Dennis Turner
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Dennis Turner (born 26 August 1942) is a Labour and Co-operative politician in the United Kingdom and was a Member of Parliament from 1987 until 2005.
Turner was born in Bradley in the Black Country and has lived there his whole life. He was educated at Stonefield Secondary Modern and Bilston College of Education, and worked as a former market trader and steelworker, who later ran a social club. He is a strong trade unionist. He was one of the youngest-ever councillors on Wolverhampton Council from 1966, rising through the ranks to become deputy leader for seven years.
Turner was elected member of Parliament for Wolverhampton South East at the 1987 general election. He never held high office, serving as an opposition whip then as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Clare Short at the Department for International Development. He also campaigned on issues of Fairtrade and further education, and chaired the Commons Catering Committee. He chaired the Co-op Parliamentary Group for two years and the West Midlands group of Labour MPs. He once introduced a private member's bill seeking to make clear in law the correct amount of froth at the top of a pint of beer. He stepped down from Parliament at the 2005 general election; he announced his retirement at a very late stage, citing an impending lung operation on a collapsed diaphragm. Pat MacFadden was selected to replace him. On 13 May 2005 it was announced that he would be created a life peer.
He is married to Pat and has a son and daughter.