Barbara Follett (politician)

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Barbara Follett
File:Barbara Follett.jpg
Parliamentary Undersecretary of State at the Department for Communities and Local Government
In office
22 September 2009 – 6 May 2010
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Minister for Culture and Tourism
In office
4 October 2008 – 22 September 2009
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Preceded by Margaret Hodge
Succeeded by Margaret Hodge
Parliamentary Undersecretary of State for Equality
In office
October 2007 – October 2008
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Parliamentary Undersecretary of State for Department for Work and Pensions
In office
June 2007 – October 2007
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Minister for the East of England, Regional Affairs
In office
June 2007 – May 2010
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
Member of Parliament
for Stevenage
In office
1 May 1997 – 7 May 2010
Preceded by Tim Wood
Succeeded by Stephen McPartland
Personal details
Born Daphne Barbara Hubbard
(1942-12-25) 25 December 1942 (age 81)
Kingston, Jamaica
Nationality British
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Richard Turner (1963-1970)
Gerald Stonestreet (1970-1974)
Les Broer
(1974-1985)
Ken Follett (1985—)
Children Jann Turner (1964—)
Kim Turner (1968—)
Adam Broer (1975—)
Residence London; Hertfordshire
Alma mater Sandford School, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Ellerslie School for Girls, Sea Point, Cape Town
University of Cape Town
London School of Economics
Open University
Website http://www.barbara-follett.org.uk/

Daphne Barbara Follett (née Hubbard, born 25 December 1942) was the British Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for Stevenage from 1997 until 2010. During this time she held several parliamentary and, despite having voted 19 times against her own government, ministerial positions. In the decade before entering Parliament she played a major part in transformation of the Labour Party. Firstly, by making members more aware of their visual impact on voters and secondly by co-founding and running two organisations, Labour Women's Network and Emily's List UK, which spearheaded reforms that helped Labour to return a record number of 101 women to Parliament in 1997. Follett was a notable case in the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal.[1] She stood down in 2010 in order to take over the running of her husband, bestselling author Ken Follett's, growing business.[2]

Background

She was born Daphne Barbara Hubbard in Kingston, Jamaica, where her father (originally from Manchester, UK) was an insurance executive. In 1946 the family returned to Britain, first to Jersey then in 1947 to Billericay, Essex. In 1952 the family moved to Ethiopia where her father set up the country’s first insurance company in partnership with Emperor Haile Selassie. In 1957 after an unfortunate incident involving her alcoholic father, a toast and a drinks trolley,[3] the family were asked to leave the country and went to Cape Town in South Africa. She began a University degree in Art, but in 1962 had to give it up and started work with Barclays Bank.

She married Richard Turner in 1963 and they moved to Paris where Turner studied for his doctorate and she taught at the Berlitz School of Languages (1963–64). In 1964 her first daughter, Jann, was born. They returned to South Africa in 1966 to run his mother's fruit farm in Stellenbosch, where they had their second daughter, Kim. In 1969, after experiencing first-hand the hardships of life for farm workers in rural South Africa, she started working for Kupugani (Zulu for "uplift yourself"), an organisation that provided cheap food for the poor which bought and processed agricultural surplus and then sold it cheaply to poor families. It also provided basic health and education.

In 1970, on the breakdown of her marriage Follett moved back to Cape Town and became acting Regional Secretary at the Institute of Race Relations. She worked again for Kupugani from 1971 to 1978, first as Regional Manager for the Cape and South-West Africa (now Namibia) – then as National Health Education Director (1975–78).

