Preet Kaur Gill

Last updated

2018–2020
Preet Kaur Gill
MP
Official portrait of Preet Kaur Gill MP crop 2.jpg
Official portrait, 2020
Shadow Minister for Primary Care and Public Health
In office
6 September 2023 4 July 2024
Shadow Minister for International Development
Alma mater University of East London (BSc)Website www.preetkaurgill.com

Preet Kaur Gill (born 21 November 1972) is a British Labour and Co-operative politician who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for Birmingham Edgbaston since 2017. She served as Shadow Minister for Primary Care and Public Health between 6 September 2023 and 4 July 2024.

Contents

Early life and career

Preet Kaur Gill was born on 21 November 1972 in Edgbaston, Birmingham. [1] [2] She was born to Indian parents Daljit Singh Shergill and Kuldeep Kaur Shergill. [1] [3] Her father was a foreman, and later a bus driver, and her mother worked as a seamstress. [4] [5] Daljit Singh was the longest serving president of the Guru Nanak Gurdwara Smethwick, the first gurdwara in the United Kingdom. Gill credits her father and Baron Tarsem King of West Bromwich as her main inspirations for her ambition to enter politics. [6] [7]

She has six younger siblings. Her early education was at Lordswood Girls' School and Bournville College. At the latter, Gill was elected as student president. [5] Gill graduated from the University of East London with a first-class BSc in sociology with social work. [8] After graduating, she worked as a social worker in a kibbutz in Israel and with street children in India. [5]

Political career

She was a social worker in Waltham Forest and Birmingham specialising in child protection and serving as children's services manager in Birmingham from 2010 to 2017. [1]

She was elected as a councillor for Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council in 2012 and re-elected in the 2016 local election; her term ended May 2018. On the council, she served as the Cabinet Member for Public Health and Protection. [5] [8] [9]

Gill supported remaining within the European Union (EU) in the 2016 EU membership referendum. [10]

Parliamentary career

In opposition

Gill was selected by the Labour Party to contest Birmingham Edgbaston on 28 April 2017. [3] At the snap 2017 general election, Gill was elected as MP for Birmingham Edgbaston with 55.3% of the vote and a majority of 6,917. [11] [12] She is the first female British Sikh MP. [13]

In July 2017, she was elected as a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee. [12]

On 12 January 2018, she was appointed to the shadow cabinet as International Development Minister (role shared with Dan Carden). [14]

In March 2019, Gill signed a letter supporting the People's Vote campaign for a second referendum on EU membership. [15]

Gill is the chair of the All Party Parliamentary Groups on Mentoring and for British Sikhs. [16]

Gill was re-elected as MP for Birmingham Edgbaston at the 2019 general election with a decreased vote share of 50.1% and a decreased majority of 5,614. [17]

Gill supported Keir Starmer in the 2020 Labour Party leadership election. [18] She was promoted to Shadow Secretary of State for International Development following Starmer's election as leader. [19]

As Shadow Secretary of State, Gill initially shadowed Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan until the department was abolished in September 2020; since then she shadowed ministers of the newly created Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. She remained in the shadow cabinet following the November 2021 reshuffle, but her position was renamed Shadow Cabinet Minister for International Development and she joined the new shadow Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs team. [20]

In November 2020, Gill was elected Chair of the Co-operative Party Parliamentary Group of MPs. [21]

On 19 December 2021, Gill was criticised by some social media users over a tweet she later deleted that referred to a "Hindu terrorist" behind the act of violence at Golden Temple in Amritsar. [22] [23] [24]

On 23 February 2023, The Guardian reported on comments Gill made in a WhatsApp group which appeared to undermine Sikh victims of sexual violence. Earlier that month, Sikh Women's Aid had published a report which found that two thirds of women surveyed had experienced domestic abuse, with many of the women criticising the inadequate response support given by community leaders. Gill was alleged to have accused the women surveyed of using "very dangerous language" and urged them to submit apologies to gurdwaras. A Labour spokesperson stated "though we cannot comment on leaked WhatsApp messages, Preet would never downplay abuse or violence". [25]

In the 2023 British shadow cabinet reshuffle she was replaced by Lisa Nandy, and Gill became Shadow Minister for Primary Care and Public Health. [26]

Gill is a member of Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East. [27]

In government

At the 2024 general election, Gill was again re-elected, with a decreased vote share of 44.3% and an increased majority of 8,368. [28]

On 18 July 2024, Gill was appointed as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds. [29]

Personal life

Gill has been married to Sureash Singh Chopra, who is a social worker, since 2009. They have two daughters. [1] [5] Gill is vice-president of the Local Government Association and a non executive director for the Spring Housing Association. [30]

Awards and nominations

In September 2018, Gill was named as one of the Birmingham City University's Brummies Who Inspire, alongside fellow Birmingham MP, Shabana Mahmood. [31]

In October 2018, she was presented with the Sikh Women of Substance award by the Sikh's Women Alliance UK. [32]

In December 2018, she was one of the recipients of the Giving Voice award, presented by the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists. [33]

In December 2020, Gill won the overall prize at the MP of the Year Awards organised by the Patchwork Foundation, [34] for "her consistent championing of young people, representation of the Sikh Community and initiative to tackle Fuel Poverty via a strategic campaign aimed at the UK's biggest fuel companies." [35]

Notes

  1. Shadow Secretary of State (2020–21)

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References

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Birmingham Edgbaston
2017–present
Incumbent