Sir Bill O’Brien obituary

A picture


The life and career of Sir Bill O’Brien, the former Labour MP, who has died aged 96, could easily have been adapted by any self-respecting novelist to provide a snapshot of the characteristic 20th-century working man (and they were always men) who becomes an admired and respected solid citizen, having successfully harnessed decades of gritty industrial experience to elected public office, first in the town hall and then at Westminster.The archetype was further richly fulfilled in O’Brien’s case as he was a Yorkshire miner, born into poverty, who learned to have the courage to speak truth to power within his own dying industry – which meant standing up to Arthur Scargill as leader of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) – and always to defend what he believed to be the right course of action, irrespective of political fashion.He was categorised as a moderate, but in reality he was an unapologetic pragmatist.“I’m not extreme in any way,” he once said.He would also cheerfully acknowledge that sometimes he agreed with the views of Tony Benn – regarded at the time as the arbiter of Labour’s left – and sometimes he did not.

He first went to work at the coalface of Glasshoughton colliery, near Castleford, West Yorkshire, as a teenager at the end of the second world war and, after 38 years in the industry, was elected to the House of Commons as the MP for Normanton, south-east of Leeds, in 1983.He had already spent 30 years as a councillor, from 1951 as a member of Knottingley urban district council and subsequently, from 1973, on Wakefield metropolitan district council, where he chaired the finance committee and was deputy leader for a decade.His local government experience gave him an authority and an understanding of transport, housing and environmental issues, as well as the economic implications of public spending in those areas.His years down the pit made his voice one that deservedly won an audience during his 22 years in the Commons, a period that coincided with the decades that saw the effective closure of the British coal industry.Throughout his career, he argued for a massive redistribution of funding to Yorkshire and the north of England, asserting that the responsibilities of devolved political power mattered far less than the availability of greater resources, while he also sought investment in “clean” coal technology.

In 2003 he warned the prime minister, Tony Blair, about the findings of a report by the Institution of Civil Engineers predicting that future gas supplies piped to the UK could be sourced from politically unstable countries and thus vulnerable to supply failures, sabotage and terrorism.In O’Brien’s maiden speech in July 1983, on the then controversial Thatcher government policy of council house sales, he typically reasoned that some sales of municipal housing were popular, but insisted that sales should only be allowed to go ahead on a voluntary basis.He was appointed to the public accounts committee shortly thereafter and was a diligent member until 1988, also serving on the energy select committee from 1986 until 1988.He was appointed by Neil Kinnock to the opposition frontbench as a member of the environment team in the wake of the 1987 general election, having nearly doubled his majority in what had been a redrawn seat when he won it at the low point in his party’s electoral fortunes four years earlier.In 1992, John Smith switched him to the Northern Ireland brief, where his status as a Roman Catholic had resonance.

He returned to the backbenches when Blair became leader and, for the remainder of his tenure as an MP, served as a member of the select committee dealing with the environment, transport and local government.After standing down as an MP in 2005 he remained active in local affairs.A magistrate and a school governor, he continued to campaign on political issues in Pontefract, where he lived.He was knighted in the Labour government’s retirement honours list in 2010.O’Brien was born into a mining family in the Glasshoughton neighbourhood of Castleford and, after attending St Joseph’s Roman Catholic school in the town, joined the workforce at the local colliery along with three of his four brothers.

He signed up with the Labour party and the NUM aged 16, and early on discovered an aptitude for organising, which led him into trade union activism, becoming branch secretary at Glasshoughton.He also studied for an extramural degree at Leeds University and was awarded a BEd degree in 1978.His political stance brought him into recurring conflict with Scargill, notably in 1976 when O’Brien supported the Sheffield Star in a court case brought against the newspaper by Scargill.Having nevertheless won his legal case, Scargill subsequently attempted to suspend O’Brien from holding union office.This resulted in further legal action, this time won by O’Brien.

