John Maxton, Baron Maxton
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John Alston Maxton, Baron Maxton (born May 5, 1936) was a Labour backbench Member of Parliament in the British House of Commons
Maxton is a nephew of the former Independent Labour Party leader, James Maxton. He joined the Labour Party in 1970 and became a prominent campaigner as Vice Chairman of the group Scottish Labour Against the Market during the 1975 referendum. He was selected to oppose the Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland Teddy Taylor at the 1979 election in the Glasgow Cathcart seat. The changing demographics of the area and Labour's increasing popularity in Scotland made it a winnable seat, and Maxton's victory was made more likely by the Conservative Party's strident opposition of the Scottish National Party which drove some of its voters back to Labour.
Maxton was the only Labour candidate to gain a previous Conservative seat at that election. In Parliament he allied with the left in the Tribune Group, and voted against the Falklands War. In 1983 his constituency was withdrawn to his disadvantage but Maxton ruled out a move to any neighbouring and more favourable areas; he therefore notionally gained his seat from the Conservatives again in the 1983 election. Maxton was a popular backbench figure but did not obtain much support when he stood for election to the Shadow Cabinet. He was a junior Whip in 1985 and a spokesman on Scottish Affairs from 1985 to 1992.
He stood down from Parliament in 2001 and was given a life peerage in June 2004, as Baron Maxton, of Blackwaterfoot in Ayrshire and Arran.