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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Just what will be his legacy?

December 23, 2015 10:15
4 min read

Greville Janner was one of the most flamboyant but at the same time one of the most flawed of the communal politicians who walked upon the Anglo-Jewish stage in the second half of the 20th century. Adored - worshipped almost - but reviled by others, there can be no denying that he made a mark and left a legacy.

But whether that mark was as positive as his many supporters and disciples would no doubt have wished it to be remains an open question.

Janner was born on July 11 1928 into a political dynasty consciously conceived and crafted by his father, Barnett ("Barney"), a clever and politically ambitious lawyer of Lithuanian origin whose parents had emigrated from Tsarist Russia to South Wales in 1893.

In 1970 he announced that he was retiring as MP for Leicester North-West, but deliberately left the announcement until after posters had been printed "Vote Janner" for the election called that June. Barney then cheekily suggested that, to save reprinting costs, his son might be nominated to succeed him in what both regarded as the "family" constituency.