Gisela Stuart

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The Right Honourable
Gisela Stuart
MP
GiselaStuartOct2008.jpg
Stuart in 2008
Member of Parliament
for Birmingham Edgbaston
Assumed office
1 May 1997
Preceded by Jill Knight
Majority 2,706 (6.6%)
Personal details
Born Gisela Gschaider
(1955-11-26) 26 November 1955 (age 68)
Velden, West Germany
Nationality British
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Robert Stuart (1980–2000; div.)
Derek Scott (2010–12; died)
Children 2 sons
Alma mater University of London
University of Birmingham[1]
Religion Roman Catholic

Gisela Gscheider Stuart (born 26 November 1955) is a British Labour Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Birmingham Edgbaston since 1997. Born and raised in Germany, she moved to Britain in 1974.

Early life

Stuart, who was born as Gisela Gscheider in Velden, Bavaria, West Germany, was raised in her parents' Roman Catholic faith. She attended the Realschule Vilsbiburg on Amselstraße in Vilsbiburg.

After serving an apprenticeship in bookselling she moved to Britain in 1974 in order to improve her English and to undertake a Business Studies course at Manchester Polytechnic. Stuart subsequently relocated to the Midlands.

She graduated from the University of London with an LLB in 1993, having studied through the University of London External System. From 1992 to 1997 she was a law lecturer at Worcester College of Technology. She began researching for a PhD in trust law (ownership of pension funds) at the University of Birmingham, but did not complete her PhD and instead went into politics full-time.[2]

In 1994, as Gisela Gscheider, Stuart contested the Worcester and South Warwickshire seat at the European Elections.[3] for Labour. She lost by 1000 votes.

Parliamentary career

In 1995, Stuart was selected as Labour's prospective parliamentary candidate for the Birmingham Edgbaston constituency, which had been held by the Conservative Party for 99 years. On 1 May 1997, Stuart was elected as the first ever Labour MP for the seat, making it one of a succession of traditionally conservative seats to succumb to the landslide Labour victory. Stuart's victory was the first televised Labour gain of the evening.

During the first Tony Blair premiership, Stuart served on the Social Security Select Committee and in 1998 as PPS to Home Office Minister of State Paul Boateng, before joining the Government in 1999 as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health. Stuart left the Government in the reshuffle that followed the 2001 General Election.[4] Her election agent in that election was John Clancy, who in 2015 became leader of Birmingham City Council.[5]

In Blair's second term, Stuart was appointed as one of the UK Parliamentary Representatives to the European Convention, which was tasked with drawing up a new constitution for the European Union. In this capacity, Stuart also served as one of the 13 members of the Convention's Presidium - the steering group responsible for managing the business of the Convention.

The experience of drawing up the Constitution had a significant impact upon Stuart's views of the European Union. When the draft Constitution finally emerged, Stuart was amongst its most trenchant critics, stating that it had been drawn up by a "self-selected group of the European political elite" determined to deepen European integration. She subsequently expounded these views in a 2004 Fabian Society pamphlet, "The Making of Europe's Constitution". Consequently, she has argued in favour of leaving the European Union, thus becoming one of the leading figures in Labour's eurosceptic wing.[6]

Between 2001 and 2010, Stuart also served as a member of the House of Commons Select Committee on Foreign Affairs.[7]

She held Birmingham Edgbaston for Labour at the 2005 General Election but her majority was exactly halved in both percentage and numerical terms. Despite the predictions of the pundits, Stuart went on to retain the seat at the 2010 general election, against a national tide of Labour defeat.[8] Her successful campaign has been seen as a model for a new style of community-based Labour politics. It also earned her the title of Survivor of the Year at The Spectator magazine’s 2010 Parliamentarian of the Year awards, which was presented to her by the new Conservative Prime Minister, David Cameron.[9] She retained her seat at the 2015 General Election with a majority of 2,706, more than double her majority from 2010.[10]

She is a signatory of the Henry Jackson Society principles, which promote the spread of liberal democracy across the world and the maintenance of a strong military with global expeditionary reach.[11] Following the election[which?], she joined the Commons Select Committee on Defence.[12]

Stuart is also editor of the weekly political magazine The House Magazine.[13]

In October 2004, she became the only Labour MP who openly supported the re-election of George W. Bush in that year's US presidential election, arguing "you know where you stand with George and, in today's world, that's much better than rudderless leaders who drift with the prevailing wind". She wrote that a victory for Democratic Party challenger, John Kerry, would prompt "victory celebrations among those who want to destroy liberal democracies. More terrorists and suicide bombers would step forward to become martyrs in their quest to destroy the West".[14]

Personal life

Stuart was married to Derek Scott, who was economic adviser to the Prime Minister during the Blair Government. Scott died on 31 July 2012. She has two grown-up sons from her previous marriage to Robert Scott Stuart.

Voting record

How Stuart voted on key issues since 2001:[15]

  • Has never voted on a transparent Parliament[further explanation needed]
  • Voted for introducing a smoking ban
  • Voted for introducing ID cards
  • Voted for introducing foundation hospitals
  • Voted for introducing student top-up fees
  • Voted for Labour's anti-terrorism laws
  • Voted for the Iraq war
  • Voted against investigating the Iraq war
  • Voted for replacing Trident
  • Voted for the hunting ban
  • Voted for equal gay rights

References

  1. C. K. Jones, The People's University (London, 2008), p. 33
  2. C. K. Jones, The People's University (London, 2008), p. 33
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http://www.giselastuartmp.co.uk/2010/06/why-i-am-backing-david-miliband-as-labour-leader/ http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/local-news/gisela-stuart-fires-broadside-at-gordon-69357 http://www.redbrick.me/2010/10/redbrick-interview-gisela-stuart-mp/

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Birmingham Edgbaston
1997–present
Incumbent