After a brief marriage to Gerald Stonestreet, she married architect Les Broer in 1974. Their son Adam was born in 1975. In January 1978 her ex-husband Richard Turner, a prominent anti-apartheid activist, was assassinated.[4] Three months later, Barbara, who was then running the Women’s Movement for Peace was told that she too was about to be "banned". She and her children fled to England and lived in Farnham, Surrey. Barbara found work as Assistant Course Organiser and lecturer on Africa for the Farnham-based Centre for International Briefing (1980–84) and joined the local Labour Party.[3]

Political career

Follett stood as Labour candidate for Woking in the 1983 general election, but was not elected. In 1985 she married author Ken Follett. From 1984 to 1992 she was a freelance lecturer and consultant, contesting Epsom and Ewell for Labour in 1987, again unsuccessfully. Unhappy with the inequalities that women faced in public life, she joined the Fawcett Society and the National Alliance of Women's Organisations and jointly founded the Labour Women's Network in 1987, on whose Steering Committee she has served ever since.

Inspired by women in the US, Follett imported the idea of EMILYs List, a fundraiser for women Democrat candidates, into Britain for the Labour Party. She became the Director of EMILY’s List UK in 1993. The organisation has since backed more than 80 women seeking selection.

During this period she obtained a BSc (Econ) in Economic History from the London School of Economics. She was selected as the candidate in Stevenage (1995) before her postgraduate course could get under way. She concentrated instead on work as Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Public Policy Research (1993–97).

Follett is also an alumna of the Open University and she has since become a patron of Action on Pre-Eclampsia.

In Parliament

The 1997 General Election saw Follett elected as MP for Stevenage. In Parliament she went on the Select Committee on International Development, as well as becoming Chair of the All Party Retail Industry Group; Chair of the Eastern Group of Labour MPS; Chair of the Eastern Region of Labour Movement in Europe; Vice-Chair of the Parliamentary Film Industries Group; a member of Labour’s backbench Treasury Committee; Joint Secretary of the Population, Development and Reproductive Health Group; and Treasurer of the Sex Equality Group. She is also a member of the Fabian Society.

In May 1999, Barbara became a member of the Britain in Europe Council, and served on the Select Committee on Modernisation of the House of Commons. In June 2005, she was elected as Chair of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) Women’s Committee. In November 2005, she became Parliamentary Private Secretary to Tessa Jowell.

In June 2007 she was appointed to become Minister for the East of England, and, in October 2007, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of Equality, supporting the Minister for Women and Equalities, Harriet Harman, with a particular role in drafting the government’s equality legislation. She then went on to serve as Minister for Culture, Tourism and the Creative Industries between October 2008 and September 2009, before finally serving as Parliamentary Under-Secretary at the Department for Communities and Local Government until May 2010.

Following the controversy generated by the public disclosure of her expenses Follett announced her decision to stand down at the 2010 general election on 1 October 2009.[5] She cited a desire to spend more time with her family as her motivation for standing down.

Election results since 1997

Election Constituency Party Votes (%) Position
General 1997 Stevenage Labour 28,440 (55.3%) 1
General 2001 Stevenage Labour 22,025 (51.9%) 1
General 2005 Stevenage Labour 18,003 (42.9%) 1

Parliamentary positions

  • Chair of the Parliamentary Labour Party Women's Committee (June 2005)
  • Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister for Women, Rt Hon Tessa Jowell (June 2005 - May 2006)
  • Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Rt Hon Tessa Jowell (May 2006 - June 2007)
  • Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister for Women, Rt Hon Ruth Kelly (May 2006)
  • Minister for the East of England (June 2007 - May 2010)
  • Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Work and Pensions (June 2007 - Oct 2008)
  • Parliamentary Under-Secretary of Equality (Oct 2007 - Oct 2008)
  • Minister for Culture, Tourism and the Creative Industries (Oct 2008 - Sept 2009)
  • Parliamentary Under-Secretary at the Department for Communities and Local Government (Sept 2009 - May 2010)

Post-parliamentary career

Follett was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Law from the University of Hertfordshire, in November 2010.[6] She remains committed to women's issues and is a member of the White Ribbon Alliance and the Abortion Rights Campaign.

Barbara is married to the international bestselling author Ken Follett and since leaving politics, has been CEO of the Follett Office which is based in Stevenage. She is also Ken Follett’s Agent.