During the selection procedure for the Labour candidate for Normanton – after the announced retirement of the sitting MP – O’Brien then successfully defeated the candidate proposed by Scargill,The two also clashed during the subsequent year-long miners’ strike of 1984-85, which O’Brien wholeheartedly supported, while rejecting the tactics of the union leadership,In retirement O’Brien researched and published a book on the history of the Prince of Wales colliery in Pontefract, which had once served as the town’s largest employer – with 2,200 on the payroll in 1958 – in its 133 years of operation until closure in 2002,In 1978 he married Jean Scofield, who survives him, as does his daughter, Darrel, from an earlier marriage, and her two daughters, Kaye and Diane,Bill (William) O’Brien, miner and politician, born 25 January 1929; died 18 May 2025
sportSee all
A picture

Wallabies can take heart from Lions series for litmus Tests against South Africa | Angus Fontaine

If Australian rugby is to take a key learning from the British & Irish Lions tour and adopt a credo for the upcoming Rugby Championship and the road to the 2027 World Cup, Will Skelton nailed it at half-time on Saturday: “We don’t take no itshay.”The 203cm, 145kg colossus’s performance was as big as he was in the Wallabies’ stirring victory in Sydney. But Skelton’s fighting words to his team – “Keep fighting. Keep fighting for each other. Keep fighting for the jersey” – and the pig Latin catchcry that followed was a crudity that offered perfect clarity to Joe Schmidt’s team

A picture

US sports lobby Home Office for travel exemption after golf caddie refused UK entry

Sports organisations in the US will press the Home Office to apply exemptions to new travel rules for American citizens entering the UK, after Harris English’s caddie missed out on around £130,000 by being denied access for the Scottish Open and the Open Championship.The case of Eric Larson has alerted sport governing bodies such as the NFL and NBA, which stage games in London, that sportspeople or staff can be prohibited from entering the UK under electronic travel authorisation (ETA) rules if they have a criminal conviction. Larson was sentenced to 13 years in prison in 1995 for involvement in drug dealing and rebuilt his career as a caddie for several leading PGA Tour players after serving 10 years.Larson’s past had been largely forgotten until the Scottish Open, when it was revealed that any American citizen given a custodial sentence of at least 12 months will now be denied UK entry. ETA implementation started in January this year

A picture

Research finds 89% of female rugby players experience pain wearing boots

Wearing boots designed for men causes discomfort for a majority of female rugby players, according to new research which finds as many as 89% of athletes experience pain from boots not built for women’s feet.With the Women’s Rugby World Cup coming to England in just over two weeks’ time IDA Sports, a footwear brand designed for female athletes, called out what it describes as the “iniquity” of boot design that leaves women not only lacking comfort when playing but exposed to a heightened risk of injury.After scanning nearly 1,000 feet, of amateurs and players from across Premiership Women’s Rugby, and surveying a further 330, IDA Sports found that comfort was the driving factor behind a player’s boot choice, but one that was rarely met. While 78% said comfort was a top priority, nearly nine in 10 spoke of discomfort.“The findings of our many years of research and development … illustrate the inequities that women athletes face when it comes to footwear,” Laura Youngson, co‑founder and chief executive of IDA Sports, said

A picture

The Breakdown | The Lions will endure … but who can we expect in the squad for 2029?

The average worker bee, in the busiest months of the year, generally lives for up to seven weeks. Talk about a short and sweet existence. It is not dissimilar with British & Irish Lions tours. One moment players are winning a major series, the next their team abruptly ceases to exist. That’s all, folks, unless you can make the next trip in four years

A picture

NFL preseason storylines: Cowboys chaos, the Browns‘ QB circus and Aaron Rodgers’ last dance

With the start of the regular season almost in sight, we take a tour of the league’s most compelling plotsLeave it to Jerry Jones to stink up the most optimistic time of year. The Cowboys owner has once again fumbled a contract negotiation with one of his stars. Despite fellow 2021 draftees Penei Sewell, Patrick Surtain II and Ja’Marr Chase signing long-term extensions, the Cowboys have allowed talks with Parsons to drag on.Last week, Parsons accused Jones of trying to circumvent his agent in negotiations and formally requested a trade.It’s fun to imagine Parsons on the trade block

A picture

TNT Sports secures live rights to England’s Ashes series in Australia

England’s attempt to regain the Ashes this winter will be broadcast live in the UK by TNT Sports. After ­agreeing a one-year deal with Cricket Australia over the weekend TNT now has the rights for all of England’s winter tours, as the broadcaster had deals in place to cover both white-ball series in New Zealand and Sri Lanka either side of the Ashes.TNT’s predecessor, BT Sport, bought the rights for the past two Ashes tours so the new deal may be inauspicious for Ben Stokes’s side as their viewers have not seen England win a single game. England have lost 13 of the past 15 Tests they have played in Australia, which shows the size of the task for the touring side this winter.TNT has increasingly become the home of England’s winter cricket deals in recent years and has long-term rights in place with New ­Zealand, West Indies and Pakistan, as well as securing a late deal to cover England’s five-Test series in India last winter