a personality that exuded calm reasonableness, Worthington was well qualified to earn trust in that role.In the early months of the new government, he took through legislation that formally abolished internment without trial, describing this as “an important statement of political principle that does honour to the government and to this country”.He had responsibility for legislation to establish a Parades Commission, which brought order to a subject of perpetual conflict.

Although well regarded across the political spectrum in Northern Ireland, Worthington fell victim to Tony Blair’s first ministerial reshuffle in 1998 and served the rest of his time in the Commons on the backbenches as an active and effective campaigner on subjects to which he was deeply committed,Prominent among these was his work on behalf of asbestos victims, which started as an issue in his Scottish consituency and developed into a national campaign,The shipbuilding history of the town of Clydebank, which formed the major part of Worthington’s constituency of Clydebank and Milngavie, had left thousands of workers suffering, or at risk, from the consequences of exposure to asbestos,In 1992, this led to the creation of the Clydebank Asbestos Group, which became a national leader in campaigns for recognition of the material as the cause of these diseases as well as for compensation,Tony contributed to these over a long period as an MP and during his retirement.

Significant changes in the law were secured as a result of these campaigns, in the teeth of resistance from companies that had used asbestos.One particularly pernicious aspect was that social security payments had been reclaimed from any compensation received, even where the victims’ condition was terminal, often wiping out the value of any successful claim secured through long legal struggles.The Clydebank group recalled that “Worthington was responsible for the [issue of the] recovery of benefits taking on a national profile and this was the first time that a successful outcome for asbestos victims was achieved.”Tony was the son of Monica (nee Wearden) and Malcolm Worthington, a shopkeeper.Born in Lemsford, Hertfordshire, he attended the City school, Lincoln, and graduated from the London School of Economics before gaining a master’s degree in education at Glasgow University.

From 1962 to 1966, he lectured in sociology at HM Borstal, Dover.He then taught in Sunderland – where he joined the Labour party – before making the move, in 1971, to Scotland as a lecturer at Jordanhill College of Education.Soon immersed in Labour politics, he was elected in 1974 to Strathclyde regional council, a powerful local authority which became a thorn in the side of the Thatcher government.When Hugh McCartney, the veteran MP for Clydebank and Milngavie, retired before the 1987 election, Worthington was narrowly selected to replace him as candidate.His diligence made him a popular local MP and he held the seat through four general elections, with his share of the vote never falling below 50%.

Always an energetic campaigner, he struck lucky in 1989 when he came second in the private members’ ballot and introduced a right of reply bill that would have created a statutory Press Commission to replace the discredited Press Council, with powers to force newspapers to print corrections,It was blocked by the Conservatives after its second reading,Worthington joined Labour’s frontbench in 1989, covering education and employment in the Scottish Office shadow team,John Smith moved him to overseas development,He pursued a particular commitment to the plight of Somalia as a strident critic of the west’s lack of commitment to relieving the famine which gripped the east African country.

In 1994, he was briefly detained by rebels in Somalia along with a Conservative MP, Mark Robinson, who had joined him on a fact-finding mission organised by ActionAid,This made headlines at home and drew the ire of Labour whips, who had not authorised the trip,Worthington resigned from his position but the following year was reinstated by Blair to the Northern Ireland team, becoming parliamentary under-secretary of state in 1997,After leaving government, he chaired the all-party parliamentary group on overseas development for five years from 2000, and retired from the Commons in 2005,He remained extremely active as an international development consultant.

“I went to work full-time on what I am thinking about full-time – the fulfilment of the millennium development goals and the ending of world poverty,” he explained.In recent years, he suffered from vascular dementia, but this, too, became a campaigning challenge that he embraced with vigour.Involvement in Alzheimer Scotland, he said, did not only give him support “but allows me to play a part as Tony the former MP, not just Tony the person who has dementia.Helping drive policy and striving for change connects deeply to me.I find myself attending meetings, having structure to my life again and sharing my own experiences to help shape the future for someone else.

