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Joyce Quin

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The Baroness Quin
Minister of State for Europe
In office
28 July 1998 – 28 July 1999
Prime MinisterTony Blair
Preceded byDoug Henderson
Succeeded byGeoff Hoon (Minister)
Minister of State for Home Affairs
In office
2 May 1997 – 28 July 1998
Prime MinisterTony Blair
Preceded byAnn Widdecombe
Succeeded byThe Lord Williams of Mostyn
Member of Parliament
for Gateshead East and Washington West
Gateshead East (1987–1997)
In office
12 June 1987 – 11 April 2005
Preceded byBernard Conlan
Succeeded bySharon Hodgson
Member of the European Parliament
for Tyne and Wear
Tyne South and Wear (1979-1984)
In office
10 June 1979 – 18 June 1989
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born (1944-11-26) 26 November 1944 (age 79)
Political partyLabour
Alma materNewcastle University
London School of Economics

Joyce Gwendolen Quin, Baroness Quin, PC (born 26 November 1944) is a Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom.

Quin was educated at Whitley Bay Grammar School,[citation needed] and Newcastle University where she gained first class honours in French and was first in her year. She subsequently gained an M.Sc. in International Relations at the London School of Economics. She worked as a French language lecturer and tutor at the University of Bath and Durham University.

She served as Member of the European Parliament for Tyne South and Wear and Tyne and Wear successively from 1979 to 1989, and entered the House of Commons in the 1987 election as Member of Parliament for Gateshead East. After boundary changes for the 1997 general election, she represented the new Gateshead East and Washington West constituency from 1997 until she stepped down at the 2005 general election and was replaced by Sharon Hodgson.

Quin served as prisons minister, Minister for Europe, and as a junior agriculture minister. She asked to retire as a minister in 2001 to concentrate on her constituency interests. She had intended to stand for membership of a North East Regional Assembly on her retirement from Westminster, but the proposed body was rejected by a margin of 4–1 in a referendum in November 2004.

In April 2006, it was announced that Quin had been nominated for a life peerage by the Labour Party.[1] On 30 May, she was created Baroness Quin, of Gateshead in the County of Tyne and Wear.[2] In November 2007, she was appointed Chair of the Franco-British Council (British Section). In 2010 she was awarded "Officier de la Legion d'Honneur" by the French Government. She was appointed a shadow Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs minister by Harriet Harman in May 2010, and was retained in that role by Ed Miliband after his election as Leader of the Labour Party. She stood down from this position in July 2011. Quin is the grand-niece of Labour Party politician Joshua Ritson (1874–1955). She authored a book on the British Constitution in 2010. [3]

She was interviewed in 2014 as part of The History of Parliament's oral history project.[4]

References

  1. ^ "New working life peers unveiled". BBC News Online. 11 April 2006. Retrieved 25 May 2009.
  2. ^ "No. 58001". The London Gazette. 5 June 2006. p. 7665.
  3. ^ Robert Waller, Byron Criddle, The Almanac of British politics (vol 7), Routledge (2002); ISBN 0-415-26833-8, ISBN 978-0-415-26833-2, page 383.
  4. ^ "Joyce Quin interviewed by Isobel White". British Library Sound Archive. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
European Parliament
New constituency Member of the European Parliament
for Tyne South and Wear

19791984
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of the European Parliament
for Tyne and Wear

19841989
Constituency abolished
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Gateshead East

19871997
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament
for Gateshead East and Washington West

19972005
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of State for Home Affairs
1997–1998
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of State for Europe
1998–1999
Succeeded by