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Trevor Smith, Baron Smith of Clifton

Trevor Arthur Smith, Baron Smith of Clifton, FRHistS, FAcSS, FRSA, CCMI (14 June 1937 – 24 April 2021) was a British politician, academic and member of the House of Lords. He was the Liberal Democrat spokesman in the House on Northern Ireland and constitutional affairs.

The Lord Smith of Clifton
Smith in 2016
Member of the House of Lords
In office
4 November 1997 – 31 January 2019
MonarchElizabeth II
Personal details
Born
Trevor Arthur Smith

(1937-06-14)14 June 1937
Clapton, London
Died24 April 2021(2021-04-24) (aged 83)
NationalityBritish
Political partyLiberal (1956–88)
Liberal Democrats (1988–2021)
Spouse(s)
Brenda Susan Eustace
(m. 1960; div. 1973)

Julia Donnithorne Bullock
(m. 1979)
Children3
EducationChiswick Polytechnic
Alma materLondon School of Economics
OccupationAcademic, Political Scientist, Politician

Early life Edit

Smith was born in the East End of London, the son of Arthur James Smith and Vera Gladys Smith (née Cross).[1] He read Economics at the London School of Economics in 1955-8, graduating with a BSc. He worked as a schoolteacher for the London County Council from 1958-9.

Academic career Edit

Smith's first academic post was as an Assistant Lecturer at the University of Exeter from 1959–60. He then became Research Officer for the Acton Society Trust in 1960–2, a trust set up by the Joseph Rowntree Social Service Trust in the 1940s "to analyse the implications of the welfare state for liberty and the individual."[2] In 1962, he became a Lecturer in Politics at the University of Hull, where he would remain for the next five years.

In 1967, Smith moved to Queen Mary College at the University of London, where he was to be based for the next 24 years. Initially a Lecturer and then a Senior Lecturer, he was appointed Professor in Political Studies in 1983. He also served as Head of Department in Politics from 1972–85, and was Dean of Social Studies in 1979-82. By the mid-1980s, he was also playing an administrative role in the university as a whole - he was Pro-Principal in 1985–7, Senior Pro-Principal in 1987–9, and Senior Vice-Principal in 1989–91.

Smith was an active member of the Political Studies Association since the 1950s, and was its Chairman in 1988-9, Vice-President in 1989-91, and President in 1991-3.

In 1991, Smith moved to Northern Ireland, to take up the appointment of Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ulster, which he held until 1999. As the university was Northern Ireland's largest employer, Smith was heavily involved in the Northern Ireland peace process throughout the 1990s, taking a non-sectarian "outsider" role.

Political activity Edit

He was an active member of the Liberal Democrats and its predecessor, the Liberal Party, since 1956. A former Chairman of the Union of Liberal Students, he contested the 1959 General Election in West Lewisham, being the youngest candidate of any party that year.

He was a board member of the Joseph Rowntree Social Service Trust Ltd from 1975, and its Chair from 1987 to 1999; he retired from the board in 2007. During his time as Chair, the Trust saw a significant reorientation of its goals as a non-charitable trust geared towards funding political activity around democratic reform and social justice. In order to reflect this, it was renamed the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust in 1990.

In 1997, he entered the House of Lords as a Liberal Democrat peer, serving as his party's frontbench spokesperson on Northern Ireland from 2000-11. During the 2010-5 coalition government, he emerged as a vocal critic of his party's participation in the coalition, including being one of only four Lib Dem peers to vote against their party's trebling of tuition fees, and calling for the resignation of his party leader, Nick Clegg.

He retired from the House of Lords on 31 January 2019.[3]

Honours Edit

He was created a Knight Bachelor in the 1996 Birthday Honours for services to higher education,[4] receiving the accolade from The Queen on 3 December 1996.[5] He was created a life peer as Baron Smith of Clifton,[6] of Mount Sandel in the County of Londonderry, on 4 November 1997.[7] He was made an Honorary Fellow of Queen Mary University of London in 2003.

