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Pat Glass

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Preceded by
  
Hilary Armstrong

Website
  
Official website

Majority
  
7,612 (17.4%)

Name
  
Pat Glass


Political party
  
Labour

Role
  
Politician

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Party
  
Labour Party

Pat Glass ichef1bbcicouknews624mediaimages80568000

Born
  
14 February 1957 (age 67) Esh Winning, County Durham, England (
1957-02-14
)

The pat glass scandal does it matter if it was bigotry or racism


Patricia "Pat" Glass (born 14 February 1957) is a former Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament for North West Durham from 2010-2017. She was appointed Shadow Education Secretary on 27 June 2016 by Jeremy Corbyn, but resigned two days later after announcing that she would be standing down at the next United Kingdom general election.

Contents

Pat Glass MP Pat Glass hits out at nursery school closures in the

Early life and career

Pat Glass Pupils shocked by MP39s 39failure39 comment Chronicle Live

She was born in Esh Winning, County Durham. Before becoming an MP, Glass worked in various positions with local education authorities, and became a Government Education Adviser specialising in Special Needs Education, and Assistant Director of Education in Sunderland and Greenwich.

Pat Glass An honour39 as Labour chooses its candidate From Durham Times

Glass was elected as a councillor on Lanchester Parish Council in 2007. Subsequently she was selected as the Labour Party parliamentary candidate for North West Durham, with the retirement of Hilary Armstrong at the 2010 general election.

Political career

Pat Glass httpsichefbbcicouknews624cpsprodpb352Ep

Glass was elected to the House of Commons at the 2010 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for North West Durham. Her particular interest is education, and has sat on the Education Select Committee

In 2014, Glass accused rival politicians in Parliament of "orchestrated barracking" of women with regional accents, saying "I get the impression they think women who are northerners should not be there."

In September 2015, Glass was appointed as Shadow Education Minister with responsibility for childcare by the newly elected Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn. On 5 January 2016, she was named the Shadow Europe Minister after Corbyn had conducted the first reshuffle of his Shadow Cabinet.

Glass took a prominent role in Labour's campaign to remain in the EU in the June 2016 referendum campaign. On 19 May 2016, she apologised after calling a member of the public in Sawley, Derbyshire "a horrible racist", which was caught at the end of a radio interview recording and reported by the media. She also added "I'm never coming back to wherever this is".

At a Labour rally, she suggested voters try to persuade their mothers and grandmothers to vote to stay in, but joked they didn't bother with their grandfathers because "the problem is older white men". She reported having received death threats during the referendum campaign, and on the advice of the police, she did not attend the referendum count.

In June 2016, Glass was appointed Shadow Education Secretary following the resignation of Lucy Powell and several other Cabinet ministers in protest at Corbyn's leadership during the EU referendum. The next day, Glass announced that she would not stand at the next general election. The day after that, she resigned as Shadow Education Secretary, saying that the "situation is untenable", and making the statement:

While I had always intended to do more than two terms in Parliament I have found the last six months very, very difficult. The referendum has been incredibly divisive, it divided families and communities and I have found it bruising in many respects. It has had an impact on both me and my family as I am sure it has had on many others.

Glass stood down at the 2017 snap general election, citing the "bruising referendum" as a major cause.

References

Pat Glass Wikipedia