Having unsuccessfully fought
Sheffield Hallam in
February 1974, at the
1987 general election, Blunkett was elected
member of parliament (MP) for
Sheffield Brightside with a large majority in a
safe Labour seat. He became a party spokesman on local government, joined the
shadow cabinet in 1992 as
shadow health secretary and became shadow education secretary in 1994.
Education and employment secretary Following Labour's landslide victory in the
1997 general election, he became
secretary of state for education and employment, As secretary of state, Blunkett pursued substantial reforms, ready to take on the teaching unions and determined to ensure basic standards of literacy and numeracy. He was rewarded with extra funding to cut class sizes, notably by abolishing the
Assisted Places Scheme. A key pillar of Blunkett's work as education secretary was the introduction of
Sure Start, a government programme which provided services for pre-school children and their families. It works to bring together early education, childcare, health and family support. In 2011, the government effectively started the abolition of Sure Start by lifting the ring fence on earmarked funding and cutting back drastically on the funds available. Following the
Dearing Report into higher education, Blunkett introduced the
Teaching and Higher Education Act 1998 on 26 November 1997, which introduced
university tuition fees. He also led the massive expansion in higher education. He provided large scale investment in universities in the UK and one study, published in 2011, showed that universities are now educating more than one-quarter more students than they did previously, and receiving double the income. Whilst in this position, Blunkett also launched
Learning and Skills Councils, created
Jobcentre Plus and had responsibility for the
Equal Opportunities Commission, as well as establishing the
Disability Rights Commission (as home secretary, he was also responsible for the Commission on Racial Equality; all three of these bodies were incorporated later into the
Equality and Human Rights Commission). In 1999, Blunkett proposed that sex education should be "age appropriate", reportedly arguing that childhood, the "age of innocence", should not be compromised by "graphic" sex education. In 2000, while attempting to cool opposition to the proposed abolition of the
Local Government Act 1988's
Section 28, he issued guidelines on the importance of 'family values' in teaching children sex education. Blunkett introduced the teaching of citizenship in schools in 1999, arguing that "We want to ensure that there's a basis of traditional knowledge that's available to all children." Citizenship education provides pupils with the knowledge, skills and understanding to become informed citizens, aware of their rights, duties and responsibilities.
Home secretary At the start of the Labour government's second term in 2001, Blunkett was promoted to
home secretary, Blunkett was almost immediately faced with the
September 11 attacks on the United States. He brought in new anti-terrorism measures, including detention without trial of suspect foreign nationals who could not be extradited or deported. It caused a backbench rebellion and provoked strong opposition in the House of Lords; Blunkett made concessions over incitement to religious hatred (later carried through by his successor) and to introduce a "sunset clause". He authorised
MI5 to start collecting bulk telephone communications data on which telephone numbers called each other under a general power brought in by the
Telecommunications Act 1984. As home secretary, Blunkett was prepared to confront the judiciary and the police, with proposals for civilian community patrols and changes to police officers' pay and working conditions. More than 7,000 police demonstrated outside Parliament in 2002. During his term in office, the large upsurge in asylum claims was reversed, the
Sangatte refugee camp on French soil was closed, and refugees numbers subsequently dropped from 110,000 to less than 30,000. With an additional 15,000 police officers and 6,500 Community Support Officers by 2004, crime had reached an all-time low, with over a 40% drop from ten years earlier. A controversial area for Blunkett was civil liberties, and he described civil libertarianism as "airy fairy". As education secretary, he had repeatedly expressed the intention that, were he to become home secretary, he would make the then-incumbent
Jack Straw, who had been criticised for being hard-line, seem over-liberal. In 2006, Martin Narey, the former director general of the prison service, claimed that Blunkett had once told him to use the army and machine guns to deal with rioting prisoners. Blunkett has denied these allegations. Blunkett radically overhauled 'Victorian' sex offences legislation in 2002, which modernised the sex offences laws in relation to same-sex and related issues by removing the archaic laws governing homosexuality, while tightening protections against rapists, paedophiles and other sex offenders. The act closed a loophole that had allowed those accused of child rape to escape punishment by arguing the act was consensual, and a new offence of adult sexual activity with a child – which covers any sex act that takes place between an adult and a child under 16 – was introduced. It was supported by all major political parties in the UK. In 2004, it emerged that Blunkett had directed Home Office civil servants to closely monitor and counter the findings of
Migration Watch UK, which controversially included manipulating the timing of statistical releases to avoid criticism from the pressure group. Blunkett resigned as home secretary on 15 December 2004, amidst allegations that he helped fast-track the renewal of a work permit for his ex-lover's
nanny. Blunkett thanked the Jewish community in 2005 for its "extraordinary support" when "things got difficult" in his personal and professional life, and said that "I won't let you down. I feel deeply honoured when friends from the Jewish community are prepared to welcome me. I feel like one of the family." While he was born a Methodist, his son with
Kimberly Quinn attended a Jewish nursery, as Quinn has Jewish heritage. In 2005, he was presented with an honorary doctorate by
Haifa University. He is a member of
Labour Friends of Israel. The accusations made against him in November 2004 formed part of an acrimonious public conflict playing out in the Family Court in respect of contested Contact and Responsibility Orders. Clarity about the circumstances and events leading up to and surrounding his departure emerged in
the phone hacking trial of 2013/14. On 24 June 2014,
Andy Coulson, the former editor of the
News of the World and head of communications for
David Cameron, was found guilty of a charge of conspiracy to intercept voicemails. Blunkett's detailed evidence was instrumental in the conviction of Andy Coulson, arising from the interview he undertook with Blunkett in August 2004, prior to the
News of the World front-page story about his private life. One aspect of criminal justice changes which Blunkett later indicated he regretted most was introducing
imprisonment for public protection in the
Criminal Justice Act 2003. This particular sentence had resulted in individuals with repeat, but often minor, offences unable to gain release through the
Parole Board, resulting in imprisonment for far longer than had ever been anticipated. In 2012, the
European Court of Human Rights declared them unlawful for new offenders, but not retrospectively, leaving nearly 3,000 prisoners on the regime. Blunkett was instrumental, with others across parliament, in bringing about substantial change in the
Victims and Prisoners Act 2024, which saw 1800 IPP prisoners on licence released from those conditions in November 2024.