He received the following honorary degrees:

Personal life Edit

Smith married Brenda Susan (née Eustace) in 1960, with whom he had two sons; the marriage was dissolved in 1973. In 1979, he married his second wife, Julia Donnithorne (née Bullock), with whom he had one daughter, Naomi Smith of Best for Britain.[9]

Bibliography Edit

Books Edit

  • Trevor Smith with Alison Thomson, Anti-Politics: Consensus, Reform and Protest in Britain (London: Charles Knight, 1972).
  • Trevor Smith and Robert Benewick (eds), Direct Action and Democratic Politics (London: Allen & Unwin, 1973).
  • Trevor Smith, The Politics of the Corporate Economy (London: M. Robertson, 1979).
  • __________, The Fixers: Crisis Management in British Politics (London: Dartmouth, 1996).
  • __________, Workhouse to Westminster (London: Caper Press, 2018).

Book chapters Edit

  • Trevor Smith, 'United Kingdom', in Raymond Vernon (ed.), Big Business and the State: Changing Relations in Western Europe (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1974).
  • ___________, 'Causes, Concerns and Cures', in F. F. Ridley and Alan Doig (eds), Sleaze: Politicians, Private Interests & Public Reaction (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).
  • Trevor Smith and Alison Young, 'Politics and Michael Young', in Geoff Dench, Tony Flower and Kate Gavron (eds), Young at Eighty: The Prolific Public Life of Michael Young (Manchester: Carcanet Press, 1995).
  • Trevor Smith, 'Britain', in Jack Hayward and Michael Watson (eds), Planning, Politics, and Public Policy: The British, French and Italian Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).
  • ___________, 'Industrial Planning in Britain', in Jack Hayward and Michael Watson (eds), Planning, Politics, and Public Policy: The British, French and Italian Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).

Pamphlets Edit

  • Roger Cuss, Maurice Gent and Trevor Smith, New Unions for Old - New Orbits Pamphlet #6 (London: New Orbits Group, 1961)
  • Michael Argyle and Trevor Smith, Training Managers (London: Acton Society Trust, 1962).
  • Trevor Smith and Anthony M. Rees, Councillors: A Study of Barking (London: Acton Society Trust, 1964).
  • Trevor Smith, Town & County Hall: Problems of Recruitment & Training (London: Acton Society Trust, 1966).
  • Trevor Smith (ed.), Economic Dilemmas and Political Choices (London: Acton Society Trust, 1973).
  • Trevor Smith, British Politics in the Post-Keynesian Era (London: Acton Society Trust, 1986).
  • Paul Hodgson, Archy Kirkwood and Trevor Smith, Directors’ Remuneration and Private Utilities — Centre for Reform Paper No. 11 (London: Centre for Reform, 1999).

Peer-reviewed articles Edit

  • Robert E. Dowse and Trevor Smith, 'Party Discipline in the House of Commons - A Comment', Parliamentary Affairs, 16:2 (December 1962), pp. 159–164.
  • Trevor Smith, 'Politics, Economics, and Political Economy', Government and Opposition, 8:3 (July 1973), pp. 263–279.
  • __________, 'Thoughts on British Politics', Higher Education Quarterly, 30:4 (September 1976), pp. 462–469.
  • __________, 'Zur Verbindung von Gedanke und Tat in der britischen Politik: Der Fall Thatcher', Zeitschrift für Parlamentsfragen, 12:4 (December 1981), pp. 562–572.
  • __________, 'White Collar, Blue Collar, Dog Collar: Speculations on the emerging ecclesiastical/industrial complex', Higher Education Quarterly, 39:3 (June 1985), pp. 242–248.
  • __________, 'Britain Today: Crisis and Critiques', Parliamentary Affairs, 39:1 (January 1986), pp. 129–132.
  • __________, 'Political Science and Modern British Society', Government and Opposition, 21:4 (October 1986), pp. 420–436.
  • __________, 'The UGC's Research Rankings Exercise', Higher Education Quarterly, 41:4 (September 1987), pp. 303–316.
  • __________, 'Citizenship and the British Constitution', Parliamentary Affairs, 44:4 (October 1991), pp. 429–441.
  • __________, 'Post-Modern Politics and the Case for Constitutional Renewal', Political Quarterly, 65:2 (April 1994), pp. 128–137.
  • __________, 'Political Sleaze in Britain: Causes, Concerns and Cures', Parliamentary Affairs, 48:4 (October 1995), pp. 551–561.
  • __________, 'Citizenship, Community and Constitutionalism', Parliamentary Affairs, 49:2 (April 1996), pp. 262–272.
  • Trevor Smith and Alison Young, 'The Fixers: Elite Regeneration as a Response to Crisis Management in Modern British Government', Parliamentary Affairs, 50:2 (April 1997), pp. 292–306.
  • Patrick Dunleavy, Helen Margetts, Trevor Smith and Stuart Weir, 'Constitutional Reform, New Labour in Power and Public Trust in Government', Parliamentary Affairs, 54:3, (July 2001), pp. 405–424.
  • Trevor Smith, 'How Citizenship got on to the Political Agenda', Parliamentary Affairs, 55:3 (July 2002), pp. 475–487.
  • __________, '‘Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue’: Themes of Tony Blair and his Government', Parliamentary Affairs, 56:4 (October 2003), pp. 580–596.