Follett is a Director of the Jumby Bay Island Company, based in Antigua, and a member of the Labour Women's Network Management Committee.[7]

Organisations

Barbara Follett is a member of, and active in, a number of organisations:[8]

She is also a Patron of Stevenage Haven; Dignity in Dying; Action on Pre-Eclampsia; Herts Aid; Crucial Crew; The Friends of the Forster Country

Brass Eye

In 2001, Follett appeared in the television satire programme Brass Eye, in a special which satirised media hysteria towards the issue of paedophilia. In the programme, she was duped into giving fake warnings about an online game called "Pantu the dog", claiming on camera that a paedophile had converted the dogs eye into a webcam in order to see the child player. Follett went on to demonstrate how the paedophile would wear a t-shirt with a small illustration of a child's body on it in order to disguise themselves as another child, as well as how the paedophiles get children to press their faces against the screen, using special gloves to touch them.[9] Follett complained to the BSC and ITC about being duped into appearing into the programme. The BSC noted that the programme makers had deliberately given warning signals to suggest the material might be dubious and thus rejected Follett's complaints against the show as it successfully revealed the dangers of how public figures were willing to speak "with apparent authority about matters they do not understand".[10]

Expenses controversies

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In May 2008 following the release of details of MPs expenses it emerged that the taxpayer had paid in excess of £1,600 for window cleaning of Follett's London flat in a single year.[11] Further still, the invoices for the work were addressed to her husband.[12]

In May of the following year, The Daily Telegraph alleged that she claimed more than £25,000 for private security patrols at her London home after she was mugged.[13] Follett was also criticised for claiming £120,000 in expenses from the taxpayer over 6 years to pay for a London flat when she already owned one property in the capital. Additionally, commuting to London from her main home in Stevenage takes less than 30 minutes by rail.[14] It was also revealed that Follett had claimed £528.75 to repair and clean a Chinese rug, though only £300 of the claim was actually accepted as the amount was deemed excessive.[15]

In February 2010, following a review of all MP's expenses it was revealed that Follett had claimed more in dubious expenses than any other MP. This led some newspapers to brand her "The Expenses Queen".[16] Additional items she was ordered to repay included £4,454 for having six phone lines at her property and £2,812 for insuring her fine art collection.[16] Follet also claimed twice for boiler insurance and for pest control at a property which wasn't actually her second home.[1]

Follett had initially insisted all her claims were justified, but following significant criticism she changed her position and agreed to repay £32,976 for the security patrols and other similarly extravagant claims.[17] The rest of the money she owed was repaid later.[1] Follett apologised, stating "I did try to act as honestly as possible but where I failed, I am sorry".[18]

Personal life

She is married to Ken Follett and since leaving Parliament she has become CEO of his company, which has offices in Stevenage, and his Agent.[19] They own two properties in London, one in Knebworth, a property in Cape Town and a holiday home in Jumby Bay, Antigua.[14][20] She has two daughters, Jann and Kim, a son, Adam, and two stepchildren, Emanuele and Marie-Claire.[21]

Follett and her husband have been referred to as champagne socialists in the media due to the alleged contrast between their political views and their extravagant lifestyle.[22] She is also well known for training Labour Party members on how to handle the media and present themselves, which has been termed "Folletting".[23] Follett is a frequent donor for the Labour Party.

References

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  2. http://www.barbara-follett.org.uk/home/index.html
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  4. http://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/anti-apartheid-activist-dr-richard-turner-assassinated
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  6. http://www.herts.ac.uk/about-us/news/2010/november/barbara-follett-receives-honorary-degree
  7. http://www.lwn.org.uk/management_committee
  8. http://www.barbara-follett.org.uk/biography/memberships.html
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  18. http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2010/02/05/the-374-fiddlers-115875-22019777/
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  23. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/the-red-brigade-1570130.html

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Stevenage
1997–2010
Succeeded by
Stephen McPartland
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Culture and Tourism
2008–2009
Succeeded by
Margaret Hodge
Preceded by Minister for Local Government
2009–2010
Succeeded by
Andrew Stunell