Lindsay Northover, Baroness Northover Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Baroness Northover
Honorific-Suffix:PC
Office:Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for International Development
Term Start:4 November 2014
Term End:7 May 2015
Primeminister:David Cameron
Predecessor:Lynne Featherstone
Successor:The Baroness Verma
Office1:Baroness-in-waiting
Government Whip
Primeminister1:David Cameron
Term Start1:11 May 2010
Term End1:4 November 2014
Predecessor1:The Baroness Farrington of Ribbleton
Successor1:The Lord Bourne of Aberystwyth
Office2:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start2:10 May 2000
Life Peerage
Birth Date:21 August 1954
Birth Name:Lindsay Patricia Granshaw
Occupation:Politician
Academic
Party:Liberal Democrats
Alma Mater:St Anne's College, Oxford
University of Pennsylvania

Lindsay Patricia Northover, Baroness Northover, (born 21 August 1954; née Granshaw) is a British academic, Liberal Democrat politician, member of the House of Lords, and former junior government minister.

Early life

The daughter of Charles and Patricia Granshaw, Northover was born on 21 August 1954. She was educated at Brighton and Hove High School, a private school for girls in Brighton. She went on to study at St Anne's College, Oxford, where in 1976 she graduated Bachelor of Arts in modern history. She received an English-Speaking Union Scholarship and a Mrs Giles Whiting Fellowship to study at Bryn Mawr College and the University of Pennsylvania, receiving an examined Master of Arts degree in 1978 and graduating as a Doctor of Philosophy in the history and philosophy of science in 1981.

Career

Academic career

Northover was awarded a research fellowship at University College London and St Mark's Hospital from 1980 to 1983, and a further research fellowship in 1983–84 at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School in London. She was then appointed Lecturer at University College London and Wellcome Institute in 1984, where she taught medical students, human science students and others from across the University of London, and carried out research on the history of modern medicine, authoring various academic books and articles.

Political career

Northover contested Welwyn Hatfield in the 1983 and 1987 general elections, and Basildon in the 1997 general election. She was a member of the committee which negotiated the merger between the Liberal Party and the SDP in 1987–1988, forming the Liberal Democrats. She was Chair of Women Liberal Democrats 1992–1995, Chair of the SDP and then the Liberal Democrats Parliamentary Candidates Association 1987–1991, and subsequently its Vice-President, and Chair of the Health and Social Welfare Association, 1987–1988.

On 1 May 2000, she was created a life peer, taking her married name of Northover, as Baroness Northover, of Cissbury in the County of West Sussex.She was the Liberal Democrats Health Spokesperson in the House of Lords 2000–02 and main frontbench Liberal Democrats Spokesperson on International Development in the House of Lords, 2002–2010. She has been a member of various House of Lords Select Committees including those on Embryonic Stem Cell Research (2001–02), and on the European Union (Sub-Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and International Development 2003–04; Sub-Committee on Economic and Financial Affairs, 2008–10).

In 2010 under the Coalition Government, she was appointed as Government Whip (Baroness-in-Waiting) and Spokesperson on International Development, Health, Justice and Women and Equalities, later covering Education, DCMS and DEFRA, instead of Justice and Health.[1] [2]

Northover was a Member of Council of the Overseas Development Institute, 2005–2010; Trustee of the Tropical Health and Education Trust, 2007–10; Vice-Chair of the British Council Associate Parliamentary Group, 2007–10; Vice-Chair of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, 2008–10; Trustee of the Liberal Democrats, 2009–11; Trustee of UNICEF UK, 2009–10; Vice-Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on HIV/AIDS; Vice-Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Aid, Debt and Trade; and Secretary of the All Party Group on Overseas Development.[3] She was promoted to become Under Secretary of State in the Department for International Development in November 2014.

Personal life

Northover has three adult children.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Government Spokespersons . Government Whips Office . 25 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120215135744/http://www.lordswhips.org.uk/display/templatedisplay1.asp?sectionid=12 . 15 February 2012 . dead .
  2. Unlike whips in the Commons, Lords whips are also Government spokespersons in their portfolios, contributing to legislation and speaking for the Government in debates.
  3. Web site: Baroness Northover | Peers Detail . 2012 . 26 February 2012.
  4. Web site: Lindsay Northover. Liberal Democrats. 24 July 2016.