Emma Nicholson, Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Baroness Nicholson
of Winterbourne
Office:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start:3 November 1997
Life Peerage
Office1:Member of the European Parliament
for South East England
Term Start1:10 June 1999
Term End1:4 June 2009
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Catherine Bearder
Office2:Member of Parliament
for Torridge and West Devon
Term Start2:11 June 1987
Term End2:8 April 1997
Predecessor2:Peter Mills
Successor2:John Burnett
Birthname:Emma Harriet Nicholson
Birth Date:16 October 1941
Birth Place:Oxford, England
Party:Conservative (before 1995; since 2016)[1]
Otherparty:Liberal Democrats (1995–Jul. 2016)
Non-affiliated (Jul.–Sept. 2016)

Emma Harriet Nicholson, Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne (born 16 October 1941) is a British politician, who has been a life peer since 1997. She was elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Torridge and West Devon in 1987, before switching to the Liberal Democrats in 1995. She was also the Liberal Democrat Member of the European Parliament for South East England from 1999 to 2009. In 2016, she announced she was re-joining the Conservative Party "with tremendous pleasure".[2] In 2017, Baroness Nicholson was appointed as Prime Minister's Trade Envoy for Kazakhstan.[3]

Early life

Born in Oxford and a descendant of the family that founded London gin distillers J&W Nicholson & Co, Lady Nicholson is the third of four daughters of Sir Godfrey Nicholson, Bt and his wife, Lady Katharine (the fifth daughter of the 27th Earl of Crawford). Her uncle was Lord Chancellor in the 1960s,[4] and his daughter, her cousin Eliza Manningham-Buller, became Director General of MI5.

She was diagnosed as deaf at the age of 16.[5] She was educated at St Mary's School, Wantage and the Royal Academy of Music.

Career

Before her political career, she was a computer programmer and systems analyst from 1962 to 1974, and a director of the Save the Children Foundation from 1974 to 1985.

She unsuccessfully contested the constituency of Blyth in the 1979 general election. She was elected a Conservative Member of Parliament for Torridge and West Devon in 1987, having acted as a vice-chairman of the Conservative Party between 1983 and 1987. She defected to the Liberal Democrats in December 1995,[6] [7] telling Robin Oakley, the BBC's Political Editor: "The Conservative Party has changed so much, while my principles have not changed at all. I would argue that it is not so much a case of my leaving the party, but the party leaving me."[8]

Nicholson fought for the release of Katiza Cebekhulu, the "missing witness" in the case of the death of Stompie Seipei.[9] The South African national had been part of the so-called Mandela United Football Club, the bodyguards of Winnie Mandela.[10] Cebekhulu later claimed that Nicholson had demanded £50,000 from him to obtain copyright over a book she had Fred Bridgland written about him; Nicholson denied this, saying her motives were "exclusively humanitarian and honourable".[11]

As an MP Nicholson voted for Section 28 which banned schools and local authorities from promoting homosexuality[12] and denounced lesbian families as "neither normal nor natural".[13] She also voted against an equal age of consent for heterosexuals and homosexuals[14] and her opposition to gay rights led a group called the Lesbian Avengers to organise a "tea party-cum-protest" on her lawn.[15]

She was succeeded by John Burnett, later Baron Burnett, in 1997, when Tony Blair won his landslide. That year, Nicholson was made a life peer as Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne, of Winterbourne, in the Royal County of Berkshire.

European Parliament

Lady Nicholson became a member of the European Parliament in 1999, joining the Committee on Foreign Affairs[16] and serving as the committee's vice-president from 2004 to 2007. She was President of the Delegation for Relations with Iraq and President of the Committee on Women's Rights of the Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary Assembly.[17] Lady Nicholson was also a member of the subcommittee on Human Rights, the Delegation for relations with Iran and the Delegation for relations with the Mashreq countries (i.e. the eastern Arab world).[18] She was Rapporteur for Kashmir, and in 2007 her controversial report on Kashmir was passed by a majority of 522 to 9.

During the Iraq War, Nicholson gave evidence to the United Nations that she claimed showed Iraq had "hidden material used to make weapons of mass destruction".[19] She described the draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes as a "genocide".[20]

She has monitored elections in many countries. In 2006, Lady Nicholson was Chief Observer of the European Union Election Observation Mission to Yemen. She was a member of European Union Election Observation Missions to Palestine (2005), Azerbaijan (2005), Lebanon (2005), Afghanistan (2005), Armenia (2007) and Pakistan (2008). In January and December 2005 she was a member of the United Nations Election Observation Missions to Iraq.

