John Spellar

John Francis Spellar (born 5 August 1947) is a British politician who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Warley, formerly Warley West, from 1992 to 2024. A member of the Labour Party, he previously represented Birmingham Northfield from 1982 to 1983. He served as a minister in numerous departments between 1997 and 2005 and later served as Comptroller of the Household in the Whips' Office between 2008 and 2010. After Labour entered opposition, he served as a shadow Foreign Office minister from 2010 to 2015.

Early life
Spellar was born in Bromley and educated at Dulwich College and St Edmund Hall, Oxford. He was Chairman of the Oxford University Labour Club in 1967.

Spellar was the Political Officer of the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union (EETPU) from 1969 to 1992, and was a speech-writer for general secretaries Frank Chapple and Eric Hammond. As a young union officer he attended, along with John Golding and Roger Godsiff, the St Ermin's group of senior trade union leaders who organised to prevent the Bennite left taking over the party in the years 1981–1987.

He was a councillor in the London Borough of Bromley between 1970 and 1974.

Parliamentary career
Spellar stood for the constituency of Bromley at the 1970 general election as Labour's youngest candidate.

He was first elected to the House of Commons in the 1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election but lost at the 1983 General Election to the Conservative candidate, Roger King. At the 1987 general election he stood again for the same seat but was again unsuccessful against Roger King. Spellar returned to the House of Commons in the 1992 general election becoming the MP for Warley West with a majority of 5,472, and was appointed an opposition whip. Following a period as opposition spokesman for Northern Ireland in 1994, he was moved to shadow Defence minister in 1995.

At the 1997 general election, Spellar was elected as MP for the new Warley constituency (as Warley West had been abolished in a boundary review). In the new Labour government, he was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Ministry of Defence, being promoted to become Minister of State for the Armed Forces in 1999. In 2001, he was appointed to the Privy Council, as Minister of State for Transport in the Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions with rights to attend Cabinet. After the 2002 reshuffle, he became Minister of State at the Department for Transport, and moved to the Northern Ireland Office in 2003. He was banned from the offices of both the Mayor of Derry and the Mayor of Belfast during that year, because he supported the reinstatement to the British Army of convicted murderers Mark Wright and James Fisher of the Scots Guards. He left the front benches in 2005, but in 2008, he rejoined the government as a whip (Comptroller of the Household) and served until Labour entered opposition in May 2010.

In November 2015, Spellar he suggested that his party leader Jeremy Corbyn should resign over the question of whether to conduct air strikes on ISIL in Syria. Spellar supported Owen Smith in the 2016 Labour leadership election.

In November 2017, Spellar was appointed as a member of the UK parliament delegation to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.

On 27 May 2024, Spellar announced he would step down at the 2024 United Kingdom general election. He was an MP for 32 years.

Peerage
In the 2024 Dissolution Honours, he was nominated for a life peerage.

Other political activities
Spellar is a vice-chair of Labour Friends of Israel. He is a Director of the centre-right Labour grouping, Labour First and also of the Henry Jackson Society Advisory Council.

Personal life
Spellar was married to dentist Anne Wilmot from 1981 until her death in 2003. They had a daughter.