UK - Gwyneth Dunwoody RIP

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UK - Gwyneth Dunwoody RIP

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"The railway industry has lost a good friend"

Veteran Labour MP Dunwoody dies

Veteran Labour MP Gwyneth Dunwoody, the longest-serving female MP in Parliament, has died at the age of 77.

Mrs Dunwoody, MP for Crewe and Nantwich since 1974, had been ill for the past week, her son said.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown described her as "politics at its best" and said she would be sadly missed.

As well as chairing the transport select committee, Ms Dunwoody was known as a prominent and much-admired fighter for backbenchers' rights.

She is reported to have recently undergone emergency open-heart surgery.

Leading the tributes, the prime minister said: "So many people will be so sad to hear of the death of Gwyneth Dunwoody.

"She was always her own person. She was fiercely independent."

Conservative leader David Cameron said he was "incredibly sad" to hear news of her death.

"She was an extraordinary MP, a real battler. Someone who was never prepared to just take the establishment view," said Mr Cameron.

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg said Mrs Dunwoody was "a fiercely principled and incredibly effective Parliamentarian" who would be "missed on all sides of the House".

'Sadly missed'

Ms Dunwoody's son David described her as a wonderful mother and grandmother.

He told the BBC she had died "in a gentle and calm way" on Thursday evening after being ill for about a week.

He said: "She was a woman who stood up and said what she believed was true. She defended people who didn't have anyone else to defend them.

"Everybody who knew her knew she believed passionately in everything that she did."

Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly, who crossed swords with Ms Dunwoody in appearances before her committee, said the veteran MP would be "sadly missed by her Labour colleagues".

"I always enjoyed my encounters with Gwyneth, but I always made sure I was fully briefed," she added.

Former Commons speaker and Labour MP Baroness Boothroyd, who was a close friend, said she was "a fighter in every respect who just wouldn't give up".

"She was always a rebel, but she was a rebel with a cause," she told BBC Radio 4's The World at One.

Former Labour MP Tony Benn said he was shocked by the news.

He said: "She was an independent-minded woman who always spoke her mind and will be badly missed.

"She was listened to with great attention from the House itself."

Ms Dunwoody joined the Labour Party in 1946 and first entered Parliament as the MP for Exeter in 1966. She came from a politically active family: both her grandmothers were suffragettes and her father Morgan Phillips was General Secretary of the Labour Party.

Her mother was a minister in the House of Lords and later became Lord Lieutenant of London.

From 1967 she was a minister on the former Board of Trade, before losing her seat in 1970.

She was elected MP for Crewe in 1974 - which became Crewe and Nantwich in a 1983 boundary change.

She was also a member of the European Parliament from 1974 to 1979.

Thorn in side

Always an independent figure, Mrs Dunwoody was frequently a thorn in the Government's side.

In 2001 she survived an attempt by Labour whips to remove her from the transport select committee - which under her chairmanship often produced highly critical reports.

Backbench Labour MPs refused to support the move when it went to a vote in the Commons.

The Labour MP, Stephen Pound, told the BBC: "The House rose as one to save our Gwyneth."

He said she was an "extraordinary person" and her views always deserved attention.

She was also widely admired by transport industry leaders, many of whom were grilled by her over the years at committee hearings.

George Muir, director-general of the Association of Train Operating Companies, said: "Gwyneth was a passionate supporter of the railway in the UK over many years and never afraid to express strong views on its development.

"We will miss her energy, enthusiasm and good humour. The railway industry has lost a good friend".

BBC
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