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Former UK politician Norman Tebbit Dies at 94

Local media reported that former British politician Norman Tebbit died on Tuesday at age 94. He was a devoted supporter of Margaret Thatcher and best known for having survived a bomb attack in 1984 on her government.

Tebbit personified the hardline Conservative Party, criticizing the trade unions and urging strict immigration controls. He also preached a return to the traditional moral values.

Former airline pilot and cabinet member, Tebbit was instrumental in the 1987 campaign that gave Thatcher her third term and the Conservative Party a landslide victory.

Tebbit, the Irish Republican Army's (IRA's) most notable victim, was left paralyzed and trapped in the ruins at the Grand Hotel in Brighton, in 1984. His wife Margaret also suffered from the bombing. The Conservatives were holding their annual convention there.

He famously said at a party convention in the early 1980s that his father did not riot when he was unemployed: "He went on his bicycle and looked for work".

Tebbit was conceived in Enfield (north London) on March 29,1931. In the 1930s, his father, who was a pawnbroker and jeweller, lost his job during the Depression and had to work as a bricklayer. (Reporting and editing by Kate Holton; Sachin Ravikumar, Sarah Young)

(source: Reuters)