![]() ![]() He acted as lawyer to John Hemming in his 2005 legal bid to challenge postal votes at the 2005 general election and has also defended celebrities and a British soldier in Iraq. He was instrumental in setting up Ten 17 radio with Tony Saxby and Russ Lewell in 1991. Tishane Bernard was accused of a gangland execution, and was also acquitted. McGing was a soldier in Basra accused of drowning a teenager whilst on patrol. Hayes has practised as lead defence counsel in high-profile cases, including R v McGing and R v Tishane Bernard. Hayes was called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1977. Hayes also regularly reviews the newspapers on Stephen Nolan's weekend late night show on Fridays at midnight on BBC Radio 5 Live along with Mohammed Shafiq, a media commentator on British-Muslim issues. His blog has now moved to Total Politics. In May 2010, Hayes started a political blog for the website "Think Politics", which also hosts blogs by former Liberal Democrat MP for Falmouth Camborne, Julia Goldsworthy, current Labour MP for Denton and Reddish, Andrew Gwynne, and Conservative candidate for Swansea West, René Kinzett. "In fact they are very good: I have all their albums." After Parliament įollowing his career in Parliament, he wrote for the magazine Punch. "I have advised the group is not a bad influence," he said. When the heavy metal group Iron Maiden were having trouble getting permission to play in Beirut, Hayes threw his weight behind them (one member was a constituent). This included being fastened in the stocks and pelted with custard pies, and being whipped while dressed in fetish clothing. Hayes was frequently described as a "political buffoon", because of his willingness to subject himself to ridicule on various television and radio appearances. Hayes appeared on comedy show Have I Got News for You in 1992, on which he was unafraid to ridicule his own party and it was revealed that he was Ken Livingstone's "favourite Tory", which Angus Deayton then compared to being " Ian Paisley's favourite Catholic". For over four years he regularly appeared with Charles Kennedy, Ken Livingstone and Michael Parkinson on a political discussion show on LBC in London. Hayes was a regular contributor on television quiz shows and talk shows, in particular, The James Whale Show. Roth's Parliamentary Profiles says of Hayes: " has never taken himself seriously, and therefore has not been taken seriously by others." Betty Boothroyd, former Speaker of the House of Commons, said of Hayes that "he would look very pretty as a French maid I wish I had his curls." Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher personally disliked his beard and yellow ties, which he refused to change, when asked. ![]() ![]() On the BBC Question Time programme on, he expressed the view that there was a real danger that the entire legal profession would be placed in the hands of G4S within a couple of years. But in those days that was about as popular as a rat sandwich." Once, when asked why he did not support Blair's New Labour endeavour, he replied "They're too right-wing". Heaven knows why, I just believed in social justice and pragmatism. During the Thatcher years I was regarded as a rebel. On his blog, Hayes wrote, "I'm on the independent left of the Conservative Party. Hayes opposed capital punishment and fought for free dental and eye check-ups. Hayes was on the left on the Conservative Party, unlike most of the 1983 intake of Conservative MPs. Hayes lost his seat to Bill Rammell, the Labour Party candidate, in the 1997 general election. ![]() He introduced a number of Acts including the Sexual Offences Act, the Nurse Prescribing Act and the Video Recordings Act. He served on the Health and Heritage Select committees and was a Parliamentary Private Secretary in the Northern Ireland Office and the Department of Environment. He was Member of Parliament for Harlow from 1983. Hayes was selected as the Conservative candidate for Harlow in Essex in 1981. Hayes grew up in Epping and was educated at the London Oratory School in Fulham. Hayes' father was in the Merchant Navy during World War II. He subsequently returned to practising criminal law. Jeremy Joseph James Hayes (born 20 April 1953) is a British former Conservative politician, the MP for Harlow in Essex from 1983 until he failed to be re-elected in 1997. ![]()
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