Angela Billingham, Baroness Billingham

Angela Theodora Billingham, Baroness Billingham JP (born 31 July 1939) is a British Labour politician.

Angela Billingham

Early life

Born Angela Theodora Case in Liverpool, she was educated at Aylesbury Grammar School, the Institute of Education and the Department of Education, Oxford University. She became a teacher, working in education for thirty five years until 1995.

Political career

Baroness Billingham was a councillor for many years. From 1970 until 1974, she served on Banbury Borough Council, then from 1974 to 1984 on Cherwell District Council. She was Mayor of Banbury in 1976. She was an Oxfordshire county councillor 1993–94. She stood for Parliament in 1992 for Banbury, without success.

Billingham was elected to the European Parliament for Northamptonshire and Blaby in 1994.[1] In 1999 she unsuccessfully stood for the European Parliament in the new East Midlands Region. She was made a life peer as Baroness Billingham, of Banbury in the County of Oxfordshire on 2 May 2000[2] and sits on the Labour benches.[3][4]

Interests

She has promoted sports for people with disabilities and is a regular on Sky News where she previews the following morning's newspapers. Angela also campaigns for reform of the current Daylight Saving system, arguing that lighter evenings could end the national scourge of childhood obesity by allowing children to do an extra hour of physical activity a day. She also cites economic, environmental and safety concerns as important reasons for reform of the current system. She is also a keen tennis player, and is Chair/Captain of the Commons and Lords Tennis Club and the Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Tennis Group.[5][6]

Personal life

She married Peter Billingham in 1962 and they had two daughters, Zoë and Caroline. Peter died in 1992. Zoë is married to Dennis Skinner, son of Dennis Skinner, the long-serving Labour MP for Bolsover.

Parliamentary expenses

Subsistence Allowances are designed to help peers who live in the country to attend late-night votes and debates in Parliament, Billingham, who has a flat in Hampstead and a country house in Suffolk claimed £26,983 in 2006–07 in overnight allowances, prompting calls for an inquiry.[7]

gollark: What "cheddar counter"?
gollark: Oh no, race conditions.
gollark: I could change this.
gollark: You can either take it *from* someone by just pinging them, or transfer it to them by pinging them and the role.
gollark: You can now transfer "cheddar" to people, or wait for them to take it from you.

References

  1. Foster, Jonathan (13 June 1994). "The European Elections: Working-class voters wooed back". The Independent.
  2. "No. 55846". The London Gazette. 12 May 2000. p. 5243.
  3. Hartley-Brewer, Julia; Woodward, Will (31 March 2000). "Policy and Politics: Blair `balances' Lords with 33 new peers". The Guardian. p. 11.
  4. "Life Peers". The Times (London). 4 May 2000. p. 24.
  5. "Register of All-Party Groups". House of Commons. 24 February 2010. Archived from the original on 27 March 2010. Retrieved 2 April 2010.
  6. Slater, Matt (29 March 2010). "All-Party Tennis Group warns LTA over public profile". BBC Sport. BBC. Archived from the original on 1 April 2010. Retrieved 2 April 2010.
  7. Peers face demand for expenses probe
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