Barnett Janner, Baron Janner was a Lithuanian-born British politician who was elected as a Liberal Member of Parliament and later as a Labour Member of Parliament.
Background
Janner was born to a Litvak family in Luokė in the Kovno Governorate of the Russian Empire, in what is modern day Lithuania. He was the son of Joseph and Gertrude Janner. At the age of nine months his family, who were Orthodox Jews, moved to Barry, Glamorgan, Wales, where his father opened a furniture shop.
Education
Janner was educated at the local school before obtaining a scholarship to attend the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire at Cardiff. He graduated with a Bachelor in English and mathematics in 1914 before serving in the Royal Garrison Artillery during the First World War. Having studied law before the war, he was admitted as solicitor in 1919 and established a legal practice in Cardiff.
Career
He was president of the students" union and edited the college magazine. Janner entered politics in 1921 when he stood unsuccessfully for election to Cardiff City Council as a candidate of the Comrades of the Great War. Three years later he had joined the Liberal Party, but again failed to gain a seat on the council.
At the 1929 general election he was the Liberal candidate for Cardiff Central, but failed to be elected.
Later in the year he moved to Hendon, north London, and took up employment as company secretary and solicitor for his father-in-law"s business. In 1930, Harry Gosling, the sitting Labour Member of Parliament for the Whitechapel and Street Georges constituency in the East End of London died.
Janner was chosen to contest the resulting by-election. The area had a large Jewish population, and he campaigned in opposition to the government"s policy on Palestine, but was narrowly defeated.
Ten months later at the 1931 general election Janner again contested the Whitechapel seat for the Liberals, this time being returned to the House of Commons.
At the next general election in 1935 Janner stood as a Liberal and Anti-Fascist candidate, but was one of many Liberals to lose their seats, with the Labour Party regaining the seat. Within a year of losing his seat as a Liberal, Janner had joined the Labour Party, and was quickly chosen as prospective candidate for Leicester West, which was held by National Labour with a small majority. In the event there was no election for ten years because of the Second World War.
Janner returned to Parliament ten years later, when he was elected at the 1945 general election as Labour Member of Parliament for Leicester West, defeating Harold Nicolson the incumbent National Labour Member of Parliament. When the constituency was abolished for the 1950 election, he was re-elected for the new Leicester North West.
Knighted in 1961, Janner was created a life peer on 20 June 1970 taking the title Baron Janner, of the City of Leicester. Janner held many positions in the, including President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, 1955-1964.
Membership
36th United Kingdom Parliament. 38th United Kingdom Parliament. 39th United Kingdom Parliament.
40th United Kingdom Parliament.
41st United Kingdom Parliament. 42nd United Kingdom Parliament.
43rd United Kingdom Parliament. 44th United Kingdom Parliament]
In 1926 he was elected to the Board of Deputies of British Jews, and subsequently became a member of the executive of the British Zionist Federation.