Read the write-up of Emily Thornberry net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, salary, MP, party, politics as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Emily Thornberry is a British politician who has been a Member of Parliament (MP) for Islington South and Finsbury since 2005. A member of the Labour Party, she has served as Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales since 2021, and previously from 2011 to 2014. She has also served as Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 2016 to 2020, Shadow First Secretary of State from 2017 to 2020 and Shadow Secretary of State for International Trade from 2020 to 2021.
Thornberry worked as a human rights lawyer from 1985 to 2005 and joined the Transport and General Workers’ Union. She was first elected to Parliament in 2005 and served as Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales in Ed Miliband’s shadow cabinet from 2011 until she resigned in 2014 after sending a tweet mocking a house with England flags. After Jeremy Corbyn won the 2015 Labour Party leadership election, Thornberry was appointed Shadow Minister of State for Employment in September 2015, Shadow Secretary of State for Defence in January 2016 and Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs in June 2016.
She was a candidate to succeed Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party in the 2020 leadership election but was eliminated from the race after failing to obtain the number of nominations needed. Thornberry was appointed to Keir Starmer’s shadow cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for International Trade and Shadow President of the Board of Trade in April 2020. She was appointed Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales in November 2021.
Early life
Name | Emily Thornberry |
Net Worth | $8 million |
Salary | $1.5 million |
Occupation | Politician |
Age | 61 years |
Height | 1.68m |
Emily Anne Thornberry was born on July 27, 1960 (age 61 years) in Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom. Her parents were Sallie Thornberry Bone, a teacher, and Cedric Thornberry, at the time teaching international law at the London School of Economics, and later a United Nations Assistant Secretary-General. When Thornberry was seven, her parents divorced and she had to leave their home with her mother and two brothers. After this, she relied on free school meals and food parcels, and their cats were euthanized to save money.
Thornberry’s mother later became a Labour councillor and mayor (representing Stoke in Guildford from 1983 to 2003), and her father stood as the Labour candidate for Guildford in the 1966 general election. She failed the eleven-plus exam, so attended a secondary modern school. She left to live with her father when she was fifteen until he left without warning to work for the United Nations when she was seventeen. She worked as a cleaner and a barmaid in London alongside resitting her O-Levels and taking her A-Levels.
She went on to study law at the University of Kent in Canterbury, graduating in 1982, and afterwards led the students’ union as an elected full-time officer. She was called to the Bar at Gray’s Inn and practiced as a barrister specializing in human rights law from 1985 to 2005 under Michael Mansfield at Tooks Chambers. Thornberry joined the Transport and General Workers’ Union in 1985.
Political career
Emily Thornberry stood as the Labour candidate in Canterbury in the 2001 general election but was defeated by the Conservative incumbent, Julian Brazier. Following the decision of Chris Smith not to stand again, Thornberry was selected as the Labour candidate for Islington South and Finsbury for the 2005 general election through an all-women shortlist of prospective candidates.
Thornberry was elected to Parliament with a majority of 484, narrowly beating the Liberal Democrats. Nick Smith (who was subsequently elected to Parliament representing Blaenau Gwent) served as her election agent. Thornberry made her maiden speech in the House of Commons on 24 May 2005. In Parliament, she has been a member of the Environmental Audit Committee and was on the Communities and Local Government Select Committee during the 2005–10 Parliament.
She has served as vice-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Cycling Group and the All-Party Parliamentary Pro-Choice and Sexual Health Group. In 2006, Thornberry was criticized by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards Philip Mawer for adding a quote from herself into a news release by the Electoral Commission. She was found not to have broken the Parliamentary code of conduct.
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Emily Thornberry’s main interests since becoming an MP have been in health, housing, the environment and equality. She has also spoken on the need for more affordable housing, particularly in Islington. In 2006, Thornberry introduced the Housing Association Bill, a Private Member’s Bill which sought to improve the control of housing association tenants over their landlords. Many of the ideas from this bill were taken up by the Cave Review. On environmental matters, Thornberry worked with Friends of the Earth and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) to campaign for a Climate Change Bill and a Marine Bill.
In 2006, Thornberry won the ePolitix Award for Environment Champion of the Year after being nominated by WWF. In 2008, Thornberry supported a change in the law to allow single women and lesbian couples to seek in vitro fertilization treatment. In 2009, she was appointed as a ministerial aide in the Department of Energy and Climate Change and attended the Copenhagen Summit in December that year with Joan Ruddock and Ed Miliband.