Brief return to the cabinet Following the
2005 general election, Blunkett was returned to the cabinet as secretary of state for work and pensions, where he faced a growing pensions crisis. Two weeks before the election, Blunkett took up a directorship in a company called
DNA Bioscience and bought £15,000 of shares in the company. After sustained questions over a six-month period, Blunkett was asked on 31 October 2005 to explain why he had not consulted the
Advisory Committee on Business Appointments regarding the directorship. Having placed the shares into an independent trust, he said that the trustees had agreed to dispose of the shares. Blunkett's political opponents claimed that a conflict of interest was created by him having been director of and holding shares in a company proposing to bid for government contracts to provide paternity tests to the
Child Support Agency (CSA), part of the
Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), of which he was secretary of state. On 2 November, a scheduled appearance before a House of Commons
Select Committee was cancelled at the last minute, and Blunkett was summoned to a meeting at
10 Downing Street. Later that morning, a spokesman for Prime Minister
Tony Blair confirmed Blunkett had resigned at the meeting, stating that his position had become untenable. This became the main focus of discussion at the session of
Prime Minister's Questions that afternoon, and Conservative leader
Michael Howard described the event as 'the beginning of the final chapter of (Blair's) administration'. Blunkett was later found not to have broken the ministerial code. On 25 November 2005, after he had resigned,
Gus O'Donnell wrote to Blunkett confirming that there was no conflict of interest, no failure to declare either Blunkett's shareholding or brief business connection with the company. O'Donnell wrote: "The issue of shareholdings and trusts and the handling of private interests more generally is of course covered quite extensively in Section 5 of the Ministerial Code. There is no ban on a Minister, or his or her immediate family members, holding such interests but where they do the Minister must ensure that no conflict arises, or appears to arise, between his or her public duties and such private interests. In terms of the handling of your interests, and those of your family, you followed correct procedure in notifying your Permanent Secretary of your interests. Neither the DWP nor the CSA were in any contractual relationship with DNA Bioscience, and the CSA's contract for biometric testing was not due to be renewed for some years." He is also a patron of The Micro and Anophthalmic Children's Society, a charity for children born without eyes or with underdeveloped eyes. He is additionally a former honorary chair of the
Information Systems Security Association (ISSA-UK) Advisory Board and was, until March 2015, chairman of the not-for-profit International Cyber Security Protection Alliance (ICSPA). In October 2010, Blunkett proposed the creation of a Yorkshire Parliament, giving autonomy to the historic county with a similar funding formula to the
Welsh Assembly's devolved budget, which would entitle
Yorkshire to an annual budget of around £24 billion. One of his main interests is volunteering and community service. In 2011, he published a pamphlet calling for a National Volunteer Programme, which received a wide range of support, particularly among third sector organisations. Since then, Blunkett has commenced putting together and becoming a founder of the Future For Youth Foundation, which sought to tackle high levels of unemployment in young people, and which concluded its work in the summer of 2015. He was a key voice in the successful
NOtoAV campaign in 2010–11, prior to the
2011 Alternative Vote referendum, and in 2011 spoke out against the
Coalition Government's proposed boundary changes. In 2012, he published
In Defence of Politics Revisited, in which he set out a range of proposals to increase faith in, and improve the working of, democratic politics. He was later awarded status as an Academician of the
Academy of Social Sciences. In 2013, Sheffield University announced Blunkett had become a visiting professor in the Department of Politics, in the world's first Centre for the Public Understanding of Politics. He was, from 2012 to 2018, a trustee of the government-sponsored, major volunteer programme known as the
National Citizen Service Trust, a voluntary community service programme for 16- and 17-year-olds. From 2013 to 2014, he chaired a parliamentary inquiry with the
Charities Aid Foundation into how giving to charities could be boosted. This reported in June 2014, making recommendations ranging from the inclusion of a 'social action' section on UCAS forms to the creation of a post-careers advice service, for those who are retiring but wish to continue giving in their community. This led to the
National Citizen Service Act coming into law in 2017. Between June 2013 and May 2014, Blunkett led a review into local oversight of schools and the raising of standards for the leader
Ed Miliband and the shadow education secretary. The Blunkett Report was published in May 2014, and called for the creation of new independent Directors of School Standards to operate between local authorities. These directors would focus on bringing greater coherence to the process of school creation, raising standards and improving local accountability. In June 2014, Blunkett announced he would not be contesting the election in the following year, stating that he had realised he would not be returning to the frontbenches. In his letter he wrote: "it is clear that the leadership of the Party wish to see new faces in Ministerial office and a clear break with the past". The editor of the conservative
The Spectator magazine,
Fraser Nelson, commented: "He was never under-briefed, and never showed any sign of his disability ... he was one of Labour's very best MPs – and one of the very few people in parliament whose life I would describe as inspirational." Responding to a question from Blunkett on 11 March 2015, Prime Minister
David Cameron said: "As a new backbencher, I will never forget coming to this place in 2001 and, in the light of the appalling terrorist attacks that had taken place across the world, seeing the strong leadership he gave on the importance of keeping our country safe. He is a remarkable politician, a remarkable man." ==Later career==