Margaret Hodge
The Right Honourable Margaret Eve, Lady Hodge MBE (born September 8, 1944, Egypt) is a British politician and Labour Party member of Parliament for Barking. She was the first Minister for Children appointed in a newly created post within the Department for Education and Skills in 2003. She was appointed Minister of State at the Department for Work & Pensions with responsibility for Work after the 2005 election which she holds to date.
Related Topics:
MBE - September 8 - 1944 - Egypt - British - Labour Party - Member of Parliament - Barking - Minister for Children - Department for Education and Skills
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She has been member for Barking since a by-election on June 9, 1994 caused by the death of Jo Richardson. She became a junior minister in 1998 and was made Minister for Universities in 2001, and remained there until 2003 when she was made Children Minister.
Related Topics:
June 9 - 1994 - Jo Richardson - 1998 - 2001 - 2003
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In 2003 she was involved in a controversy about press coverage of a man who accused her of being ultimately responsible for abuse he suffered as a child in a home overseen by Mrs Hodge as leader of Islington Council. Following a media campaign conducted by several national newspapers calling for her to resign, she was further drawn into the controversy by responding to the man in question by letter and referring to him in it as 'extremely disturbed'. Following this the man passed the letter to the press which planned to publish it, only to be judicially restrained from doing so at the instruction of Mrs Hodge. The letter was eventually published, mainly on the grounds that the blocking of the letter was seen as disproportionate to the reaction from the press, who usually resist such legal interference in their right to publish. Mrs Hodge was forced to publicly apologise and offer to contribute to a charity of the man's choosing as recompense. This effectively ended the affair in the eyes of the press.
Related Topics:
2003 - Islington Council
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She was the first person to be Children's Minister since the post was created in 2003 but has suffered further difficulties since the Islington controversy and the press has called for her resignation on several occasions. Usually viewed as a strong supporter of Tony Blair, she appears to retain his support despite the hostility of the press and the problems caused by it.
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Privacy International awarded Margaret Hodge the 2004 Big Brother Award for "Worst Public Servant" for her backing of controversial initiatives including the Universal Child Database.
Related Topics:
Privacy International - Big Brother - Universal Child Database
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At a keynote speech to the Institute for Public Policy Research on 26 November, 2004, Hodge strongly defended the idea of greater state regulation of individuals' choices, stating that "some may call it the nanny state but I call it a force for good".
Related Topics:
Institute for Public Policy Research - 26 November - 2004 - Nanny state
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On June 17, 2005 she allegedly said that the former workers of MG Rover would be able to obtain jobs at Tesco, a local supermarket. Later, she claimed that she did not say this, rather that she had empathy for those losing their jobs, and pointed to a new Tesco supermarket as an example of new jobs being created in the face of the redundancies at the car manufacturing plant.
Related Topics:
June 17 - 2005 - MG Rover - Tesco
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