Neil Hamilton(III)
- Actor
Hamilton rose through the ranks of the British Conservative Party
during the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 1983, he became the party's
Member of Parliament for Tatton in North-West England. In 1996,
Mohamed Al-Fayed, owner of the Harrod's department store in
London, claimed that Hamilton had accepted bribes to ask questions in
the British Parliament. Neil Hamilton strenuously denied the
allegations, but this was just one of a number of damaging "sleaze"
allegations facing the ruling Conservative Party in the run-up to the
1997 General Election. Former BBC news reporter
Martin Bell stood against Hamilton
as an independent candidate and famously defeated him in a landslide
victory, ending Hamilton's political career. Neil and his wife
Christine Hamilton have
subsequently become celebrities thanks to several memorable
confrontations between them and Bell, which were broadcast nationwide
on news programmes. They appeared on the satirical news quiz
Have I Got News for You (1990)
shortly after their election defeat in May 1997, and have since
attempted to launch a career as television presenters, with limited
success. Together they sued
Mohamed Al-Fayed for libel in 2000. The
case was thrown out of court, and the huge legal bills forced Hamilton
to file for bankruptcy. In summer 2001, events took an even more
bizarre turn when the Hamiltons were accused of sexual assault by
22-year-old Nadine Milroy-Sloan who told her story to publicist
Max Clifford. Although the allegations
proved to be completely unfounded, they were once again surrounded by
journalists and news cameras. Events were captured by BBC filmmaker
Louis Theroux, who coincidentally was
making a documentary about the couple when the story broke. Events in
2001 have proved that the public are still intrigued by this slightly
eccentric person.