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Maggie Jones, Baroness Jones of Whitchurch

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Name
  
Maggie Baroness

Role
  
Politician

Education
  
University of Sussex


Maggie Jones, Baroness Jones of Whitchurch assets3parliamentukextmnisbiopersonwwwdods

Margaret Beryl Jones, Baroness Jones of Whitchurch (born 22 May 1955) is a British Labour Peer and previously a trade union official and Labour politician. She was Chair of the Labour Party from 2000 to 2001.

Contents

Jones was Director of Policy and Public Affairs of the trade union UNISON until 2006. In 1979 she became a regional official of National Union of Public Employees (NUPE), which merged into UNISON. She has a background as a housing campaigner as well as fighting low pay and discrimination at work. She was previously a trustee of Shelter and WRAP as well as being on the board of Circle Housing Group. She is currently a board member of Ombudsman Services.

Jones was born and brought up in South Wales, and was educated at Whitchurch High School in Cardiff and then the University of Sussex. She now lives in Brighton.

Labour Party positions

Jones was a member of the Labour Party's National Executive Committee (NEC) within the trade union section from 1993 to 2005. She was elected Chair of the Labour Party in 2000, the year the Prime Minister Tony Blair controversially appointed Charles Clarke to be the similarly named Party Chairman. She was co-convener, along with Tony Blair, of the NEC Joint Policy Committee for much of her time on the NEC.

Parliamentary candidate for Blaenau Gwent

Jones was the Labour Party parliamentary candidate for the constituency of Blaenau Gwent at the 2005 general election, the safest Labour seat in Wales, and fifth safest in the UK. She was selected from a women-only shortlist imposed upon the local party; subsequently eight of twelve members of the local executive resigned in protest. The retiring MP Llew Smith also criticised the selection method.

Peter Law, the Labour Welsh Assembly Member for the constituency, stood against her as an Independent and won with a majority of 9,121 votes, creating one of the media highlights of the election.

Peerage and Shadow Minister

Jones was nominated for a Life Peerage in 2005 by the Labour Party, according to a list leaked to The Times. This leaked list eventually led to the Cash for Peerages scandal in which Jones was not implicated. On 10 April 2006, her nomination for a peerage was officially announced, and she was gazetted as Baroness Jones of Whitchurch, of Whitchurch in the County of South Glamorgan on 5 June 2006.

In June 2010 Jones joined Labour's Shadow Ministerial Team, as Labour's House of Lords spokeswoman on Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport.She was then promoted to the Shadow Education Minister. Since 2015 she has been Labour's Shadow Environment Minister in the Lords.

References

Maggie Jones, Baroness Jones of Whitchurch Wikipedia