Emily Benn

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Emily Benn
Emily Benn Photograph.jpg
Benn in 2009
Common Councillor for City of London Common Council
Assumed office
24 March 2022
Parents
Relatives
Alma mater New College, Oxford
OccupationInvestment banking
Website democracy.cityoflondon.gov.uk/mgUserInfo.aspx?UID=2871

Emily Sophia Wedgwood Benn (born 4 October 1989) is an English politician, who has represented the Ward of Bread Street on the Court of Common Council of the City of London since 2022. [1]

Contents

Benn unsuccessfully contested both the 2010 and 2015 UK general elections as a Labour Party parliamentary candidate. At the 2014 local elections, Benn was elected to the West Thornton Ward of Croydon Borough Council, serving until 2016. [2] At the 2022 local elections, she was elected to represent Bread Street Ward on the City Common Council. [3]

The granddaughter of the late Labour MP Tony Benn, she is the eldest child and only daughter of the 3rd Viscount Stansgate [4] by his wife Nita Clarke (née Bowes). [5]

Early and family life

Emily Sophia Wedgwood Benn was born 4 October 1989 in Croydon, London, where the 1989 Labour Party Conference was being held, [6] [7] as the daughter of a viscount, she is entitled to be styled as The Honourable . Benn is a quarter-Indian on her mother's side [8] Benn claims that her first political experience was campaigning for her grandfather in his Chesterfield constituency during the 1992 general election aged two and she joined the Labour Party at the age of 14. [9]

Four generations of her family have served as British Members of Parliament (MP) – uncle Hilary Benn, grandfather Tony Benn, great-grandfather William Wedgwood Benn and great-great-grandfathers, Sir John Benn and Daniel Holmes. [10]

Education

Benn attended Wallington High School for Girls [11] where she achieved 11 A* grades in her GCSEs. [12] She then studied Music, History and Latin for A-levels at St Olave's Grammar School, Orpington, [9] [13] before going up to read History and Politics at New College, Oxford. [11] [14]

Professional career

After university, Benn joined the graduate training programme at UBS Investment Bank, then the multi-asset sales team at the bank in London. [15] [16] In 2016 she started working for UBS in New York. [17] [16]

In 2018 Benn was a graduate research assistant at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, helping to write a book on ageing demographics with Camilla Cavendish. [18] She later worked as Chief of Staff for Jonathan Powell before becoming Chief of Staff of Tortoise Media. [19]

Political career

Parliamentary candidate

On 12 September 2007, three weeks before her eighteenth birthday, Benn was selected as the Labour Party candidate for the West Sussex constituency of East Worthing and Shoreham at the 2010 general election. [9]

The sitting MP, Conservative Tim Loughton, defending a majority over Labour of 8,183 votes from the 2005 general election, [6] defeated Benn, who finished in third place, 4,276 votes behind the Liberal Democrat candidate in second place, while Loughton increased his majority to 11,105 votes. [20]

On 16 July 2014, Benn was selected as the Labour Party candidate for Croydon South for the 2015 general election. [21] [22] She increased the Labour vote share by 4.8%, but was defeated by Conservative candidate Chris Philp. [23]

Local councillor

In July 2013, Benn was selected as one of three Labour candidates for the Ward of West Thornton on Croydon Borough Council in the 2014 local council elections. [24] [25] In May 2014, she was elected top of the ballot with a majority of 1,777. [2] She resigned as a Councillor in 2016 after accepting a job in New York. [17]

Benn served on the Board of Trustees of the London Youth Games and London Mozart Players. [26]

Benn returned to local politics in 2022, being elected to the Ward of Bread Street on the City of London Common Council as an Independent at the 2022 election. [3]

Andrew Fisher complaint

In the autumn of 2015, Benn formally complained about Andrew Fisher, Jeremy Corbyn's head of policy, for supporting the group Class War at the general election earlier that year; [27] Fisher was suspended. [28] The Guardian also stated that 'Fisher Supporters' had pointed out that a page titled 'Emily Benn for Croydon South' on Facebook published a retweet suggesting Labour members who were '"disappointed" with Corbyn's "male dominated" leadership join the Women's Equality Party. [29]

Electoral history

2022 City of London Corporation election

Bread Street (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Independent Emily Benn 105 37.5 N/A
Independent Giles Shilson* 84 30.0 Decrease2.svg10.1
Independent Stephen Hodgson6021.4N/A
Women's Equality Harini Iyengar3111.1N/A
Turnout 280
Independent hold

2015 general election

General election 2015: Croydon South [30] [31]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Chris Philp 31,44854.5+3.6
Labour Emily Benn14,30824.8+4.8
UKIP Kathleen Garner6,06810.5+6.1
Liberal Democrats Gill Hickson3,4486.0-16.9
Green Peter Underwood2,1543.7+2.0
Putting Croydon First!Mark Samuel2210.4N/A
Class War Jon Bigger [32] 650.1N/A
Majority17,41029.7
Turnout 57,71270.4+1.1
Conservative hold Swing -0.6%

2010 general election

General election 2010: East Worthing and Shoreham [33] [34]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Tim Loughton 23,45848.5+4.6
Liberal Democrats James Doyle12,35325.5+1.2
Labour Emily Benn8,08716.7−8.8
UKIP Mike Glennon2,9846.2+1.4
Green Susan Board1,1262.3N/A
English Democrat Clive Maltby3890.8N/A
Majority11,10522.9
Turnout 48,39765.4+3.6
Conservative hold Swing +1.7

See also

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References

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