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  1. May 12, 1994 · JOHN SMITH'S sudden death yesterday stunned the Labour Party with a deep grief and threatened to transform the British political landscape. It will mean a struggle to fill the leadership vacuum ...

  2. John Smith was Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Official Opposition from 18 July 1992 until his death on 12 May 1994. Smith became leader upon succeeding Neil Kinnock, who had resigned following the 1992 general election —for the fourth successive time, the Conservatives had won and Labour lost.

  3. The night before John Smith QC died in May 1994, he gave a now infamous speech at the Park Lane Hotel to raise money for the Labour Party’s campaign for the next general election. To the 500 people in attendance, Smith remarked that ‘the opportunity to serve our country—that is all we ask’. 30 years on from his death, Smith is often ...

  4. May 12, 2024 · Katie Neame. Yvette Cooper and others have paid tribute to former Labour leader John Smith 30 years on from his death, with the Shadow Home Secretary saying his “determination to be both credible and radical” is as important now as it was during his lifetime. Cooper – who worked as an economic researcher for Smith in her early career ...

  5. Dec 2, 2003 · In film after film, Smith explores the cracks within and the tribulations of the world he confronts everyday, taking a closer look at and often transforming (verbally, associatively, just by observing from a different angle) things like a pane of glass, the discolorations of a mouldy ceiling, a hospital water-tower, the archaeology of an ...

  6. 5/14/2014. On May 12th, 1994 John Smith, then the leader of the Labour Party, died suddenly and tragically at the young age of 55. Wyn Grant reflects on his political legacy and what might have been had things turned out differently. The twentieth anniversary of the tragically early death of John Smith in his mid-fifties is an opportunity to ...

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  8. The Whore (German: Die Wanderhure) is a 2010 German television film, adapted from the novel The Wandering Harlot by Iny Lorentz. The film is set in Konstanz, (now Germany) in the years 1414 and 1415. [1][2] The screenplay was adapted by Gabriele Kister and directed by Hansjörg Thurn. You can help expand this article with text translated from ...