Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Joan Lestor, Baroness Lestor of Eccles

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Leader
  
Tony Blair

Succeeded by
  
Ian Stewart

Party
  
Labour Party

Preceded by
  
Lewis Carter-Jones

Education
  
University of London

Succeeded by
  
Clare Short

Role
  
British Politician

Preceded by
  
Tom Clarke

Name
  
Joan Baroness


Joan Lestor, Baroness Lestor of Eccles idailymailcoukipix201408241408838693945I

Leader
  
Neil Kinnock John Smith

Died
  
March 27, 1998, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
What Are We Doing to Our Children

Joan Lestor, Baroness Lestor of Eccles (13 November 1931 – 27 March 1998) was a British Labour politician.

Contents

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Early life

Lestor was educated at Blaenavon Secondary School, Monmouth; William Morris High School, Walthamstow and the University of London. She became a nursery school teacher and a member of the Socialist Party of Great Britain, but resigned from the latter over the Turner Controversy. She became a councillor in 1958 on the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth and later the London Borough of Wandsworth. She served on London County Council (1962–64).

Parliamentary career

Lestor contested Lewisham West in 1964 and was elected Member of Parliament for Eton and Slough in 1966.

She was briefly a junior minister from 1969–70 with responsibility for nursery education. In March 1974 she became the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and in June 1975 moved back to Education as Under-Secretary of State, for Education and Science. In March 1976 she resigned over cuts.

Lestor was one of the founding editors of anti-fascist monthly, Searchlight, though that magazine had only a tenuous connection to the current publication.

After boundary changes in 1983, Lestor contested the new constituency of Slough but was defeated by the Conservative candidate John Watts. Neil Kinnock, who would become leader of the Labour Party shortly after the election said he was "heartbroken" by Lestor's defeat. Lestor blamed the SDP for her defeat. No longer an MP, Lestor worked for the World Development Movement, campaigning for child welfare and setting up a unit to investigate child abuse, including sexual abuse, an area neglected by mainstream politicians at the time.

She was returned for Eccles in 1987, and held this seat until 1997. She served in the shadow cabinet between 1989 and 1996 firstly as Shadow Spokesperson for Children and Families and subsequently as Shadow Minister for Overseas Development. She resigned on 25 July 1996 after announcing that she was not seeking re-election at the next election.

House of Lords

On 4 June 1997, she was created a life peer as Baroness Lestor of Eccles, of Tooting Bec in the London Borough of Wandsworth., nine months before her death from motor neurone disease.

References

Joan Lestor, Baroness Lestor of Eccles Wikipedia