William Goodhart, Baron Goodhart


William Howard Goodhart, Baron Goodhart, QC was a British Liberal Democrat politician, a leading property and human rights lawyer, and a member of the House of Lords.

Background and early life and career

William Goodhart was the son of Arthur Lehman Goodhart and the brother of Charles Goodhart and Sir Philip Goodhart.
He was educated at Eton College, undertook National Service from 1951–1953, and graduated with a law degree from Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1956 before winning a Harkness Fellowship to study law at Harvard University.
He was admitted to the bar in 1960 and made a Queen's Counsel in 1979. As a barrister he developed a specialist Chancery practice and appeared in a number of notable cases, including in particular Street v Mountford. He also co-wrote (with Gareth Jones a textbook on the subject of specific performance.

Politics

A member of the Social Democratic Party, he contested the safe Conservative seat of Kensington in both the 1983 and 1987 general elections.
After the SDP merged with the Liberals, he subsequently fought the Kensington by-election of 1988 under the new Social and Liberal Democrats banner, finishing a weak third.
In the 1992 general election he contested the winnable seat of Oxford West and Abingdon now as a Liberal Democrats candidate. Goodhart cut the Conservative majority by over 1,000 votes down to 3,500 but still finished second.

Peerage

He was knighted on 14 February 1989 and was created a life peer as Baron Goodhart, of Youlbury in the County of Oxfordshire, on 23 October 1997. In the House of Lords, he served as a spokesman for the Liberal Democrats in several capacities, usually relating to legal matters, including as the Liberal Democrats' Shadow Lord Chancellor. Before the House of Lords Act 1999, he campaigned to reform the Upper House, and later in his career expressed frustration at its undemocratic nature.
He retired from the House of Lords on 15 May 2015.

Humanism and ICJ memberships

A devoted humanist, Goodhart was a longtime member of the All Party Parliamentary Humanist Group, as well as the British Humanist Association. He was among a number of parliamentarians who in 2010 called for substantive reforms of public services in Britain following a BHA report into religious influence in public services. From 2007 to 2009, Goodhart was the Chairman of JUSTICE, the UK section of the International Commission of Jurists, as well as serving as a Commissioner of the ICJ since 1993. He was elected as Vice-President of the ICJ in 2002. He was also an honorary associate of the National Secular Society.

Private life

He had three children with his wife, Celia Goodhart: Annabel Frances Goodhart, Laura Christabel Goodhart, and Benjamin Herbert Goodhart.