Judith Blake, Baroness Blake of Leeds

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Judith Vivienne Blake, Baroness Blake of Leeds CBE (born 23 July 1953,[1] née Parsons) is a British Labour politician serving as a life peer in the House of Lords since 2021. She serves on the opposition front bench as a Shadow Spokesperson for Housing, Communities and Local Government and an Opposition Whip.

The Baroness Blake of Leeds
Official portrait, 2024
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Assumed office
25 March 2021
2021–presentEnergy Security and Net Zero
2021–presentBusiness and Trade
2021–2023Whip
2021–2021Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
Leader of Leeds City Council
In office
21 May 2015 – 24 February 2021
Preceded byKeith Wakefield
Succeeded byJames Lewis
Member of Leeds City Council
for Middleton Park
Hunslet (2002–2004)
In office
2 May 2002 – 6 May 2021
Preceded byMark Davies
Succeeded bySharon Burke
Member of Leeds City Council
for Weetwood
In office
2 May 1996 – 4 May 2000
Preceded byAnn Castle
Succeeded byJames Souper
Personal details
Born
Judith Vivienne Parsons

(1953-07-23) 23 July 1953 (age 70)
Leeds, England
Political partyLabour
Children4, including Olivia
EducationLeeds Girls High School
Alma materUniversity of Kent

Blake served as the leader of Leeds City Council from 2015 to 2021, being the first woman to hold the position.[2][3][4]

Personal life

Blake was born on 23 July 1953 into a Methodist family in Leeds. Both her parents were doctors. She attended Leeds Girls High School until 1971 and then studied History at the University of Kent.[5][6]

After university, she began her career in education and social policy, living in London and then Birmingham in the 1980s. During her time living in Birmingham, she taught the English language to refugees.[7][8] In 1992, she returned to live in Otley.[8]

Blake has four children. Her youngest child, Olivia Blake, was elected as the Member of Parliament for Sheffield Hallam in 2019.[7][9][10]

Political career

Blake was elected as an Otley town councillor,[7] and, except for a two-year gap after losing her seat in Weetwood at the 2000 city council election, has been an elected member of Leeds City Council since 1996.[3]

She contested the Leeds North West constituency in the 2005 and 2010 national elections as the Labour Party's prospective parliamentary candidate. In 2005 she came second behind Greg Mulholland of the Liberal Democrats; in 2010, she fell to third behind Julia Mulligan of the Conservatives and re-elected MP Mulholland.

Following her selection as deputy leader of the Leeds Labour group in 2003, once the party regained control of Leeds in 2010, Blake served as the Deputy Leader of the Council for five years to 2015. She was the Executive Cabinet Member for Children & Families during this period, overseeing the city's Children's Services' Ofsted rating change from "inadequate" to "good overall".[3] She has been involved in a number of national legal campaigns, worked with education authorities in Yorkshire to raise school standards in the area, and worked on crises and issues with student grades and school placements throughout her career.[4]

She voted for Yvette Cooper in the 2015 Labour Party leadership election and supported Keir Starmer in the 2020 leadership election.[11][12][13]

Leader of Leeds City Council

After then-leader Keith Wakefield stepped down, Blake was elected as the first woman leader of Leeds City Council in May 2015.[2] She chaired the Council's Executive Board, having also served on the boards for NHS Leeds and the West Yorkshire Police Authority. In April 2019, Blake was appointed to the board of Northern Ballet.[14]

In December 2015, she expressed the frustration of city residents in feeling that David Cameron, then the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, was giving greater attention to more affluent counties in southern England during a period of severe flooding.[15]

She was awarded a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2017 Birthday Honours.[16]

House of Lords

In December 2020, it was announced Blake would be conferred a Life Peerage after a nomination by Labour Party Leader Keir Starmer.[17] In February 2021, she was created Baroness Blake of Leeds, of Gledhow in the City of Leeds.[18]

Blake joined the opposition front bench in May 2021, as a Shadow Spokesperson for Housing, Communities and Local Government and an Opposition Whip.[19][20] In December 2021 she became Shadow Spokesperson for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and International Trade, and following changes to the Machinery of Government in February 2023 is currently Shadow Spokesperson for Energy and Net Zero and Shadow Spokesperson for Business and Trade.

Electoral history

UK local elections
Date of electionWardPartyVotes% of votesResult
1996 Leeds City Council electionWeetwoodLabour2,56940.2 Y Elected
2000 Leeds City Council electionWeetwoodLabour2,02336.3 N Not Elected
2002 Leeds City Council electionHunsletLabour1,53568.2 Y Elected
2004 Leeds City Council electionMiddleton ParkLabour2,11140.9 Y Elected
2007 Leeds City Council electionMiddleton ParkLabour2,46746.7 Y Elected
2011 Leeds City Council electionMiddleton ParkLabour3,31364.5 Y Elected
2015 Leeds City Council electionMiddleton ParkLabour4,97451.2 Y Elected
2018 Leeds City Council electionMiddleton ParkLabour2,74761.1 Y Elected
UK parliamentary elections
Date of electionConstituencyPartyVotes% of votesResult
2005 general electionLeeds North WestLabour14,73533.0 N Not Elected
2010 general electionLeeds North WestLabour9,13221.0 N Not Elected

References

External links