Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Baroness Meyer | |
Office2: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start2: | 19 June 2018 Life Peerage |
Birth Date: | 26 January 1953 |
Nationality: | British |
Party: | Conservative Party |
Spouse: | Christopher Meyer |
Children: | 2 |
Catherine Irene Jacqueline Meyer, Baroness Meyer,[1] (; born 26 January 1953), is a British politician and businesswoman. She is the widow of Sir Christopher Meyer, the British former Ambassador to the United States. In 1999, she founded the charity PACT, now Action Against Abduction. In October 2020, she was appointed as the Prime Minister's Trade Envoy to Ukraine.[2]
Meyer was privately educated at the French Lycée in London, the School of Slavonic and East European Studies and the London School of Economics. She began her career in financial services and became a licensed commodity broker in 1979, working for Merrill Lynch, Dean Witter and E.F. Hutton.
Despite her having custody of her children, Alexander and Constantin, her German ex-husband refused to return them to London after a summer holiday visit in 1994.[3] This led to her almost decade-long legal battle in the German and English courts to gain access to her sons.[4] Her account of these events is found in her two books. When Alexander and Constantin reached adulthood, they made contact with Meyer. She commented in interviews that they would have turned out differently if she raised them, but she is extremely proud of them. Both sons still live in Germany.
In October 1997, she married Christopher Meyer on the eve of his departure to Washington to become British Ambassador to the United States. During their five and a half years in America, she campaigned against international parental child abduction alongside a number of American parents in a similar situation with Germany.[5]
In 1998, she co-founded with Ernie Allen the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC),.[6] In 2000, she established her own organisation PACT, renamed Action Against Abduction (AAA) in 2015, affiliated to NCMEC and ICMEC.
During her time in Washington D.C., Meyer co-chaired with Ernie Allen two international conferences on improving the effectiveness of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction[7] and gave evidence to committees of the United States House of Representatives and the US Senate[8] which led to several concurrent resolutions urging better compliance by certain signatory states, including Germany,[9] with the Hague Convention 1996; and persuaded both Presidents Clinton and Bush to raise with the German Chancellor cases of parental child abduction to Germany, including her own.[10]
She has also taken her campaign against international parental child abduction to Europe, giving evidence before the Belgian Senate;[11] successfully lobbying the EU to tighten its rules against parental child abduction;[12] and, together with ICMEC, persuading the Permanent Bureau of the Hague Convention to produce a good practice guide to the implementation of the Convention.[13]
In the UK, Meyer instigated adjournment debates in the House of Commons on her case and the issue of parental child abduction in general across frontiers. In 2005, the Parliamentary Ombudsman upheld her complaint of maladministration against the then Lord Chancellor's Department with regard to the handling of her case.[14]
Since 2003 and her return to the UK from America, she has broadened AAA's mission to embrace children who go missing for any reason. This has led to close co-operation with the Home Office, the police, CEOP and other charities. She was a member of the Home Secretary's Strategic Oversight Group on missing people, created in 2006 by David Blunkett. Her campaigns have focussed on the difficulties of measuring exactly how many children go missing every year;[15] the adoption by police forces of the Missingkids Website;[16] and the Child Rescue Alert.[17] On 25 May 2011, International Missing Children's Day, the Home Office announced major changes to child protection services in the UK, in particular the passing of responsibility for missing, abducted and exploited children to the Child Exploitation and Online Protection agency (CEOP). This was the culmination of a ten-year lobbying campaign. Meyer's role was recognised in the Home Office press release.[18]
In 2003, Meyer was co-chair of Vote 2004,[19] which campaigned for a referendum on the still-born European Constitution.[20] She was a National Treasurer of the Conservative Party between 2010 and 2015.
From 2003 to 2007 she was a non-executive director of LIFFE (London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange).[21]
From 2013 to 2014 she was a trustee of the London Institute for Mathematical Sciences.[22]
From the 28th May 2024 she has been a director of The Museum of Communist Terror. [23]
In 1999, Meyer received the Adam Walsh Rainbow Award[24] for outstanding contribution to children's causes and was named by British Airways Business Life magazine for her campaigning on behalf of abducted children.
Meyer was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2012 Birthday Honours for services to children and families.
Meyer was created a Life Peer on 19 June 2018 taking the title Baroness Meyer, of Nine Elms in the London Borough of Wandsworth.
Meyer delivered her maiden speech on 11 September 2018.[25]