Journalistic articles Edit

  • Trevor Smith, 'A momentous day in the Lords', OpenDemocracy, 14 October 2008.
  • __________, 'Conservatives will polarise Northern Ireland politics', OpenDemocracy, 7 December 2008.
  • __________, 'Northern Ireland's crisis needs more democracy, not less', OpenDemocracy, 9 January 2010.
  • __________, 'Will the Tories try to buy off the nats to block PR?', OpenDemocracy, 4 May 2010.
  • __________, 'Why I defied the Whips and voted against my government’s education policy', OpenDemocracy, 17 December 2010.
  • __________, 'We Lib Dems cannot return to "business as usual"', OpenDemocracy, 9 May 2011.
  • __________, 'Unelected Oligachy: corporate and financial power in Britain under the spotlight', OpenDemocracy, 23 August 2011.
  • __________, 'Trends and tendencies in contemporary UK politics and the future of the Lib Dems', Social Liberal Forum, 10 January 2012.
  • Trevor Smith and Naomi Smith, 'Save Our Party from the Precipice! A Lib Dem's Plan for Recovery', OpenDemocracy, 31 January 2012.
  • Trevor Smith, 'War with Iran? How Should Britain Proceed?', OpenDemocracy, 31 January 2012.
  • __________, 'Cameron's damage control strategy will further humiliate the Lib Dems', OpenDemocracy, 6 September 2012.
  • __________, 'Bereft of Ideas', Liberator, 351, February 2012, p. 20.
  • __________, 'Prime Minister as a mid-career job: what consequence for Britain?', OpenDemocracy, 10 February 2012.
  • __________, 'Whither the Lib Dems? Withering!', OpenDemocracy, 7 May 2012.
  • __________, 'Lib Dem prospects', OpenDemocracy, 15 September 2013.
  • __________, 'Even Bobbing Corks Sink Eventually', Liberator, 366, June 2014, pp. 8–9.
  • __________, 'The challenge facing the Liberal Democrats', OpenDemocracy, 17 June 2015.
  • __________, 'Politics against democracy: tracing the roots of Brexit', OpenDemocracy, 18 July 2016.
  • __________, 'How Universities Sold Their Souls', Liberator, 388, January 2018, pp. 12–13.
  • __________, 'After Carillion, can capitalism clean up its act? Or will Marx have the final word?', OpenDemocracy, 15 February 2018.
  • __________, 'Land of the Robber Barons', Liberator, 389, March 2018, pp. 12–13.
  • __________, 'The Withering of Democracy', Liberator, 391, August 2018, pp. 8–10.
  • __________, 'Polarised Britain in a Polarised World', Liberator, 392, September 2018, pp. 24–25.
  • __________, 'An Arranged Marriage, Contemporary-Style', Liberator, 393, November 2018, p. 17.
  • __________, 'Paddy Ashdown: a frank remembrance', OpenDemocracy, 15 January 2019.
  • __________, 'Staring Us in the Face', Liberator, 402, July 2020, pp. 12–13.
  • __________, 'Taking Care of Business', Liberator, 405, February 2021, p. 32.

Arms Edit

Coat of arms of Trevor Smith, Baron Smith of Clifton
Crest
A sacred ibis’s head Proper gorged with a plain collar Or.
Escutcheon
Sable between two haunches Argent fretty Sable four fusils conjoined in pale throughout each per pale Argent and Or per chevron counterchanged.
Supporters
On either side a sacred ibis Proper gorged with a plain collar Or.
Motto
Faber Meae Fortunae [10]

References Edit

  1. ^ Smith's entry in Who's Who, and Who Was Who, www.ukwhoswho.com
  2. ^ "Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust". The Rowntree Society. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  3. ^ "Lord Smith of Clifton". UK Parliament. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  4. ^ "No. 54427". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 June 1996. p. 2.
  5. ^ "No. 54663". The London Gazette. 28 January 1997. p. 1095.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 October 2011.
  7. ^ "No. 54942". The London Gazette. 10 November 1997. p. 12601.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ Smith's entry in Who's Who, and Who Was Who, www.ukwhoswho.com
  10. ^ Debrett's Peerage. 2000.

