Mr Speaker We come now to tributes to the late Baroness
Jowell, former Member of Parliament for Dulwich and West Norwood.
While there is not time today for many right hon. or hon. Members
to speak, I know that many of you would like to record your
memories of her, and her contribution both to Parliament and to the
nation. I am confident—I repeat, I am confident—that there will be
other opportunities for you to do so in the...Request free trial
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Mr Speaker
We come now to tributes to the late , former Member of Parliament for Dulwich and West
Norwood. While there is not time today for many right hon. or
hon. Members to speak, I know that many of you would like to
record your memories of her, and her contribution both to
Parliament and to the nation. I am confident—I repeat, I am
confident—that there will be other opportunities for you to
do so in the coming days and weeks.
Prime Minister, Leader of the Opposition, colleagues in all
parts of the House: in offering my own heartfelt condolences
to Tessa’s family, together with my own deeply felt personal
tribute, I shall attempt for once to lead by example, and be
uncharacteristically brief.
The embodiment of empathy, a stellar, progressive
change-maker, and a well of practical compassion without
rival,
was the best of us. I rue her tragic and untimely passing,
which leaves all of us in this place, and countless others
beyond it, infinitely and permanently poorer. May Tessa rest
in peace.
3.35 pm
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The Prime Minister (Mrs Theresa May)
Before I pay tribute to , may I apologise to you, Mr Speaker, and the
whole House that I may not be able to remain to hear all
the tributes as I am due to welcome the President of Panama
to Downing Street this afternoon?
I am sure the whole House was deeply saddened by the
passing of
this weekend. She was a most extraordinary
politician, colleague and campaigner, but she was also a
loving mother and wife, and our thoughts and sympathies at
this time must be with her family: her husband David, her
children Jess and Matthew, and her stepchildren Eleanor,
Luke and Annie.
Jess said this morning: “It is the greatest honour of my
life to be her daughter,” but, Mr Speaker, we were all
honoured to share this Chamber with Dame Tessa, and we are
here to pay tribute to her life and work—to her warmth, her
compassion and her incredible strength of character.
I was fortunate enough to meet Tessa while she was
confronting her illness, and her dignity and courage were
as humbling as they were inspirational. She was resolutely
brave, not only in how she faced her treatment, but also
through the way in which she spoke so openly about her
illness and campaigned tirelessly for greater brain cancer
research. Even at what must have been some of her most
difficult moments, her compassion for others shone through.
Like many across the House, Tessa began her career in
politics as a councillor, becoming an MP in 1992 and
entering Government in 1997. Whether as councillor, a Back
Bencher or a Minister, she was defined by her devotion to
public service.
Throughout her time in Parliament, she would always reach
out to an MP of any party who was going through a tough
time; whether it was personal or professional, she would be
there for them. For Tessa was a person first and a
politician second. And nowhere was that humanity greater
than with the support she provided to the loved ones of
those who died in the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and 7/7.
Her advocacy was so compelling because Dame Tessa was never
one to take no for an answer, something I believe she put
down to her Scottish roots.
Dame Tessa certainly refused to take no for an answer when
many said that London should not even bid for the 2012
Olympic and Paralympic games. As Secretary of State at the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport, she persuaded
and the Cabinet, the
civil service and ultimately the whole country to get
behind the bid. That historic summer of 2012, which brought
us together so powerfully as a nation, would simply not
have happened without her.
’s political achievements were outstanding. But
those who know her will also never forget her sense of
humour. For many years after London won that Olympic bid
the screensaver on her phone was a photo of her and David
Beckham after the announcement—hugging. As she said: “You
can be a feminist but still be susceptible to a David
Beckham moment.”
Dame Tessa brought all those qualities of compassion,
passion and determination to her final, and perhaps most
important, campaign: on brain cancer. Her impact was
reflected in yesterday’s announcement of the brain cancer research fund, and it will live on
in an annual global symposium, to be hosted by the UK, to
bring together the best clinical, scientific and academic
minds on brain cancer.
No one who heard her extraordinary speech in the House of
Lords when she spoke about her own brain tumour could have
failed to be moved. As she said in that speech:
“In the end, what gives a life meaning is not only how it
is lived, but how it draws to a close.”—[Official Report,
House of Lords, 25 January 2018; Vol. 788, c. 1170.]
Dame Tessa lived out those words. To the end, she fought
not for herself, not for her party, but for everyone
affected by this most cruel of diseases. It was typical of
the spirit with which she approached her whole life.
The outpouring of tributes this weekend, from those who had
the privilege to know her and those who did not, shows the
extent to which her courage and service inspired us all.
Her legacy will live on.
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Mr Speaker
Thank you, Prime Minister. Colleagues, it is typical of our
beloved Chaplain, the Rev. Rose, that she joins us for
these exchanges. I call the Leader of the Opposition,
.
3.40 pm
-
(Islington North)
(Lab)
Thank you very much, Mr Speaker, and thank you for
arranging this half hour of tributes to . We are grateful to you for that, and we are
grateful to the Prime Minister for what she has just said
about Tessa. Right across the House, people were devastated
when they heard the news of Tessa’s death. Like the Prime
Minister, I send my condolences to her family and friends
and to everyone who knew her well. The media coverage
yesterday and this morning goes way beyond the coverage of
the death of a normal politician. It goes way beyond that
because it brings in the way in which she lived her life
and the way in which she died.