She also generated controversy through her strong opposition to international adoptions, which she believed had become a market and subject to corruption. While the European Parliament's Special Rapporteur for Romania's EU accession she and some others in the international[21] community criticised international adoptions. Due partially to her pressure, the Romanian government in 2005 implemented legislation that de facto banned the practice, in line with practices in some of the EU member states. The measure generated controversy, mainly in the US, Israel, France, Spain and Italy, particularly from prospective parents. International and Romanian media also called attention to poor conditions in Romanian orphanages and hospitals where abandoned children remained for prolonged periods, while acknowledging some progress made in reforming child protection. In December 2005 and July 2006, the EP passed measures requesting Romania deal with outstanding pipeline cases, despite Romania having dismissed these formally through legislation after consultation with an Independent Panel of EU Experts on Family Law. Critics claimed that this panel was stacked with opponents of international adoptions. The U.S. Congress also passed repeated measures and held hearings opposing the ban.

Lady Nicholson stood down from the European Parliament at the 2009 elections.

House of Lords

In 2009, Lady Nicholson returned to London and resumed her political work at the House of Lords. In February 2010, she founded the All-party parliamentary group (APPG) for Business Development in Iraq and the Regions[22] and has served as its chair.[23] She is also a member of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Human Trafficking, chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Foreign Affairs and speaks regularly on health care and education in the Middle East and Eastern Europe and business development in Iraq and its wider neighbourhood.[24] In 2013 she argued that the Iraq War was "resoundingly" worth it, and claiming Liberal Democrat party members who took an opposing stance were "guilty of hypocrisy".[25] She was appointed as Prime Minister's Trade Envoy for Iraq[26] on 30 January 2014.

She resigned the Liberal Democrat whip in July 2016, to sit as a non-affiliated member. However, on 10 September 2016, she announced she was re-joining the Conservative Party "with tremendous pleasure" and would sit on the Conservative benches in the House of Lords. Listing her reasons for rejoining the Tories, she highlighted Theresa May's education speech on 9 September, quoting May's position on grammar schools as evidence that the prime minister "leads a party with a real commitment to delivering for the next generation and building a country that works for everyone". However, the Liberal Democrats claimed that she had said her reason for leaving the party was her position on Europe.[27]

Baroness Nicholson visited Kazakhstan as Prime Minister's Trade Envoy on 28 April 2019. The six-day visit was focused on expanding trade relations with the Central Asian country.[28]

She voted against gay marriage on the grounds it would degrade "the status of women and of girls".[29] [30]

She is a supporter of the LGB Alliance and the group has thanked for her "unwavering support".[31]

Other work

Lady Nicholson is the Executive Chairman of the AMAR Foundation,[32] which works to rebuild and improve the lives of disadvantaged communities in war-torn areas.

She is Executive Chairman of the Iraq Britain Business Council[33] an organisation that facilitates business, trade investment, human resources, training and transfer of technology and know-how into the Republic of Iraq.

Lady Nicholson is Executive Chairman of the Associatia Children's High Level Group. She co-founded its English counterpart, the Children's High Level Group (now the charity Lumos, "working to end the harm of institutionalisation & help children worldwide be reunited with family"[34]) with novelist and philanthropist J. K. Rowling.[35] Lady Nicholson is the co-chairman with the Prime Minister of Romania of the High Level Group for Romania's Children and the co-chairman with the Prime Minister of Moldova of the High Level Group for Moldovan Children.

Lady Nicholson is also a member of the American Bar Association's Middle East North Africa Council, the Arab Gulf Programme for United Nations Development Organisations Prize Committee and Freedom House International Solidarity Committee. She is a board member of the Foundation for Dialogue Among Civilisations,[36] the American Islamic Congress, and a member of the Board of Advisors for the New York University Center for Dialogues, Islamic World.[37] She is vice-president of The Little Foundation, and is Honorary Advisor to the Prime Minister and Government of Iraq on Public Health and related issues.

