Ann Cryer
Constance Ann Cryer JP (born
December 14,
1939) is a
British politician and the
Labour Member of Parliament for
Keighley.
Born Constance Ann Place in
Lytham St Annes, she was educated at the St John's
Primary School in
Darwen and the Spring Bank Secondary Modern School, Darwen, before attending the
Bolton Technical College and the
Keighley Technical College. She began her career working as a clerk with the
Imperial Chemical Industries plc in
1955, moving to the
General Post Office 1960-
1964. She became a researcher in
social history at the
University of Essex in
1969 before becoming a full time personal assistant for twenty years to her MP husband
Bob Cryer from
1974 until his death in a
car accident on
April 12,
1994. She became a justice of the peace in
1996.
She was elected to the
House of Commons for one of her husband's former constituencies, Keighley, at the
1997 General Election, defeating the sitting
Conservative MP Gary Waller by 7,132 votes and has remained the MP there since. She made her moving
maiden speech on
May 16,
1997.[
1]
Since the
2005 General Election she has been a member of the
Home Affairs Select Committee. She has been a member of the
Bradford Cathedral Council since
2000. She married her husband Bob Cryer in
1963 and they had a son and a daughter. When she entered parliament in 1997 she was joined by her son,
John Cryer who had been elected for
Hornchurch from
1997 until
2005, they formed the only mother son partnership in the Commons at that time. Ann Cryer has voted against the government on many issues, is seen as a
Eurosceptic, and is in favour of
nuclear disarmament. She is a member of the left-wing
Socialist Campaign Group. She is a grandmother. She has faced much criticism from some of her Asian constituents, she has called on
immigrants to learn to speak
English before entering the country [
2], she has also spoken out against
arranged marriages. She comes from a political dynasty, her father, Allen Place, was an activist in the
Independent Labour Party, her grandmother was a leading
suffragette and she cites
Annie Besant as one of her
heroines.
Boldness be My Friend: Remembering Bob Cryer by Ann Cryer and John Cryer, 1997, Bradford Arts, Museums and Libraries Service, ISBN 0907734480
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Ann Cryer MP Official website
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Guardian Unlimited Unlimited Politics - Ask Aristotle: Ann Cryer MP*
TheyWorkForYou.com - Ann Cryer MP*
The Public Whip - Ann Cryer MP voting record
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BBC News - Ann Cryer BBC profile