Kerry Pollard raised an early day motion in the House of Commons on Monday 19 April 1999, in support of Bradford & Bingley Building Society's fight to stay mutual. He urged Bradford & Bingley members to vote against moves to force Britain's second largest building society to convert to a bank, saying "the early day motion will express the fear that were Bradford & Bingley Building Society to become a bank, the entire building society movement will be damaged directly." In the United Kingdom Parliament, Pollard opposed the wars led by the United States in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, but his most consistent aberrations from the party instructions were over benefits – he voted on several occasions against cuts in state benefits. Pollard chaired the all party small business group. A Christian socialist, Pollard took a conservative line on questions of personal morality: he was a member of the all party anti-abortion group, and was one of a handful of Labour MPs to oppose the equalisation of the age of consent. As an MP, he appeared on former BBC day time chat show Kilroy, contributing to topics such as the problem of personal debt, with comments including "Surely the banks have some sort of responsibility?".
After Parliament
Kerry Pollard joined the management board of Ridgehill Housing Association in 2005, rising to become, upon merging with William Sutton Housing Association, the chair of William Sutton Homes. Following the merger of the William Sutton Group and Affinity Homes Group on 1 October 2006, Pollard was removed as chair of William Sutton Homes on 25 April 2007, after he had complained to the Housing Association about the behaviour of the new parent company. Pollard chaired the Labour Housing Group until 2016.
2015
Kerry Pollard stood again as the Labour Party candidate for the St Albans seat he lost in 2005 to Anne Main of the Conservative Party. In May 2015, Main got 47% of the vote, Pollard got 23%, Sandy Walkington got 19% and Chris Wright got 8%.
2017
Kerry Pollard again stood as the official Labour candidate and he faced Anne Main again. At this election, on 8 June 2017, Main received a 43% share of the vote, Daisy Cooper got 32%, Pollard got 23% and Jack Easton got 2%.
Personal life
He married Maralyn Murphy in 1966, and they have five sons and two daughters. They have lived in St Albans since 1969.