Shaun Bailey (London politician)
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Shaun Bailey AM |
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File:Shaun Bailey 2020 (cropped 2).jpg
Bailey in 2020
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Member of the London Assembly | |
Assumed office 6 May 2016 |
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Personal details | |
Born | May 1971 (age 53) North Kensington, London, England |
Political party | Conservative |
Spouse(s) | Ellie |
Children | 2 |
Education | London South Bank University |
Shaun Bailey (born May 1971) is a British politician and former journalist. A member of the Conservative Party, Bailey has been a member of the London Assembly since 2016.
Born in North Kensington to a British Jamaican family, Bailey earned a degree in computer-aided engineering from London South Bank University. In 2006, he co-founded a charity called MyGeneration; it ceased operations in 2012 due to financial problems. Bailey was a researcher for the Centre for Policy Studies and wrote several articles in the British press. He was appointed a special adviser on youth and crime to David Cameron from 2010 to 2013. He also stood unsuccessfully as the Conservative Parliamentary candidate for Hammersmith in 2010 and Lewisham West and Penge in 2017.
In 2018, Bailey was selected as the Conservative candidate in the 2021 London mayoral election (initially scheduled for 2020, but postponed until 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic). Bailey came second in the election, losing to Sadiq Khan in the second-preference count, having received 35% of first-preference and 45% of second-preference votes.
Contents
Early life
Bailey was born in May 1971 in North Kensington, London. He and his younger brother were raised by his mother and extended family in the absence of his father, who worked as a lorry driver.[1] When Bailey was around thirteen years of age, he got to know his father and his second family, and became close to his stepsisters and stepbrother.[2] The family is of Jamaican origin.[3] His grandfather came to the UK from Jamaica in 1947. Bailey said his grandfather fought for Britain in the Second World War.[4][5]
Bailey attended Henry Compton School in Fulham and left with five CSEs.[1] When Bailey was 12 years old, his mother sent him to join the Army Cadet Force in White City.[6] When he was about 19 years old, he became a Sergeant-Instructor and stayed in the Cadets for another 10 years.[6] At about the age of 12 or 13, he began attending the Jubilee Sports Centre to take up gymnastics, and he became a member of Childs Hill Gymnastics Display team.[2] After leaving secondary school, Bailey attended Paddington College, where he achieved two A-levels and a BTEC certificate.[1]
Bailey was the subject of BBC Radio 4 series The House I Grew Up In, in which he said he had been a burglar in his youth and said: "I had a particular group of friends who indulged in a burglary. I had done it with them".[7][8] Reflecting on gang culture, Bailey commented: "The problem of having estates with names is that people become very territorial. You kind of defend your 'ends'. Because you don't want your locale to be seen as where the pussies live."[9]
Career before politics
Bailey graduated at the age of 27 with a 2:2 in computer aided engineering from London South Bank University.[10] Previously, he worked as a security guard at Wembley Stadium and the London Trocadero to fund his university tuition.[11] He was unemployed for two years.[12][13] Bailey said: "I did bad, bad jobs. I basically worked sweeping factories, delivering beer and security work".[12] At least 12 members of his peer group spent time in prison.[14]
In May 2006, Bailey co-founded MyGeneration, a charity addressing the social problems that affect struggling young people and their families. It was established shortly before Bailey was selected by the Conservative Party to stand in the recreated Hammersmith constituency.[15] In 2010, The Times reported that Bailey was at the centre of allegations that his North Kensington-based charity showed £16,000 worth of spending "without any supporting records".[16] Between 2008 and 2009, almost half of the charity's expenditure was on publicity and administration, not "direct charitable expenditure". Of the £116,000 "charitable expenditure", more than half was spent on travel and subsistence. The charity was closed in 2012 due to financial problems. The charity's services were taken over by other charities including Kids Company.[17][18]
Political career
Parliamentary candidate
On 29 March 2007, Bailey was selected at an open primary to be the Conservative candidate for the newly recreated parliamentary seat of Hammersmith in West London.[19] His campaign focused on issues surrounding families and social responsibility.[20] He failed to win the seat at the 2010 general election, achieving a swing of 0.5% from Labour which was two points below the average swing across London, and lost by 3,549 votes.[21][22][23]
In the run-up to the 2015 general election, Bailey was unsuccessful in attempts to be chosen as the Conservative Party candidate for Kensington,[24][25] Croydon South,[26][27] and Uxbridge South and Ruislip.[28][29] At the 2017 general election, Bailey contested Lewisham West and Penge, where he finished in second place with 12,249 votes. His share of the vote declined by 1.1 percentage points compared with 2015, against an average decrease of 1.7 percentage points for the Conservatives across London.[30][31]
Researcher
