Sneha Girap (Editor)

Suzanne Evans

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Unknown

Role
  
English Politician

Name
  
Suzanne Evans


Suzanne Evans Suzanne Evans Biteback Publishing

Nationality
  
English (United Kingdom)

Political party
  
Conservative (2010-May 2013)Independent (May 2013)UKIP (May 2013–present)

Alma mater
  
University of Lancaster

Profiles

UKIP's Suzanne Evans quits party over Tommy Robinson appointment


Suzanne Elizabeth Evans (born February 1965) is an English journalist and a politician associated with the UK Independence Party (UKIP).

Contents

Suzanne Evans Suzanne Evans Photos UKIP Deputy Chairman Suzanne Evans

On 6 May 2010, she was elected as a Conservative councillor in the London Borough of Merton Council. She resigned the Conservative whip on 15 May 2013, and then became a councillor with UKIP from 29 May 2013 to 22 May 2014.

Suzanne Evans staticindependentcouks3fspublicthumbnailsim

Evans was Deputy Chairwoman of UKIP from 2014 to 2016, with Neil Hamilton, She was suspended from the party between March and September 2016 and was unable to run in its September 2016 leadership election. She was one of the three candidates in the party's November 2016 leadership election. She was a spokeswoman for the party and the co-author of its election manifesto.

Suzanne Evans UKIP appoints Suzanne Evans as Deputy Chairman UKIP

She stood as the UKIP candidate in the Shrewsbury and Atcham constituency in the 2015 General Election.

Suzanne Evans Nigel Farage reshuffle Who are Ukip39s women Telegraph

Former UKIP star Suzanne Evans discusses her suspension from


Early life

Suzanne Elizabeth Evans was born in February 1965. Her father ran a watchmaking firm in Roushill in Shrewsbury, and her mother was a teacher.

Evans was educated at Baschurch Secondary Modern School, a state school in the village of Baschurch in Shropshire, now known as the Corbet School, and then at Shrewsbury Sixth Form College. She won a place at Lancaster University (1985–1987), from which she graduated with a BA in Religious Studies.

Media career

Evans trained as a journalist with the BBC and worked for BBC Radio in various roles from 1987 to 1999.

On BBC Radio 4, these included being a reporter and presenter on the Sunday programme and a reporter for Woman's Hour and for the Today programme.

She also worked for BBC Radio 5, for the BBC World Service and also in several roles on BBC Local Radio.

Since January 2000, Evans has worked as a freelance public relations (PR) and marketing consultant, as Suzanne Evans Communications. She was also communications director at Aquarius PR, from March 2006 to May 2013.

Political life

Evans began her political career as a councillor for the London Borough of Merton in May 2010. She was elected as a Conservative councillor but resigned from the party in May 2013, citing a "poisonous war" within the party. She switched her allegiance to the UK Independence Party, but lost her seat a year later.

She soon became UKIP's deputy chairwoman and head of policy, between July 2014 and February 2016. She was primarily responsible for writing the UKIP 2015 manifesto after she took over the job from Tim Aker. Her success in producing a coherent and credible manifesto, after the debacle of the party's 2010 manifesto, and her confident presentation of the completed document, prompted speculation that she might stand as leader of the party, should Nigel Farage resign after the 2015 general election. She was obliged to deny that any such bid was contemplated.

In 2014, Evans blamed poor UKIP support in London on the city's high number of "educated, cultured and young". She explained that she thought that in London, voters were "more likely, I think, to have read some of the negative press that's been about us, and I think they'd be more likely to believe it" whereas outside London people were more cynical about media reporting. In April 2015, Evans blamed the British housing shortage on increased demand caused by mass-migration, a theory also repeated by Nigel Farage in election debates.

Evans was the UKIP candidate for the Shrewsbury and Atcham constituency in the 2015 General Election, finishing third with 14.4% of the total vote.

After the 2015 General Election

On 8 May 2015 Nigel Farage recommended her as the Interim Leader of UKIP following his resignation, but within three days the National Executive Committee of the party had rejected the Farage resignation and so he remained leader.

On 18 June 2015, following comments made by Evans on the BBC's Daily Politics, Evans commented that the public had a "perceived divisive" view of Nigel Farage. The UKIP press office then withdrew Evans as a media commentator for UKIP, pending an internal inquiry

On 23 March 2016, while still on the UKIP party list for the 2016 London Assembly election, Evans was suspended from UKIP, for six months, by the party's internal disciplinary committee. She, in turn, began legal action in the High Court against the decision, on the grounds that rules were allegedly being abused. On 23 September her sixth-month suspension from the party lapsed.

UKIP leadership bid

In October 2016, Evans launched her bid to become leader of UKIP following the resignation of Diane James after 18 days in the job. Launching her campaign on The Andrew Marr Show, Evans said she'd be the "strong centre" and described herself and fellow candidate Paul Nuttall as "Team Sensible" compared to fellow candidate Raheem Kassam, following extreme comments from the soon-to-resign leadership candidate. When the results were announced, on 28 November 2016, she came a distant second out of the remaining three, and lost her deposit with 19.3% of the vote.

Charity work

Evans founded the Lipoedema UK charity in 2011 after discovering that she suffers from the condition.

References

Suzanne Evans Wikipedia