External links Edit

    trevor, smith, baron, smith, clifton, trevor, arthur, smith, baron, smith, clifton, frhists, facss, frsa, ccmi, june, 1937, april, 2021, british, politician, academic, member, house, lords, liberal, democrat, spokesman, house, northern, ireland, constitutional. Trevor Arthur Smith Baron Smith of Clifton FRHistS FAcSS FRSA CCMI 14 June 1937 24 April 2021 was a British politician academic and member of the House of Lords He was the Liberal Democrat spokesman in the House on Northern Ireland and constitutional affairs The Right HonourableThe Lord Smith of CliftonFRHistS FAcSS FRSA CCMISmith in 2016Member of the House of LordsIn office 4 November 1997 31 January 2019MonarchElizabeth IIPersonal detailsBornTrevor Arthur Smith 1937 06 14 14 June 1937Clapton LondonDied24 April 2021 2021 04 24 aged 83 NationalityBritishPolitical partyLiberal 1956 88 Liberal Democrats 1988 2021 Spouse s Brenda Susan Eustace m 1960 div 1973 wbr Julia Donnithorne Bullock m 1979 wbr Children3EducationChiswick PolytechnicAlma materLondon School of EconomicsOccupationAcademic Political Scientist Politician Contents 1 Early life 2 Academic career 3 Political activity 4 Honours 5 Personal life 6 Bibliography 6 1 Books 6 2 Book chapters 6 3 Pamphlets 6 4 Peer reviewed articles 6 5 Journalistic articles 7 Arms 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditSmith was born in the East End of London the son of Arthur James Smith and Vera Gladys Smith nee Cross 1 He read Economics at the London School of Economics in 1955 8 graduating with a BSc He worked as a schoolteacher for the London County Council from 1958 9 Academic career EditSmith s first academic post was as an Assistant Lecturer at the University of Exeter from 1959 60 He then became Research Officer for the Acton Society Trust in 1960 2 a trust set up by the Joseph Rowntree Social Service Trust in the 1940s to analyse the implications of the welfare state for liberty and the individual 2 In 1962 he became a Lecturer in Politics at the University of Hull where he would remain for the next five years In 1967 Smith moved to Queen Mary College at the University of London where he was to be based for the next 24 years Initially a Lecturer and then a Senior Lecturer he was appointed Professor in Political Studies in 1983 He also served as Head of Department in Politics from 1972 85 and was Dean of Social Studies in 1979 82 By the mid 1980s he was also playing an administrative role in the university as a whole he was Pro Principal in 1985 7 Senior Pro Principal in 1987 9 and Senior Vice Principal in 1989 91 Smith was an active member of the Political Studies Association since the 1950s and was its Chairman in 1988 9 Vice President in 1989 91 and President in 1991 3 In 1991 Smith moved to Northern Ireland to take up the appointment of Vice Chancellor of the University of Ulster which he held until 1999 As the university was Northern Ireland s largest employer Smith was heavily involved in the Northern Ireland peace process throughout the 1990s taking a non sectarian outsider role Political activity EditHe was an active member of the Liberal Democrats and its predecessor the Liberal Party since 1956 A former Chairman of the Union of Liberal Students he contested the 1959 General Election in West Lewisham being the youngest candidate of any party that year He was a board member of the Joseph Rowntree Social Service Trust Ltd from 1975 and its Chair from 1987 to 1999 he retired from the board in 2007 During his time as Chair the Trust saw a significant reorientation of its goals as a non charitable trust geared towards funding political activity around democratic reform and social justice In order to reflect this it was renamed the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust in 1990 In 1997 he entered the House of Lords as a Liberal Democrat peer serving as his party s frontbench spokesperson on Northern Ireland from 2000 11 During the 2010 5 coalition government he emerged as a vocal critic of his party s participation in the coalition including being one of only four Lib Dem peers to vote against their party s trebling of tuition fees and calling for the resignation of his party leader Nick Clegg He retired from the House of Lords on 31 January 2019 3 Honours EditHe was created a Knight Bachelor in the 1996 