Member of Parliament A long-standing supporter of the
Militant tendency, Nellist was the MP for
Coventry South East from 1983 to 1992. He was known for his standing as a "workers' MP on a worker's wage", taking only the wage of a skilled factory worker, which amounted to 46% of what was then an MP's salary. The remaining 54% he donated to the Labour movement and to charities. From 1982 to 1986, Nellist was also a Labour councillor for Coventry on
West Midlands County Council. When
Tony Blair was first elected to Parliament in
1983, he initially shared an office with Nellist at the
Palace of Westminster. The duo's differing political views were considered not to make for the most harmonious working environment, so Blair was quickly allocated office space with
Gordon Brown, another newly elected Labour MP, and Nellist subsequently shared the office with the other Militant supporting MP,
Terry Fields. In late 1991, shortly before his expulsion from the Labour Party, he was awarded the "Backbencher of the Year" award by the conservative
Spectator magazine.
Michael White of
The Guardian recalled in 2007 the speech Nellist gave after receiving the award: "It was witty and highly political, done with style and without compromise. They cheered him fervently and then returned to their brandy. But it was one of the best speeches I have ever heard."
Expulsion Nellist in 1991 was one of the two MPs who were supporters of Militant, which had been found to contravene the Labour Party constitution several years earlier. Following a
National Executive Committee meeting in December 1991, along with
Terry Fields he was expelled from the Labour Party and deselected as a candidate for the
1992 general election. Nellist gained the support of his Constituency party (which was subsequently suspended by the National Executive Committee) and a number of local trade unions. Standing as an Independent Labour candidate in the elections, he came third in his old seat to the newly selected Labour Party candidate
Jim Cunningham. Cunningham received 11,902 votes, Conservative Party candidate Martine Hyams 10,591, and Dave Nellist 10,551, or 28.9% of the vote.
Socialist Party and Socialist Alliance Nellist followed the majority of Militant in founding what became the
Socialist Party (not to be confused with the
Socialist Party of Great Britain). Due to registration requirements, the party uses the name "Socialist Alternative" on ballot papers. Instead of running candidates independently, however, the party has played a leading role in several political coalitions, including the Socialist Alliance. Nellist was a prominent figure in organising the Socialist Alliance, locally and across the UK, as a loose formation of individuals and groups. He became the Chair of the Socialist Alliance, but resigned in 2001, in protest of what the Socialist Party saw as manoeuvrings of the
Socialist Workers Party to take control of the Alliance. He is involved in the
Campaign for a New Workers' Party in Britain, which is a Socialist Party sponsored campaign to create a new party to represent the
working class in the UK. Nellist ran in every general election since his deselection by the Labour Party until 2015. In
1997, he ran in the
Coventry South constituency, and received 3,262 votes (6.5%). In
2001 and
2005, he ran in the
Coventry North East constituency. In 2001, he received 2,638 votes (7.1%). In 2005, he received 1,874 votes (5.0%).
City councillor in Coventry In 1998, Nellist was elected as a city councillor in the
Coventry City Council for
St. Michael's ward, where he was reelected in 2004 and again in 2008, with an increased majority, when he received 48.6% of the vote. By 2006, when Rob Windsor was elected, the Socialist Party had won all three of St. Michael's seats. However, Nellist's Socialist colleagues were defeated in the local elections of 2007 and 2010, respectively, and in the 2012 local elections, Nellist lost his seat in the St. Michael's ward to the Labour Party candidate Naeem Akhtar by 213 votes.
No to EU – Yes to Democracy Nellist stood as a
No to EU – Yes to Democracy candidate in the
2009 European election in the
West Midlands Region of England gaining 13,415 votes (0.9%). No2EU takes a socialist, trade union and
alter-globalisation Eurosceptic stance from a workers' perspective.
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) Following the
2009 European elections, Nellist played a leading role in the formation of the
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC), of which he is interim leader. The coalition is composed of the
National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers,
Socialist Party,
Socialist Resistance, the
Socialist Workers Party and
Solidarity; and is endorsed by
Steve Gillan, General Secretary of the
Prison Officers' Association and Chris Baugh, Assistant General Secretary of
Public and Commercial Services Union. Considering the overlap in constituent parties, TUSC is seen as a successor to the Socialist Alliance and the
No to EU – Yes to Democracy alliance. Nellist stood as a candidate for TUSC in the
2010 general elections in the constituency
Coventry North East, although he stood under the label Socialist Alternative. Running against the incumbent MP, the
Labour government's
Secretary of State for Defence Bob Ainsworth, he received 1,592 votes (3.7%) losing his deposit for the first time in a Westminster constituency. The TUSC nominated Nellist to contest the
2022 Birmingham Erdington by-election, where he came third. The constituency's previous MP,
Jack Dromey, died earlier on 7 January.
Endorsement of Jeremy Corbyn In August 2015, Nellist endorsed
Jeremy Corbyn's
campaign in the
Labour Party leadership election. He said: "I hope Jeremy does well in the election and, if successful, his first action should be to instruct local Labour councils to halt cuts and direct a strategy to resist austerity." Nellist also hinted he could seek to merge his new party with the
Labour Party. In August 2016, Nellist also endorsed Corbyn's campaign in the
Labour Party leadership election. He responded to the letter backing
Owen Smith's leadership challenge from over 500 Labour councillors by saying: "If Jeremy is re-elected he must use his renewed mandate to compel Labour councillors to either fight the
Tories or stand aside for those who will – and TUSC will back him all the way." In November 2016, he was among 75 people expelled from the Labour Party who wrote to the party's
National Executive Committee asking to be re-admitted. However, he is not eligible to rejoin while being affiliated to another political party. In May 2017, he withdrew as a candidate for the
general election and encouraged supporters in Coventry to back
Jeremy Corbyn for
Prime Minister. He said: "I support Jeremy's anti-austerity policies of higher wages, free university education, crash housebuilding programme, public ownership of the railways – and 4 more bank holidays! I want to see him elected Prime Minister on June 8th... we have a chance on June 8th to send Jeremy to
No. 10 and we can't do that if Coventry sends Tory MPs to Westminster."
Your Party in January 2026 Nellist and April Ashley put themselves forward for election to the regional seats in
Your Party. However the
returning officer told them that, along with several others, they have been judged ineligible to stand. Your Party co-founder
Zarah Sultana described this as a 'witch hunt'. ==Personal life==