Norman Godman

Norman Godman
Member of Parliament
for Greenock and Inverclyde
Greenock and Port Glasgow (1983-1997)
In office
9 June 1983  7 June 2001
Preceded by Dickson Mabon
Succeeded by David Cairns
Personal details
Born Norman Anthony Godman
(1937-04-19)19 April 1937
Died 27 June 2018(2018-06-27) (aged 81)
Nationality British
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Trish Godman (wife; born Patricia Leonard)
Relations Michael, Mark and Gary Mulgrew (stepsons)

Norman Anthony Godman (19 April 1937 – 20 June 2018)[1] was a Scottish Labour Party politician.

Early life

Godman was one of nine children born to a trawler skipper man and a mother who worked in fish processing. After leaving Westbourne Street Boy’s School at 15, he worked as a shipwright before undertaking night classes and eventually graduating from Hull and Heriot-Watt Universities with a PhD and undertaking an academic career in Scotland. He served in the Royal Military Police during his National Service.[2]

Parliamentary career

Godman first stood for Parliament in the 1979 General Election when he contested Aberdeen South, but he was defeated by the Conservative incumbent Iain Sproat by 772 votes.[3][4]

He served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Greenock and Port Glasgow from 1983-97, and for Greenock and Inverclyde from 1997 to 2001. From 1988-89 he was Opposition spokesman for Agricultural and Rural Affairs.

Renowned for his humility and integrity, he was a champion of the shipbuilding industry, particularly the Scott Lythgow yard on the lower Clyde. He was tenacious in his support for fishing communities and he took a life-long interest in Irish affairs. On Northern Ireland he championed an inquiry into Bloody Sunday and privately lobbied Tony Blair for Lord Cullen to chair an inquiry.

Godman served on the House of Commons Scottish Affairs Committee (1983-87), the European Legislation Committee (1989-95), the Northern Ireland Committee for a year and the Foreign Affairs Committee (1997-2001).[5]

Bernard Ponsonby, the long-serving political editor of Scottish Television, described Godman as a “warm, gentle and empathetic man” whose career was characterised by “a special kind of integrity.”

”An old-fashioned socialist whose values were marked by a belief in social justice and world peace, he argued for his values with a consistency which always made him a prisoner of his own conscience. He never sought moral high grounds or to ever promote himself above his values. 

“He was humble, hard-working, sought to do right by those who needed his advocacy. “He was a model public servant who gave Parliament his hard work, his party his loyalty – when he thought it merited – and he always gave the country his best judgement.”

“His beliefs were incorruptible and he was incapable of bending or fashioning a view in order to get on. He had no time for spin, even less for apparatchiks who debased Labour values by wheeling and dealing.” Ponsonby cited Godman’s stand on abortion rights as an example of how he was willing to put his principles over his self-advancement, noting that he at one stage faced serious pressure from Catholic opponents who threatened his pre-selection over the issue. “He displayed a moral courage in seeing down those in his local party who saw his support for a woman’s right to choose as a ground for cutting short his Parliamentary career. He would gladly have it cut short than to do or say something that cast him as a hypocrite.”[6]

Family

His wife was Trish Godman, who was the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for West Renfrewshire constituency from the Scottish Parliament general election, 1999 until her retirement in 2011.

References

  1. Norman "bowie" Godman
  2. "Obituary, The Scotsman". The Scotsman.
  3. "Politics". the Guardian.
  4. "Dr Norman Godman, former MP, Greenock and Inverclyde - TheyWorkForYou". TheyWorkForYou.
  5. "Obituary, The Scotsman". The Scotsman.
  6. "Obituary, The Scotsman". The Scotsman.

|title= Obituary, The Scotsman

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Dickson Mabon
Member of Parliament for Greenock and Port Glasgow
19831997
constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for Greenock and Inverclyde
19972001
Succeeded by
David Cairns


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