Birthday Honours for services to higher education 4 receiving the accolade from The Queen on 3 December 1996 5 He was created a life peer as Baron Smith of Clifton 6 of Mount Sandel in the County of Londonderry on 4 November 1997 7 He was made an Honorary Fellow of Queen Mary University of London in 2003 He received the following honorary degrees Legum Doctor LLD from Trinity College Dublin in 1992 Legum Doctor LLD from the University of Hull in 1993 Legum Doctor LLD from the University of Belfast in 1993 Legum Doctor LLD from the National University of Ireland in 1996 Doctor of Humane Letters DHL from the University of Alabama at Birmingham on 6 December 1998 8 Doctor of Letters DLitt from the University of Ulster in 2002 Doctor of Science DSc from the University of Buckingham in 2019 Legum Doctor LLD from the University of York in 2021 Personal life EditSmith married Brenda Susan nee Eustace in 1960 with whom he had two sons the marriage was dissolved in 1973 In 1979 he married his second wife Julia Donnithorne nee Bullock with whom he had one daughter Naomi Smith of Best for Britain 9 Bibliography EditBooks Edit Trevor Smith with Alison Thomson Anti Politics Consensus Reform and Protest in Britain London Charles Knight 1972 Trevor Smith and Robert Benewick eds Direct Action and Democratic Politics London Allen amp Unwin 1973 Trevor Smith The Politics of the Corporate Economy London M Robertson 1979 The Fixers Crisis Management in British Politics London Dartmouth 1996 Workhouse to Westminster London Caper Press 2018 Book chapters Edit Trevor Smith United Kingdom in Raymond Vernon ed Big Business and the State Changing Relations in Western Europe Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1974 Causes Concerns and Cures in F F Ridley and Alan Doig eds Sleaze Politicians Private Interests amp Public Reaction Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Trevor Smith and Alison Young Politics and Michael Young in Geoff Dench Tony Flower and Kate Gavron eds Young at Eighty The Prolific Public Life of Michael Young Manchester Carcanet Press 1995 Trevor Smith Britain in Jack Hayward and Michael Watson eds Planning Politics and Public Policy The British French and Italian Experience Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Industrial Planning in Britain in Jack Hayward and Michael Watson eds Planning Politics and Public Policy The British French and Italian Experience Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Pamphlets Edit Roger Cuss Maurice Gent and Trevor Smith New Unions for Old New Orbits Pamphlet 6 London New Orbits Group 1961 Michael Argyle and Trevor Smith Training Managers London Acton Society Trust 1962 Trevor Smith and Anthony M Rees Councillors A Study of Barking London Acton Society Trust 1964 Trevor Smith Town amp County Hall Problems of Recruitment amp Training London Acton Society Trust 1966 Trevor Smith ed Economic Dilemmas and Political Choices London Acton Society Trust 1973 Trevor Smith British Politics in the Post Keynesian Era London Acton Society Trust 1986 Paul Hodgson Archy Kirkwood and Trevor Smith Directors Remuneration and Private Utilities Centre for Reform Paper No 11 London Centre for Reform 1999 Peer reviewed articles Edit Robert E Dowse and Trevor Smith Party Discipline in the House of Commons A Comment Parliamentary Affairs 16 2 December 1962 pp 159 164 Trevor Smith Politics Economics and Political Economy Government and Opposition 8 3 July 1973 pp 263 279 Thoughts on British Politics Higher Education Quarterly 30 4 September 1976 pp 462 469 Zur Verbindung von Gedanke und Tat in der britischen Politik Der Fall Thatcher Zeitschrift fur Parlamentsfragen 12 4 December 1981 pp 562 572 White Collar Blue Collar Dog Collar Speculations on the emerging ecclesiastical industrial complex Higher Education Quarterly 39 3 June 1985 pp 242 248 Britain Today Crisis and Critiques Parliamentary Affairs 39 1 January 1986 pp 129 132 Political Science and Modern British Society Government and Opposition 21 4 October 1986 pp 420 436 The UGC s Research Rankings Exercise Higher Education Quarterly 41 4 September 1987 pp 303 316 Citizenship and the British Constitution Parliamentary Affairs 44 4 October 1991 pp 429 441 Post Modern Politics and the Case for Constitutional Renewal Political Quarterly 65 2 April 1994 pp 128 137 Political