Opposition under Ed Miliband
In May 2010, Emily Thornberry was returned as MP for Islington South and Finsbury with an increased majority, in a seat identified as the Liberal Democrats’ top target in England for the 2010 general election. Thornberry was promoted to Shadow Minister for the Department of Energy and Climate Change in May 2010. In the role, she shadowed Charles Hendry. Thornberry missed out on a place in Labour’s shadow cabinet, then elected by Labour MPs, by one vote. She was instead promoted to the role of shadow care minister under the shadow health secretary John Healey.
As shadow care minister, Thornberry criticized the coalition government’s lack of action over failing care home operator Southern Cross, calling for action and that the government put in place a plan B should the operator fail. She criticized the government over the Winterbourne View care home abuse scandal, calling for an investigation into the affair. In April 2011, Thornberry surveyed all the local government directors of adult social care and highlighted the pressures on care for the elderly by the coalition government’s cuts to local authority funds.
Emily Thornberry was appointed shadow attorney general in October 2011, in which capacity she attended shadow cabinet meetings. Thornberry called for action by Dominic Grieve over Applied Language Solutions’ failure to provide interpreters for court proceedings and called on the attorney general to ensure that allegations of bribery involving Bernie Ecclestone were properly investigated.
Thornberry challenged David Cameron in 2011 over his false claims about wages at Islington Council, campaigning against government measures that Thornberry claimed to have exacerbated child poverty in Islington, and answering over 1,000 inquiries a month from constituents. Thornberry resigned her shadow cabinet position on 20 November 2014, shortly after polls closed in the Rochester and Strood by-election. Earlier in the day, she had received criticism after tweeting a photograph of a house in the constituency adorned with three flags of St. George and the owner’s white van parked outside on the driveway, under the caption “Image from #Rochester”, provoking accusations of snobbery.
She was criticized by fellow Labour Party MPs, including leader Ed Miliband who said her tweet conveyed a “sense of disrespect”, Chris Bryant who said that it broke the “first rule of politics” and Simon Danczuk who said that the party had been “hijacked by the north London liberal elite”.
Opposition under Jeremy Corbyn
Emily Thornberry was appointed in September 2015 as the shadow minister for employment by the new Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn. She was promoted to shadow defense secretary in January 2016, replacing Maria Eagle. Thornberry advocated spending money on the army rather than on the UK’s Trident nuclear programme. On being appointed, Thornberry was interviewed by the British Forces Broadcasting Service, where she defended her appointment, saying she had “quite a lot more experience than people might think I do. I was made an honorary lieutenant colonel when I was doing court-martials when I was a barrister so I have a certain amount of experience of the military there.” However, she does not, nor did she ever, hold the claimed rank.
Thornberry conducted a review of defense policy during her role as shadow defense secretary, including the role of the nuclear deterrent, which was delayed following the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum. During a private Labour discussion about the nuclear deterrent, Thornberry asked what “Defcon One”, a status of the United States nuclear defense rating, meant.
She was promoted to Shadow Foreign Secretary in June 2016 after Corbyn fired Hilary Benn. She held the role of Shadow Brexit Secretary concurrently until Keir Starmer took on the role later that year. She accused Sky News presenter Dermot Murnaghan of sexism after he asked her to name the French minister of foreign affairs and international development, Jean-Marc Ayrault and the president of South Korea, which she was unable to do. Following the 2017 general election, she was given the additional role of Shadow First Secretary of State, effectively acting as Corbyn’s number 2.
Thornberry opposed Britain’s involvement in the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen against the Shia Houthis. She said that “while Saudi Arabia will remain a valued strategic, security and economic ally in the years to come, our support for their forces in Yemen must be suspended until the alleged violations of international humanitarian law in that conflict have been fully and independently investigated.” In May 2018 Thornberry said support in Syria for the country’s president, Bashar al-Assad, had been “underestimated” in the West.
In October 2018 Thornberry criticized Theresa May’s government’s response to Jamal Khashoggi’s disappearance as “too little, too late”. She said: “Imagine how this government would have reacted if either Russia or Iran had abducted–and in all likelihood murdered–one of their dissident journalists within the sovereign territory of another country.” After Corbyn announced he was stepping down as leader, Thornberry was the first to officially announce that she would be running for leader of the Labour Party.
In the week after the election, defeated Labour MP Caroline Flint appeared on Sophy Ridge on Sunday and accused Thornberry of saying that Brexit voters in Northern England were ‘stupid’. Thornberry appeared on ITV News and accused Flint of ‘making up shit about her’ and threatened to take legal action. She was eventually eliminated from the leadership election after failing to achieve enough nominations from constituency parties or affiliated groups. After the killing of Qasem Soleimani in the 2020 Baghdad International Airport airstrike, Thornberry condemned the actions of the United States government. She said that she shed no tears over the death, but was fearful of escalating tensions in the region.