Bailey was a Research Fellow[when?] at the Centre for Policy Studies,[32] writing for the Centre and for various newspapers, including the Evening Standard,[33] the Times,[34] and The Independent.[35]
Government adviser
In 2011, Bailey was appointed as one of David Cameron's "Ambassadors for the Big Society".[36][37] In 2012, he became a special adviser to the Prime Minister David Cameron on youth and crime.[38] Bailey was paid a salary of £60,000 as a special adviser.[39] In 2013, he was moved to a part-time role in the Cabinet Office on a one-year contract and was paid substantially less. The Telegraph published claims he was pushed out of Downing Street by David Cameron's "clique of Old Etonian aides".[39]
London Assembly
In October 2015, Bailey was selected as the third Conservative candidate on the London Assembly top-up list, after Kemi Badenoch and Andrew Boff.[40] He was Deputy Leader of the Conservative Greater London Authority Group before being selected as the Conservatives' Mayoral candidate.[41]
Other
Kensington Labour MP Emma Dent Coad wrote about Bailey in 2010, before her election to the House of Commons, referring to him as a "token ghetto boy".[42] Dent Coad quoted former neighbours describing Bailey as a "free-loading scumbag" and "the most hated man in North Kensington". She suggested Bailey had been "used" by the Conservatives and that his "public school buddies will drop him like a hot potato" if he failed to get elected.[43] Bailey subsequently called the comments "racist" and "hate-filled".[44] Dent Coad later apologised for "any offence caused" and said that she was just repeating what others had said.[45]
In 2018, Bailey joined Havering NHS Trust's board as part of a diversity scheme as a trainee.[46]
2021 London mayoral election
Campaign
In 2018, Bailey was selected as the Conservative candidate for the forthcoming London mayoral election (scheduled to be held in 2020 but later postponed until 2021).[47] The Evening Standard newspaper endorsed Bailey for the Conservative candidacy, suggesting Bailey "had been both the embodiment and standard-bearer of Tory modernisation".[48]
Bailey was subject to racism during the campaign on social media and in a letter posted to a Conservative party office.[49]
Following his selection, Bailey was criticised for things he had written, said and shared on social media. He shared a tweet with an image with a caption describing Sadiq Khan, the incumbent mayor of London, as the "mad mullah of Londonistan". Bailey's spokesperson said he wouldn't have shared it if he had seen the caption.[50]
In October 2018, Bailey was accused of Islamophobia and Hinduphobia over the contents of a pamphlet entitled No Man's Land, written for the Centre for Policy Studies in 2005. In it, Bailey said that celebrating Muslim and Hindu festivals "[robs] Britain of its community" and risked turning the country into a "crime riddled cesspool" as a result. He claimed that Indians "bring their culture, their country and any problems they might have, with them" but that this was not a problem within the black community "because we've shared a religion and in many cases a language".[51] In the pamphlet, Bailey confused the Hindu religion and the Hindi language: "You don't know what to do. You bring your children to school and they learn far more about Diwali than Christmas. I speak to the people who are from Brent and they've been having Muslim and Hindi (sic) days off".[52] James Cleverly, then the deputy chair of the Conservative Party, said that Bailey had been misunderstood and would not be sanctioned.[53]
In June 2020, following poor polling figures against current-Mayor Sadiq Khan, the Financial Times reported that some senior Conservatives wished to replace Bailey with another candidate such as Sajid Javid.[54][55] This was dismissed by ministers[56] and other senior Tories, with Bailey criticising those in the Conservative Party who sought to replace him as the candidate,[57] and stating that he had the personal backing of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.[58]
In early March 2021, Bailey was accused of politicising the disappearance of a 33-year-old woman in Clapham, given that the police investigation was still ongoing.[59][60][61] Liberal Democrat mayoral candidate Luisa Porritt called the comments "utterly grotesque",[62] with Labour MPs calling his comments "shameless".[61] In an interview, Minister for London Paul Scully defended Bailey's comments, with Bailey also stating that he didn't regret the tweet during an interview on LBC.[63][64]
In mid March 2021, the Daily Mirror alleged that the Conservative Party had withdrawn campaign funding, noting the lack of funds raised by the campaign itself.[65][66] Bailey's campaign denied the story, stating it was "fictional" and "hearsay".[65]
Mayoral policies
Throughout 2020 and 2021, Bailey's mayoral campaign outlined several policies including:[67]
- An increase in the size of the Metropolitan Police to 40,000 officers and the introduction of new 'stop and scan' technology that will use thermal imaging in knife crime hotspots.[68]
- A reverse in the increase in the Congestion Charge to £15,[69] and stopping the expansion of the Ultra Low Emission Zone.[67]
- A taxpayer-owned housebuilding organisation controlled by the Mayor[70] and funding 100,000 shared ownership homes to be sold for £100,000.[71]
- A London Infrastructure Bank to fund Crossrail 2 and other infrastructure including Hammersmith Bridge and Tube upgrades.[72]
- Plans to make every London bus electric by the end of a second term.[73]