”Tony married Angela Oliver in 1966.She survives him, with their son, daughter and three grandchildren.Tony (Anthony) Worthington, politician and campaigner, born 11 October 1941; died 20 April 2026
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Nicole Kidman, Hugh Jackman … Gout Gout: Australian sprint star features on 60 Minutes in US

It has previously been an honour reserved for the likes of Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman. Now, sprint sensation Gout Gout has joined an elite club of Australian A-listers to be the focus of a story on respected US current affairs programme 60 Minutes.The 18-year-old was interviewed this week by long-time Sports Illustrated writer Jon Wertheim, who also spoke to coach Di Sheppard for the 13-minute story.The programme is one of the most popular in the USA and can attract audiences of more than 10m Americans, highlighting the growing phenomenon of Gout, who became the fastest teenager to run 200m last month in Sydney.The story has been shared widely online, and drew attention from the athletics community

about 12 hours ago
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Iga Swiatek finds her flawless best to dismantle Naomi Osaka at Italian Open

Iga Swiatek produced a statement victory in a battle between two of the game’s best, mercilessly dismantling Naomi Osaka 6-2, 6-1 to return to the quarter-finals of the Italian Open.This was the type of confidence-building performance Swiatek, the fourth seed, has been seeking for some time. After a tense opening four games, the four-time French Open champion put together a near flawless match, winning 10 of the last 11 games. Swiatek found a sweet balance between stifling Osaka with her heavy topspin and offensive weaponry while also drawing errors from her adversary with her tireless consistency.In a match that pitted the six-time grand slam champion Swiatek versus the four-time major champion Osaka, this was by far the most eye-catching meeting of the tournament so far

about 17 hours ago
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‘You guys wanna see a dead body?’ The slow death of the Philadelphia 76ers’ Process era

The Sixers’ season ended in a humiliating sweep at the hands of the Knicks. There are reasons to believe the franchise can recover though“You guys wanna see a dead body?”Old heads remember that scene in Stand By Me, four boys hike through the Oregon wilderness to find the body of a dead boy. They walk for miles for the morbid prize of seeing something that can’t be unseen. When they finally arrive and stand over the body, nobody says a word. There’s nothing left to say

about 19 hours ago
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Glamorgan beat Somerset to claim first home win in Division One: county cricket, day four – as it happened

Glamorgan’s overseas fast bowler Ryan Hadley was the unlikely batting hero at Sophia Gardens, doubling his first-class average to squeak the home side over the line against Somerset. Hadley, who was sent in on Sunday evening as nightwatchman, laboured for 231 balls to 50 not out, winning the game and bringing up his maiden half‑century with a straight drive. He was given a huge hug from partner Mason Crane, handshakes from Tom Abell and most of the Somerset team, before taking giant strides back to the applause of the dressing room. “I was telling the boys I hadn’t been dismissed since coming here, as a joke, so was saying earlier it’s inevitable they’re going to get me for the first time, but I’m still here – it’s a miracle,” he said.It was Glamorgan’s first win on home soil in Division One, and if it was methodically slow, no one was complaining

about 20 hours ago
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Is CTE really the main reason behind the rise in NFL player suicides?

When an NFL player takes his own life, there is often speculation about why. Injuries and unemployment – a common occurrence in a violent sport where players are frequently traded and cut – have been linked with increased risks of suicidal ideation. In parallel to those factors, however, exists chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). A degenerative brain condition caused by repeated trauma to the head, CTE’s links with football are established and almost impossible to ignore. Players ranging from widely admired Pro Bowlers such as Junior Seau and Dave Duerson, to those infamous for more notorious reasons, such as Aaron Hernandez and Phillip Adams, were all confirmed to have CTE by autopsies

about 21 hours ago
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Counties face points deductions for financial losses under strict new ECB rules

Cricket counties will face automatic points deductions for making repeated losses under strict new financial rules that will be introduced next season.The Guardian has learned that the England and Wales Cricket Board is planning to bring in its own version of football’s profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) underpinned by points deductions in a shadow form next year to give counties time to adjust, before fixed punishments for clubs that fail to break even are introduced in 2028.The proposed new rules are understood to be similar to the financial framework operated by the Premier League and EFL, whose clubs are limited to making losses of £105m and £39m respectively over a rolling three-year period.The Premier League is dropping PSR next season in favour of new regulations that will cap player spending to 85% of a club’s football revenues, but the EFL’s profitability and sustainability limits will remain in place.Under the ECB’s version of PSR, counties would be required to show they are running profitable businesses over a four-year period, with fixed tariffs in place for those that consistently lose money

about 22 hours ago
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UK long-term borrowing costs dip from 28-year high after Starmer allies back PM – business live

about 2 hours ago
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UK borrowing costs hit highest since 1998 amid Starmer uncertainty

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Trump heads to China to spread the gospel of American tech while emulating Xi Jinping on AI

about 7 hours ago
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Texas accuses Netflix of spying on children in new lawsuit

about 15 hours ago
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Bryson DeChambeau could give up golf for YouTube in his athletic prime. Is he right?

about 4 hours ago
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The Breakdown | Frontrunners’ defeats hint at twists and turns to come in Prem Rugby finale

about 5 hours ago