Opposition under Keir Starmer
Emily Thornberry was replaced as Shadow Foreign Secretary by Lisa Nandy upon the election of Keir Starmer as Leader of the Labour Party. Thornberry herself was not sacked from the Official Opposition frontbench, but instead moved to a different frontbench role, becoming the new Shadow Secretary of State for International Trade. She replaced Barry Gardiner, and said on Twitter that, “It’s been a pleasure to work with Barry Gardiner these past four years… I hope I can take the fight to the government on International Trade as effectively as he did, and I’ll be very lucky to have his advice”.
In late December 2020, Thornberry voted for the European Union (Future Relationship) Act 2020, in line with the Labour Chief Whip. In the November 2021 shadow cabinet reshuffle, Thornberry was appointed Shadow Attorney General for England and Wales. Thornberry’s constituency falls within the London Borough of Islington, one of the most deprived areas of the country with disproportionately high house prices and private sector rents. She has supported measures by Islington Council to free up under-occupied homes by supporting tenants to downsize and to stop foreign investors from buying new homes and leaving them empty.
She has also called for a greater degree of control over private sector rents and more support for social house-building. Thornberry has frequently campaigned for a greater commitment to affordable and social housing. She was criticized when the local Islington Tribune newspaper discovered that her husband had bought a former social house that was being rented out to her aides. Thornberry said the purchase was “not about property speculation”.
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In 2015 Thornberry clashed with Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, over the proposed redevelopments of the Mount Pleasant Mail Centre, the sorting office run by the Royal Mail, and the Clerkenwell Fire Station, both in her constituency. Camden and Islington councils sought to require a high proportion of the resulting new homes to be made available for social rent, but Johnson overturned this and allowed homes designated as “affordable” to charge rents of up to 80 percent of market rates. Thornberry criticized Johnson, describing his definition of affordability as “nonsense”, and called for at least 50% of homes in the new developments to be made available for social rent.
In 2013, on the 100th anniversary of the death of the suffragette Emily Davison, Thornberry called for a statue commemorating Davison in Parliament. She arranged a public meeting to discuss options for a memorial, attended by around 800 people, and settled on the idea of a statue as an appropriate memorial, pointing out that there were very few statues of female politicians and activists in Parliament. However, in March 2015, Thornberry launched a campaign for a new Equal Pay Act. She said that 45 years after the original Equal Pay Act was passed in 1970, women still earned 19% less than men on average.
House, Properties, Other issues
Emily Thornberry has lived in Islington since the early 1990s. Since 1993 they have lived on Richmond Crescent, Barnsbury, where Tony Blair also lived until the 1997 general election, moving in on the same day as the Blairs. Thornberry also part-owns properties in Guildford and South London; her property portfolio “is believed to be worth £4.6 million.”
In April 2005, it was reported that Thornberry and Nugee had sent their son to the partially selective Dame Alice Owen’s state school 14 miles (23 km) from their home and outside her constituency. The school was formerly based in Islington and reserved a quota of 10% of its places for Islington pupils. The Labour Party opposes selection and Thornberry was criticized over the matter as a result. Chris Woodhead, the former chief inspector of schools, said: “I celebrate her good sense as a parent and deplore her hypocrisy as a politician. When will those who espouse the virtues of comprehensive education apply the logic of their political message to their children?” Later, Thornberry’s daughter attended the same school.
Husband
Emily Thornberry is married to Christopher Nugee, they had their wedding in July 1991. Emily and her husband’s marriage ceremony took plate at Wilberforce Chambers, in Tower Hamlets. The couple has three children, two sons, and a daughter. Her husband Nugee later became Queen’s Counsel, then a High Court Judge, when he was knighted, at which point Thornberry became entitled to be styled Lady Nugee, but does not use the title. Nugee later became a Lord Justice of Appeal. As of mid-2022, Emily Thornberry and her husband Christopher Nugee are still married.
Emily Thornberry net worth
How much is Emily Thornberry worth? Emily Thornberry net worth is estimated at around $8 million. Her main source of income is from her career as a politician. Thornberry’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $1.5 million annually. Her successful career has earned her some luxurious lifestyles and fancy car trips. She is one of the richest and most influential politicians in the United Kingdom. Thornberry stands at an appealing height of 1.68m and has a good body weight which suits her personality.