- To install CCTV on the Bakerloo, Central and Piccadilly London Underground lines in an effort to improve women's safety.[74]
- To recruit 4,000 new youth workers and open 32 new youth centres, one for every London borough.[75]
In August 2020, he announced he would encourage larger businesses in London to drug-test employees in an effort to reduce drug consumption and crime.[76][77]
In September 2020, Bailey proposed that companies should be able to pay to rename tube lines and stations with commercial brand names.[78] Bailey stated that funds so raised could be used to pay for under-18s and over-60s free travel.[79]
In November 2020, Bailey pledged to fund 100,000 shared ownership 'millennial' homes to be sold at £100,000 each. These would be available for first time buyers under 40, who would be able to pay a deposit of just £5,000.[71] In January 2021, Bailey was criticised for suggesting in an interview with Inside Housing that homeless people would be able to save for this £5,000 deposit to purchase an affordable home.[80][81][82]
Results
Bailey received 893,051 first preference votes (35%) in the election.[83] In a run-off against Sadiq Khan, he received a total of 977,601 votes (45%) when second preferences were included.[83] Accordingly Sadiq Khan was re-elected Mayor of London although the result was tighter than earlier polls had predicted.[83]
Political views
Bailey has expressed concerns about liberalism, saying "the more liberal we have been, the more our communities have suffered".[1] Bailey has accused BBC's output as being biased and went on to suggest the BBC "sees itself as propagandist for liberal values", and that the licence fee should be split with other broadcasters.[84]
Bailey supported leaving the European Union in the 2016 EU Referendum.[85]
In 2005, Bailey suggested that working class people "look to rules", otherwise they may turn to crime.[86]
In 2006, Bailey said "by giving children condoms and the amount of sexual material they are exposed to you normalise sex and they feel it is their divine right to have it, when actually it is not", and added "that is one of the things that drives their self-esteem up or down and leads to crime". It was later clarified that Bailey had not tried to suggest that access to abortions and contraceptive services had directly led to crime, however early sexual activity was a contributing factor to increased crime.[87][88]
Bailey has said that children are using abortion services as contraception and has favoured reducing the time limit from 24 weeks to 22 weeks.[89]
In an article in The Daily Telegraph in 2006, Bailey claimed that single mothers deliberately become pregnant in order to gain benefits, saying that they "won't be too careful about not becoming parents. In some cases, they will deliberately become pregnant - as they know that if they do, they will get a flat".[90][91] At an event at a Conservative party conference in 2008, he repeated these claims, saying that "Girls getting knocked up to get housing? It's a cottage industry where I come from."[92][93]
Bailey has argued in support of allowing the police to have greater use of stop and search powers.[94][95]
Bailey has stated his support for greater equality for black people. Speaking about the Black Lives Matter movement, Bailey commented that the movement "made everybody feel they are racist and actually very few people are."[96] Prior to Black Lives Matter protests that occurred in London in 2020 taking place, he argued that they should be allowed to happen, because otherwise the tension behind such protests "will just spill out into the summer and be very tough for the police".[97]
In 2021, Bailey opposed a controversial review of statues and street names in London pledged by incumbent mayor Sadiq Khan, arguing that removing controversial statues does not change history. He instead argued that the review of place names and statues should be subject to citizen led initiatives or that controversial statues should be placed in museums or have a plaque explaining the history behind the figure.[98][99]
Personal life
Bailey grew up in social housing with his Jamaican mother, grandfather, grandmother, two aunts, and two uncles. His extended family lived on the same estate in Ladbroke Grove.[12][14]
Following selection as Conservative's PPC for Hammersmith in 2007, Bailey and his immediate family moved out of social housing and Bailey at the time said "the mice and damp got a bit much".[14] He lives in a house owned jointly with a housing association.[100]
Bailey attends an Anglican church.[101][100] He and his wife Ellie have two children together.[102][103]
Publications
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- Bailey S and Najjar N, 'Time for a Dose of Euro-Realism', Smart Government, 2015
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- Shaun Bailey for London – campaign website
- Shaun Bailey at the London Assembly
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- ↑ https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2020/07/02/shaun-bailey-pledges-drop-ridiculous-statue-review-first-day/
- ↑ https://www.standard.co.uk/news/mayor/london-elections-2021-tory-shaun-bailey-40000-police-100-day-crime-plan-b930407.html
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- 1971 births
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- Black British politicians
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- English politicians
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- Living people
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