Nicholson was a Trustee of the Booker Prize until 2009, after which she was made an honorary vice-president. In June 2020, Nicholson referred to model Munroe Bergdorf on Twitter as "a weird creature" and shared posts Bergdorf considered transphobic, resulting in an official complaint to the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner.[38] This led to criticism of Booker from writers including Damian Barr,[39] Marlon James and Sarah Perry.[40] Booker subsequently announced that they would be dissolving all honorary titles and roles associated with the event.[41]

Personal life

On 9 May 1987, Nicholson married Sir Michael Harris Caine, with whom she had a foster son Amar Kanim, who was rescued from Iraq after surviving a napalm attack in March 1991.[42] [43] She set up the Amar Foundation to support projects in Iraq.[44] She is President of the Council of the Caine Prize for African Writing, which was named after her late husband.

Nicholson was widowed in 1999 and alleged negligence by hospital staff treating her husband at King Edward VII's Hospital.[45] Nicholson claims that nurses at the King Edward VII refused to call consultants and doctors despite her husband's distress when a breathing tube could not be cleared.[46] In September 1999 The Guardian reported that Baroness Nicholson was due to pursue legal action against the hospital alleging negligence.[45] In light of her husband's death, Baroness Nicholson said:

Awards and honours

In 2017, Lady Nicholson received an honorary doctorate in International Leadership and Humanitarian Service from Brigham Young University in the United States for her charity and humanitarian work across the Middle East.[47] [48]

