{{Infobox MP
| office =
Minister of State for Housing and Planning
| term_start =
| term_end = Incumbent
| primeminister =
Tony Blair and
Gordon Brown
| predecessor =
Hilary Armstrong
| successor = Incumbent
}
| honorific-prefix = Rt Hon
| name = Yvette Cooper
| honorific-suffix =
MP
| image = Replace this image1.svg
| constituency_MP =
Pontefract and Castleford
| parliament =
| majority = 23,804 (51.8%)
| predecessor =
Geoffrey Lofthouse
| successor =
Incumbent
| term_start =
1 May 1997
| term_end =
| birth_date =
| birth_place =
Inverness
| death_date =
| death_place =
| nationality =
British
| spouse =
Ed Balls ''(
Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families)''
| party =
Labour
| relations =
| children =
| residence =
| alma_mater =
Balliol College, Oxford,
London School of Economics
| occupation =
| profession =
| religion =
| signature =
| website =
| footnotes =
}}
'Yvette Cooper' (born
20 March 1969)
British politician. She is the
Labour Member of Parliament for
Pontefract and Castleford and is the
Minister of State for Housing at the
Communities and Local Government government department and attends
Gordon Brown's
Cabinet with effect from 28 June 2007.
Born in
Inverness, her father is Tony Cooper
[1], former General Secretary of the Union
Prospect, a member of the
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and a former Chairman of the British Nuclear Industry Forum. He was appointed to the government's Energy Advisory Panel by the Conservatives and has been described by the Nuclear Industry Association as an "''articulate, persuasive and well-informed advocate of nuclear power''"
[2]. She was educated at the Eggars
Comprehensive School,
Alton and the
Alton College, before studying at
Balliol College, Oxford where she was awarded a
Bachelor of Arts in
Philosophy, Politics and Economics. She was awarded a
Kennedy Scholarship in
1991 to
Harvard University and finished her studies with a
Master of Science in economics at the
London School of Economics.
She began her career as an economics researcher to the
shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John Smith MP in
1990 before becoming a domestic policy specialist, working in
Arkansas, for the
United States Democratic Party presidential candidate
Bill Clinton in
1992. Later in the year she became a policy advisor to the new Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
Gordon Brown MP and in
1994 found herself working as a research associate for the Centre for Economic Performance. In
1995 she became the economic
correspondent with ''
The Independent'' until her election to
Westminster.
She was selected at a very late stage in April
1997 to contest the very safe Labour seat of
Pontefract and Castleford at the
1997 General Election on the retirement of the Deputy Speaker of the
House of Commons Geoff Lofthouse. She held the seat very comfortably with a majority of 25,725 and she has held the seat easily since. She spoke of her constituency's struggle with
unemployment in her maiden speech on
2 July 1997.
[1] Yvette Cooper rose rapidly in parliament, after two years on the Education and Employment
Select Committee she became, in
1999, a member of the
Tony Blair government as the
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the
Department of Health, and in
2003 moved to the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister. After the
2005 General Election she was promoted within the same department to
Minister of State, which has subsequently become the Department of Communities and Local Government.
She married
Ed Balls in
Eastbourne in
1998 and they have three children. He was elected to parliament at the 2005 General Election for the neighbouring constituency of
Normanton and so, together, they form one of five sets of married couples in the Commons (
Nicholas Winterton and
Ann Winterton;
Andrew Mackay and
Julie Kirkbride;
Peter Robinson and
Iris Robinson;
Alan Keen and
Ann Keen - to this could be added
Gordon Prentice and
Bridget Prentice who entered the Commons as man and wife, but have been divorced for many years). When their second child was born, Cooper became the first serving minister to take
maternity leave in
2001. She enjoys
swimming and
portrait painting.
Time as a Cabinet Minister
Yvette Cooper was promoted to Cabinet level in 2007 as
Housing Minister when close ally Gordon Brown took over as Prime Minister. Cooper had to introduce the
HIPS scheme into the public eye following her promotion, to much controversy. She managed to dodge the blame for
HIPS, by being an ally of Gordon Browns. Ruth Kelly was blamed instead. [
[2]]
Since
Gordon Brown's elevation to the position of
Prime Minister, the
Labour government have identified affordable housing as one of it's core objectives. In July 2007, she told Parliament: "Unless we act now by 2026 first time buyers will find average house prices are ten times their salary. That could lead to real social inequality and injustice. Every part of the country needs more affordable homes - in the North and the South, in urban and rural communities".
[3]
References
1. Yvette Cooper Official website
2. "Tony Cooper is new Chairman of BNIF", 28 June 2002, Nuclear Industry Association
3. "Government to give homeowners more flexibility", 24 July 2007, The Mortgage Provider Online
External links
★
Yvette Cooper official site
★
Guardian Politics Ask Aristotle - Yvette Cooper MP
★
TheyWorkForYou.com - Yvette Cooper MP