Laura Pidcock Net Worth 2023, Age, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Salary

Laura Pidcock net worth

Read about Laura Pidcock net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, salary and party as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Laura Pidcock is a British former Labour Party politician who served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for North West Durham from 2017 until 2019 when she lost her seat. She served as Shadow Secretary of State for Employment Rights in Jeremy Corbyn’s Shadow Cabinet. Pidcock described climate change as the “biggest issue facing humanity”, and spoke at School Strike for Climate demonstrations.

Pidcock lost her seat to the Conservative Richard Holden, who won the constituency with a majority of 1,144 in the 2019 parliamentary election. Pidcock was elected to the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party in November 2020, from which she resigned in January 2022. She is currently the National Secretary of the People’s Assembly Against Austerity.

Early life

NameLaura Pidcock
Net Worth$2 million
OccupationPolitician
Age35 years
Height1.68m
Laura Pidcock net worth

Laura Pidcock was born on August 19, 1987 (age 35 years) in North Shields, North Tyneside, United Kingdom. She was raised in New Hartley and Seaton Delaval, Northumberland. Her parents were both active in politics. Her mother Mary was a social worker while her father Bernard was an office manager who was a member of the Northumberland County Council from 2008 until his death in February 2019.

Pidcock recollects, at the age of 3, attending demonstrations with her parents against then-Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, and against the apartheid system in South Africa. Pidcock has stated, “From a very, very young age I was taught to see everything through a political lens and through a class lens”, and that at school she was known as “the political one” and a “swot”.

Career

She studied politics at Manchester Metropolitan University, and was a mental health support worker before working within, then managing, the education team at the anti-racism charity Show Racism the Red Card. She completed an MSc in Disaster Management and Sustainable Development at Northumbria University in 2012, with research focusing on children’s institutions in Bulgaria.

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Pidcock was a councilor for Cramlington Eastfield division on Northumberland County Council until she lost her seat to the Conservative Party candidate in the 2017 local elections. Only weeks prior to the 2017 United Kingdom general election, Pidcock was selected to stand for Labour in North West Durham, when the previous MP, Pat Glass, stood down.

A feminist, she said in her maiden speech that the Palace of Westminster dated from “a time when my class and my sex would have been denied a place in it, because we are deemed unworthy”. Her speech was shared over 200,000 times on social media in 48 hours.

On 12 January 2018, she was appointed Shadow Minister for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. Pidcock was later appointed to the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for Employment Rights. Pidcock announced at the 2019 TUC that the next Labour Government would create a Ministry for Employment Rights to “bring about the biggest extension of rights for workers that our country has ever seen” to deliver better wages, greater security and give workers more of a say over how their workplaces are run.

Pidcock lost her seat at the 2019 general election. The winning candidate, Richard Holden, subsequently stated that “she represented a branch of the Labour Party that wasn’t mainstream, which wasn’t what people thought of as traditional Labour and that’s what happened tonight”. It was the first time the seat had not returned a Labour MP since its creation in 1950.

In July 2020, the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards ordered Pidcock to repay more than £3,800 after she used Commons stationery to accuse the government of a “betrayal” over the BBC license fee for over-75s. Pidcock had sent out more than 5,000 letters in September 2019 accusing the Conservatives of a “welfare cut”. She said she used a template from a House of Commons department but had made some changes. The Commissioner said these changes meant the letter “was no longer neutral and objective”. Pidcock said it had been an “honest mistake”.

Pidcock identifies as a socialist and supported the policies of party leader Jeremy Corbyn. A strong critic of the Conservative Party, she said that “I go to parliament to be a mouthpiece for my constituents and cl ass”. She stated in mid-2017 that Tories were “the enemy” and said she was “disgusted at the way they’re running this country”. Pidcock did not socialize with Conservative MPs and said that she had “absolutely no intention of being friends with any Tories.”

She criticized the Conservative government for doing far too little for working-class people and said that her then constituency had suffered long-term de-industrialization and lack of investment, leading to significant financial difficulties for many residents. She highlighted the rise in volunteer organizations to help support people who have been left behind by the state.

In December 2017, in a Parliamentary question to the Prime Minister, Theresa May, Pidcock condemned delays to payments under the Universal Credit system in the period just before Christmas, “the toughest financial time” for her constituents. She asked, “Is the roll-out a matter of gross incompetence or calculated cruelty?” She criticized the lack of proxy voting for pregnant women in Parliament, attending a vote in 2018 whilst in the late stages of pregnancy.

In early 2020, she led Richard Burgon’s unsuccessful campaign to be deputy leader of the Labour Party. That same year Pidcock was appointed as the National Secretary of the People’s Assembly Against Austerity. In November 2020, Pidcock was elected to the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party. In a Labour meeting in March 2021, former Deputy Leader Margaret Beckett, who was unaware her microphone was on, called Pidcock a “silly cow”. She subsequently apologized to Pidcock and said the remark was unjustifiable.

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In January 2022, Pidcock resigned from the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party in the wake of the Committee’s vote to not restore the Labour whip to Jeremy Corbyn and in the critique of decisions taken under Keir Starmer’s leadership, commenting that there was “an irreconcilable difference between the actions of the Labour Party as it stands and the principles that underpin the way I have been taught to treat people and my idea of what a political organization should be for” and that, at multiple levels of the organization, the Party had become “hostile territory for socialists”. In March 2022, Pidcock announced that she would not seek to be reselected as the Labour candidate for North West Durham.

Husband

Laura Pidcock was married to Daniel Kebede, the president of the National Education Union. Laura and her ex-partner have one son, born in July 2018. In June 2017, Pidcock said she would accept a council house, but there were none available. She claimed that she was unable to afford the deposit for her first home because of her university debt, so she was renting in the private sector. She bought a house jointly with Kebede in September 2018. As of April 2023, Laura Pidcock has no husband.

Laura Pidcock net worth

How much is Laura Pidcock worth? Laura Pidcock net worth is estimated at around $2 million. Her main source of income is from her primary work as a politician. Laura Pidcock’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $300,000 dollars annually. Her remarkable achievements have earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. She is one of the richest and most influential politicians in the United Kingdom. She stands at an appealing height of 1.68m and has a good body weight which suits her personality.

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