The four Nigerians
who contested for various seats to represent different counties in British parliament won resounding victories in Thursday’s
parliamentary elections.
Helen
Grant
53-year-old Ms.
Grant won the seat for Member of Parliament representing Maidstone and The
Weald in Kent.
She polled
22,745 votes, representing 45.5 per cent of the votes cast.
Helen Grant is a British Conservative Party politician and solicitor. She is the current Member of Parliament for Maidstone and The Weald in Kent and the current Minister for Sport, Tourism & Equalities. She was elected at the 2010 general election, replacing the constituency’s previous incumbent, Ann Widdecombe, who had decided to step down as an MP. Grant was the first black woman to be selected to defend a Tory seat and her election made her the Conservatives’ first female black MP.
Chuka
Umunna
36-year-old Chuka
Harrison Umunna won the elections to represent Streatham.
Mr. Umunna
is a British Labour Party politician who has served Streatham as Member of
Parliament since 2010. Umunna is the current Shadow Business Secretary since
2011. His father Bennett died in a road
accident in Nigeria in 1992.
His mother,
Patricia, is a solicitor and daughter of Sir Helenus Milmo QC, the Anglo-Irish
High Court judge. Umunna was educated at Hitherfield Primary School in
Streatham, South London, and the Christ Church Primary School in Brixton Hill.
He says his parents felt that the local state school had “given up on him” and
so moved him to the boys’ independent senior school St Dunstan’s College, in
Catford in southeast London, where he played the cello, and became Deputy Head
Boy. During this period he was also a chorister at Southwark Cathedral.
He was awarded an
upper second class LLB in English and French
Law from the University of Manchester;
after graduating he studied for one term at
the University of Burgundy in Dijon, before studying for an MA at
Nottingham Law School. He has said that his politics and moral values come from
Christianity, but that he is “not majorly religious”
Chi
Onwurah
50-year-old
Chi Onwurah is Newcastle’s first black MP. During the depression of the 1930s,
Onwurah’s maternal grandfather was a sheet metal worker in Tyneside shipyards.
Her mother grew up in poverty in Garth Heads on Newcastle’s quayside. Her
father, from Nigeria, was working as a dentist while he studied at Newcastle
Medical School when they met and married in the 1950s.
After Chi was born
in Wallsend, Newcastle upon Tyne, in 1965, her family moved to Awka, Nigeria
when she was still a baby. Just two years later the Biafran Civil War broke out
bringing famine with it, forcing her mother to bring the children back to
Newcastle, whilst her father stayed on in the Biafran army.
Kate
Osamor
Kate Osamor won
Edmonton seat for Labour with a comfortable win over the Conservatives.
The Labour
candidate, who is taking the reins from long-standing MP Andy Love, gained a
huge 25,388 votes, beating closest rival Conservative Gonul Daniels, who gained
9,969 votes.
Ms Osamor, who has
worked for the National Health Service
(NHS) for 15 years, is a trade union activist, a women’s charity trustee and a
member of the Labour Party’s National Executive Committee. She made funding the
NHS, opposing its fragmentation and standing up to government cuts the
centrepiece of her campaign.
Mazi Victor Eni
Mazi Victor Eni, from Aro in Abia
State has won the Borough Council seat in the just concluded election in
Britain.
Mr. Eni becomes
the fifth Nigerian that won seats in the keenly contested general elections in British history.
Four politicians of Nigerian descent also tasted victory
during the general elections in the Queen’s land.
Mr. Eni took to
his Facebook page ‘VICTOR ENI for KENILWORTH
Conservatives Borehamwood’ to confirm the news.
He wrote: “People
of Borehamwood This was a landslide! Victor Eni is now a Borough councillor as
well as a Town council! WELL DONE and thank you to all supporters, volunteers and residents!”
Borehamwood
Kenilworth had previously been a Labour
seat – but John Galliers lost his seat to Conservatives Victor Eni and Thomas
Ash.
No comments:
Post a Comment