Mr Bernie Grant
February 17, 1944 - April 8, 2000Summary information for Mr Bernie Grant
Contributions
1995
2 speeches — European Commission Jobs Written Answers January 20, 1995
10 speeches — Bermuda Written Answers January 20, 1995
6 speeches — South Africa Written Answers January 23, 1995
Job Advertisements (European Commission) Written Answers January 24, 1995
Stop and Search Written Answers January 26, 1995
8 speeches — Bermuda Written Answers January 26, 1995
Training (Sudanese Students) Written Answers January 31, 1995
Job Advertisements (European Commission) Written Answers January 31, 1995
Sop and Search Written Answers February 2, 1995
4 speeches — Immigration Detention Centres Written Answers March 2, 1995
Refugees Written Answers March 8, 1995
Repatriation Assistance Written Answers April 5, 1995
Peace Process Commons April 27, 1995
Metropolitan Police Written Answers May 10, 1995
3 speeches — Race and Community Relations Written Answers May 16, 1995
7 speeches — Race and Community Relations Written Answers May 16, 1995
Long-handled Batons Written Answers May 16, 1995
Equalities Associates Written Answers June 14, 1995
8 speeches — Race and Community Relations Written Answers June 14, 1995
9 speeches — Community and Race Relations Written Answers June 26, 1995
Metropolitan Police (Race Relations) Written Answers June 28, 1995
Police Training Written Answers June 28, 1995
Special Educational Needs Appeals Written Answers November 8, 1995
Immigration Written Answers November 27, 1995
Frontier Controls Written Answers November 27, 1995
Justice and Home Affairs Council Written Answers November 27, 1995
External Frontiers Convention Written Answers November 28, 1995
6 speeches — Asylum and Immigration Bill Commons December 11, 1995
Identity Cards Written Answers December 12, 1995
Identity Cards Written Answers December 13, 1995
11 speeches — Caribbean (Voluntary Resettlement) Commons December 19, 1995
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.