Sleaze in Britain Causes Concerns and Cures Parliamentary Affairs 48 4 October 1995 pp 551 561 Citizenship Community and Constitutionalism Parliamentary Affairs 49 2 April 1996 pp 262 272 Trevor Smith and Alison Young The Fixers Elite Regeneration as a Response to Crisis Management in Modern British Government Parliamentary Affairs 50 2 April 1997 pp 292 306 Patrick Dunleavy Helen Margetts Trevor Smith and Stuart Weir Constitutional Reform New Labour in Power and Public Trust in Government Parliamentary Affairs 54 3 July 2001 pp 405 424 Trevor Smith How Citizenship got on to the Political Agenda Parliamentary Affairs 55 3 July 2002 pp 475 487 Something Old Something New Something Borrowed Something Blue Themes of Tony Blair and his Government Parliamentary Affairs 56 4 October 2003 pp 580 596 Journalistic articles Edit Trevor Smith A momentous day in the Lords OpenDemocracy 14 October 2008 Conservatives will polarise Northern Ireland politics OpenDemocracy 7 December 2008 Northern Ireland s crisis needs more democracy not less OpenDemocracy 9 January 2010 Will the Tories try to buy off the nats to block PR OpenDemocracy 4 May 2010 Why I defied the Whips and voted against my government s education policy OpenDemocracy 17 December 2010 We Lib Dems cannot return to business as usual OpenDemocracy 9 May 2011 Unelected Oligachy corporate and financial power in Britain under the spotlight OpenDemocracy 23 August 2011 Trends and tendencies in contemporary UK politics and the future of the Lib Dems Social Liberal Forum 10 January 2012 Trevor Smith and Naomi Smith Save Our Party from the Precipice A Lib Dem s Plan for Recovery OpenDemocracy 31 January 2012 Trevor Smith War with Iran How Should Britain Proceed OpenDemocracy 31 January 2012 Cameron s damage control strategy will further humiliate the Lib Dems OpenDemocracy 6 September 2012 Bereft of Ideas Liberator 351 February 2012 p 20 Prime Minister as a mid career job what consequence for Britain OpenDemocracy 10 February 2012 Whither the Lib Dems Withering OpenDemocracy 7 May 2012 Lib Dem prospects OpenDemocracy 15 September 2013 Even Bobbing Corks Sink Eventually Liberator 366 June 2014 pp 8 9 The challenge facing the Liberal Democrats OpenDemocracy 17 June 2015 Politics against democracy tracing the roots of Brexit OpenDemocracy 18 July 2016 How Universities Sold Their Souls Liberator 388 January 2018 pp 12 13 After Carillion can capitalism clean up its act Or will Marx have the final word OpenDemocracy 15 February 2018 Land of the Robber Barons Liberator 389 March 2018 pp 12 13 The Withering of Democracy Liberator 391 August 2018 pp 8 10 Polarised Britain in a Polarised World Liberator 392 September 2018 pp 24 25 An Arranged Marriage Contemporary Style Liberator 393 November 2018 p 17 Paddy Ashdown a frank remembrance OpenDemocracy 15 January 2019 Staring Us in the Face Liberator 402 July 2020 pp 12 13 Taking Care of Business Liberator 405 February 2021 p 32 Arms EditCoat of arms of Trevor Smith Baron Smith of Clifton Crest A sacred ibis s head Proper gorged with a plain collar Or Escutcheon Sable between two haunches Argent fretty Sable four fusils conjoined in pale throughout each per pale Argent and Or per chevron counterchanged Supporters On either side a sacred ibis Proper gorged with a plain collar Or Motto Faber Meae Fortunae 10 References Edit Smith s entry in Who s Who and Who Was Who www ukwhoswho com Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust The Rowntree Society Retrieved 14 March 2016 Lord Smith of Clifton UK Parliament Retrieved 16 October 2019 No 54427 The London Gazette Supplement 14 June 1996 p 2 No 54663 The London Gazette 28 January 1997 p 1095 Prof Lord Smith of Clifton Authorised Biography Debrett s People of Today Prof Lord Smith of Clifton Profile Archived from the original on 20 October 2011 No 54942 The London Gazette 10 November 1997 p 12601 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 December 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Smith s entry in Who s Who and Who Was Who www ukwhoswho com Debrett s Peerage 2000 External links EditLiberal Democrats biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trevor Smith Baron Smith of Clifton amp oldid 1151253889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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