Jonathan Fryer
Jonathan Harold Fryer | |
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Personal details | |
Born |
5 June 1950 Manchester, England |
Nationality | British |
Political party | Liberal Democrats |
Residence | London, United Kingdom |
Alma mater |
Manchester Grammar School St Edmund Hall, Oxford |
Profession | Politician, writer |
Jonathan Harold Fryer (born 5 June 1950) is a British writer, broadcaster, lecturer and Liberal Democrat politician.
He was the LibDem candidate for the constituency of Poplar and Limehouse in the 2010 general election. As Chairman of the London Liberal Democrats, he has supervised the HQ's move to Brixton, and streamlined its operation.
Early life
Fryer was born in Manchester on 5 June 1950, under the name Graham Leslie Morton. Following the divorce of his natural mother, he was adopted as an infant by a local businessman and his wife, who later spent much of their time in South Africa. He has two natural sisters and one adopted one.
Education
After private primary education in Eccles, Fryer obtained a place at the independent Manchester Grammar School. He spent the summer of 1967 in Tours, at the Institut Tourain, perfecting his French. He left school before the end of his final year (having acquired 'A’ levels in English Literature, French and Geography) and travelled overland to Vietnam, where he reported on the war for the Manchester Evening News and the Geographical Magazine. His overland journey back to England in September 1969 gave him his first introduction to the Middle East, which has remained an abiding interest.
Fryer had won an Open Exhibition award to St Edmund Hall, Oxford, where he started to read Geography, before switching to Oriental Studies (Chinese with Japanese). He returned to the Far East for a year in 1971–1972, studying part-time at the University of Hong Kong and in Tokyo.
As a mature student, he has been working on an MSc in Development and Environmental Education.
Career
Fryer joined Reuters news agency as a graduate trainee after university, serving for just over a year in London and Brussels. On receiving his first book contract (for The Great Wall of China) he went freelance, but kept Brussels as his base for seven years, travelling widely in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. He returned to England in 1981, settling in London, largely to develop his political interests. As a freelance writer on international affairs, he has worked mainly for the BBC (Radio 4 and World Service), but has also contributed to the Guardian, Independent, Economist, Spectator, Oldie, Tablet, Society Today and Liberal, amongst others.
For a decade, he regularly appeared on the Today Programme's 'Thought for the Day', as a Quaker (having joined the Religious Society of Friends after his experiences in Vietnam), but in recent years has become better known for his despatches in From Our Own Correspondent. He has travelled to 160 countries, reporting, researching or making radio documentaries.
Since 1993, Fryer has taught part-time at London University's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), currently Humanities, and more recently began teaching at City University (Writing Non-Fiction).[1] He lectures frequently on cruise ships, notably around the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, as well as to groups and associations in the UK. Through the British Council and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, he has given seminars on democracy-building and the media in locations such as Egypt, Ethiopia and Uruguay. He is a Consultant with Public Affairs International (London).
Politics
Fryer joined the Young Liberals after Jo Grimond came to his school during the 1964 general election. He was successively Vice-Chairman of the North West Young Liberal Federation and Secretary of the Oxford University Liberal Club. He was elected a London borough councillor (in Bromley) 1986–1990, and fought three general elections: Chelsea 1983, Orpington 1987 and Leyton 1992. His main political focus has always been the European Parliament, for which he stood in 1979, 1984 and 1994 (London South East), 1999 and 2004 (London), coming within 0.6 per cent of winning a seat on the last occasion. He was the No. 2 candidate on the LibDem London list for the European parliamentary elections (June 2009).
He has held a wide variety of positions within the Liberal Democrats and predecessor parties, including chairing policy panels on international development (currently Chairman of the Liberal International British Group), a member of the LibDems' international relations committee, an elected member of the governing Council of the European Liberal Democrats (ELDR) and is on the party's Interim Peers' List. As Chairman of the Liberal International British Group, he is automatically a Vice-President of Liberal International worldwide.
He is the LibDem Prospective parliamentary candidate for his home constituency of Poplar and Limehouse.
Books
- The Great Wall of China (1975)
- Isherwood (1977)
- Brussels As Seen by Naif Artists (1979, with Rona Dobson)
- Food for Thought (1981)
- George Fox and the Children of the Light (1991)
- Eye of the Camera (1993)
- Dylan (1993)
- The Sitwells (1994, with Sarah Bradford and John Pearson)
- André & Oscar (1997)
- Soho in the Fifties and Sixties (1998)
- Robbie Ross (2000)
- Wilde (2005)
- Fuelling Kuwait's Development (2007)[2]
- "Kurdistan 2010"
References
External links
- "Wilde deserves better" – The Spectator
- "Pagan meets Puritan" – Telegraph
- "Buried in Oscar's Tomb" – New York Times
- "Jonathan Fryer chosen for Poplar and Limehouse" – Tower Hamlets
- "The House that Wren never really lived in" – Camden New Journal
- "Turkey must sort out its Kurd issues" – Public Service
- "Francophonia comes into vogue" – BBC
- "Launch Event for the Mercy Mission to Vanni" – Tamil National
- "European spokesperson Jonathan Fryer outlines the Liberal Democrat approach to the environment" – Tower Hamlets
- "Jonathan Fryer's Speak up Europe speech" – LDEG
- "Leading Lib Dems sign international pledge for gay rights" – DELGA
- "Youngsters grill Enfield politicians on local issues" – Enfield Independent
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