Escutcheon:Per pale Azure and Gules two bars gemel Ermine in chief three suns in splendour Or.
Supporters:On either side a swan wings inverted and addorsed Argent beaked and legged and gorged with an ancient crown attached thereto a line reflexed over the back Or charged on the breast with an ermine spot.
Motto:Numen Lumen[49]
Badge:A swan naiant wings elevated and addorsed Argent beaked Or within an ancient crown the base thereof conjoined to the base of an ancient crown reversed also Or naiant therein to the dexter a swan reversed wings elevated and addorsed Argent beaked Or.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne . . 23 June 2020.
  2. News: Lib Dems' Baroness Nicholson rejoins Conservatives. 10 September 2016. BBC News. 23 June 2020.
  3. Web site: Ambassador Erlan Idrissov meets with Baroness Nicholson, Trade Envoy to Kazakhstan. https://web.archive.org/web/20190709173329/http://www.mfa.gov.kz/en/london/content-view/ambassador-erlan-idrissov-meets-with-baroness-nicholson-trade-envoy-to-kazakhstan. dead. 9 July 2019. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan. 9 July 2019.
  4. Web site: Nicholson, Emma (1 of 7). The History of Parliament Oral History Project - Politics - Oral history British Library - Sounds . sounds.bl.uk . 28 June 2020.
  5. News: The Independent. profile: Emma Nicholson: Not her sort of party. Andy . Beckett. 31 December 1995. 23 June 2020. London.
  6. Web site: 30 December 1995 . Major's majority cut to three Tory MP defects to Lib Dems MP's defection a severe blow to Government . 2022-06-26 . HeraldScotland . en.
  7. Web site: 1995-12-31 . profile: Emma Nicholson: Not her sort of party . 2022-06-26 . The Independent . en.
  8. Book: Nicholson, Emma . Secret Society: Inside - and Outside - the Conservative Party . 1996 . Indigo . 0575400722 . London . 36331513.
  9. News: Southworth. Phoebe. 11 April 2019. Winnie Mandela's former bodyguard jailed for threatening bouncer with meat cleaver. The Daily Telegraph. 23 June 2020. 0307-1235.
  10. News: Henderson. Mark. 11 September 1997. Stompie witness 'too scared' of Winnie to testify. The Times. 25 May 2020.
  11. News: Carlin. John. 17 May 1998. An incredible journey ends in bitterness. The Independent. 25 May 2020.
  12. https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1987/dec/15/local-government-bill-1
  13. https://twitter.com/ImplausibleGrrl/status/1361311166925066240/photo/1
  14. https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1994-02-21/debates/2cff3a37-1689-4247-bfa8-3f2f3d5da45e/AmendmentOfLawRelatingTo
  15. https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/lesbian-with-a-vengeance-1589490.html
  16. Web site: European Parliament Committees : Foreign Affairs . Europarl.europa.eu . 12 May 2016 . 29 December 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181229153738/http://www.europarl.europa.eu/activities/committees/homeCom.do?language=EN&body=AFET . dead .
  17. Web site: Euromed. Europarl.europa.eu.
  18. Web site: Directory | MEPs | European Parliament . Europarl.europa.eu . 12 May 2016.
  19. News: 4 February 2003. Briton gives inspector weapons evidence. Cedar Rapids Gazette. Associated Press. 25 May 2020.
  20. News: Lyon. David. 9 May 2003. Wetlands of Mesopotamia. BBC Newsnight. 25 May 2020.
  21. Web site: Archived copy . 17 February 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20061212124919/http://laprimogenita.it/Documenti/romanadopt.pdf . 12 December 2006 .
  22. Book: A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide: Portraits of Evil and Good . . Bartrop, Paul R. . Paul R. Bartrop . 2012 . . 232 . 978-0313386787.
  23. Web site: Rebuilding Lives, Systems and Confidence After the Arab Spring . . 30 January 2012 . 25 May 2020.
  24. Web site: Hansard, House of Lords . UK Parliament - Archives . Publications.parliament.uk . 12 May 2016.
  25. News: Nicholson. Emma. 19 March 2013. Emma Nicholson writes: Was the war worth it? ... a resounding Yes from me. Liberal Democrat Voice. 25 May 2020.
  26. Web site: Baroness Nicholson appointed as new United Kingdom Trade Envoy to Iraq - News articles . GOV.UK . 30 January 2014 . 12 May 2016.
  27. News: 11 September 2016. Former Lib Dem peer Emma Nicholson joins Tory party. The Guardian. Press Association. 25 May 2020.
  28. Web site: U.K., Kazakhstan set to deepen strong strategic partnership, says British Trade Envoy. Zhanna . Shayakhmetova . 16 May 2019. The Astana Times. 9 July 2019.
  29. Web site: Anti-trans Tory peer Baroness Nicholson condemned after launching astonishing attack on same-sex marriage . Reiss. Smith. PinkNews. 10 June 2020 .
  30. Emma Harriet Nicholson @Baroness_Nichol: Web site: Because I foresaw (with some justification) that it would lead to degrading the status of women and of girls.This as we now see has happened and is continuing,so my sex are as a binary class in difficult now.. Twitter.com. 4 July 2022.
  31. https://twitter.com/ALLIANCELGB/status/1557377528981078023
  32. Web site: The Board. Amarfoundation.org. 25 June 2020.
  33. Web site: IBBC - Together We Build Iraq. Webuildiraq.org.
  34. Web site: Home - Lumos . Wearelumos.org . 28 June 2020 . en.
  35. Web site: JK Rowling's Transforming the Lives of Disadvantaged Children. Charter for Compassion. 25 June 2020.
  36. Web site: Welcome to FDC Website - Our Mission . 30 March 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090310010730/http://www.dialoguefoundation.org/?Lang=en&Page=29 . 10 March 2009 .
  37. Web site: ISLAMUSWEST - My ISLAMUSWEST. Islamuswest.org.
  38. Web site: Bergdorf. Munroe. 2020-07-01. Dear Baroness Nicholson, there's a few things I need to say... Munroe Bergdorf. 2021-08-05. Standard.co.uk. en.
  39. News: Sian Griffiths. 'Are activists targeting me?' Tory peer Baroness Nicholson's despair over Booker prize trans row. . en. 2021-08-05. 0140-0460.
  40. News: 2020-06-24. Authors call for removal of Booker prize vice-president over 'homophobic' views. 2021-08-05. The Guardian. en.
  41. Web site: 2020-06-27. Booker Prize: Former vice-president denies transphobia accusations after being removed from post. Roisin. O'Connor. 2021-08-05. The Independent. en.
  42. Web site: The boy in the photo. Jon. Kay. BBC News. 13 May 2019. 28 August 2019. Updated 23 December 2019.
  43. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article1128343.ece
  44. Web site: AMAR Foundation. AMAR Foundation. 28 August 2019.
  45. Web site: 1999-09-19. Peer's anger after death of husband. Sarah. Ryle. 2022-02-17. The Guardian. en.
  46. Web site: 1999-07-17. A very expensive way to die. Paul. Lashmar. James Oliver. Yvonne Ridley. 2022-02-17. The Independent. en.
  47. Web site: McKell. Kalena. BYU grads encouraged to 'be awful'. Daily Universe. 28 April 2017.
  48. News: Prescott. Marianne Holman. 27 April 2017. Unexpected advice — 'Be awful,' BYU grads told. Deseret News. 23 June 2020.
  49. Book: Debrett's Peerage . 2015 . 915.