I knew Tessa for a very long time. She was a warm and
compassionate person. Prior to coming to this House in 1992
as the Member for Dulwich and West Norwood, she was a
councillor in Camden in the 1970s, which is where I first
met her—I in my role as a union organiser and she in her
role as a councillor. There is always a basic synergy
between the two. She was Labour’s candidate in a
by-election in Ilford North in 1978, and many of us trudged
along many streets in support of her at that time.
Unfortunately, she was not elected then, but she came into
the House sometime after that. In Camden, Tessa was
instrumental in trying to bring an end to the pay dispute
in 1979 by offering us lots of money. When we wanted a
national settlement, she offered us a local one. It was
very kind of her. It was an attempt to try to support
low-paid workers in her constituency in Camden.
In Government, Tessa was absolutely determined to bring
about Sure Start, which was one of the great achievements
of that Government. The idea was that all children and all
families should have a place and be supported in the
difficult times that they were going through. Sure Start
helped to lift 1 million children out of poverty, and I
thank her for that. I also thank her for being an active
NHS campaigner in London from the moment she entered this
House in 1992. I worked with her on that, and I was very
happy to do so.
Tessa’s pivotal moment was helping to win the 2012 Olympics
for London, when she persuaded a probably reluctant Prime
Minister, an undoubtedly reluctant civil service and a
probably reluctant just-about-everybody-else with her
amazingly penetrating stare, saying, “Well, you’ve got to
do it!” And of course, everyone had to do it and they did.
She then showed her skills in diplomacy by putting together
a team consisting of , Ken Livingstone and herself
to deliver the Olympics for London. I have never forgotten
her describing the chances of a British gold medal in
taekwondo to a meeting of Labour MPs. I do not think that
any of us knew what taekwondo was, but we did not want to
admit that to her, so we all said, “Well done, yes, it’s
bound to go well.” She actually tried taekwondo, and she
was just as formidable at that as she was later in putting
her case to the House of Lords. So, well done Tessa on
that.
Tessa’s recent speech in the House of Lords was just
amazing. We live our lives and enjoy our lives and none of
us wants it to end, but she was able to convey to the House
and to the world that living your life is also about how
you end your life and about the legacy that you leave
behind. It was such a brave and selfless speech, and it
took so much out of her, but she was determined to do it.
Using her platform as a Member of Parliament in the House
of Lords to raise awareness of brain cancer was truly
amazing: well done her. She will be remembered for her
passion, for her sense of social justice, for her sense of
inclusion and for her sense of fun in dealing with people.
Above all, she will be remembered for the manner of her
leaving us. Her children and family are obviously totally
devastated, but I think they can also be very proud of the
legacy she has left behind. It is wonderful that we now
have the brain cancer research fund, and I hope that we
will all support that so that others do not have to suffer
in the awful way that she suffered. She taught us how to
live, and I think she also taught us how to die.
3.44 pm
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Sir (East Devon) (Con)
I have been in this House since 2001—far less time than
some colleagues—and I have come to distinguish between when
the House comes together to lament a former colleague
because it feels it ought to and when it comes together to
lament a departed colleague because it feels it wants to.
There can be no doubt that the latter is the case this
afternoon. Many people in the House knew Tessa far better
than I did, worked with her far more closely and were far
more ideologically wedded to her beliefs, but it was my
privilege—as much as being in opposition can be a
privilege—to be the shadow Culture Secretary when she was
Secretary of State, and I want to take a few seconds to
thank her for her extraordinarily unpartisan behaviour.
Tessa embodied the best in a Minister—one who goes about
their business trying to do what they believe is in the
best interests of the country, not necessarily of the
party. It was of course my job to rubbish the Olympic bid
and to rubbish the dome, both of which I did extremely
unconvincingly, I am sure. However, Tessa was unfailingly
courteous to me and my family, and I miss her as much as
anyone else.
3.45 pm
-
(Perth and North
Perthshire) (SNP)
On behalf of the Scottish National party, I express my deep
condolences to Dame Tessa’s family and friends and note the
passing of one of the truly great parliamentarians of the
past 30 years. I had the great pleasure of shadowing Tessa
at the Department of Culture, Media and Sport from 2001 and
for the Olympics from 2005, and it would be impossible to
find a more accommodating, supportive and open colleague.
Even if she furiously disagreed with me, as she quite often
did, she was able to do so in the most charming and
personable of ways. I liked Tessa immensely. I enjoyed her
company, and she was always immensely knowledgeable of
every detail of her brief.
I remember when the London Olympics games were first
announced, and I can say now that there was not a huge
amount of enthusiasm among the SNP group for what we saw as
further spending in London, but that was important to
Tessa, and she had to ensure that the whole UK bought into
the project. She selflessly went around the UK in order to
recruit people as champions for the London Olympics, and
she even convinced us of the merits of the case.
The games will be her enduring legacy, but so will all her
work on Sure Start and the incredible, brave ways in which
she faced the months at the end of her life. I only saw
Tessa a couple of times during that period, but she was
still the same Tessa—determined and feisty, but always
personable and charming—and she would always remind me of
the contribution of the UK music industry to the economy. I
will miss her, and I wish her family all the best. Rest in
peace, Tessa.
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Mr Speaker
I call the Mother of the House, .
3.47 pm
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Ms (Camberwell and
Peckham) (Lab)
was the embodiment of that old women’s movement
saying: “The personal is political.” For Tessa, the
personal and the political were completely intertwined. Her
devotion to her children and her stepchildren was what
underpinned her drive for Sure Start children’s centres,
with parenting support at their heart. Her enjoyment of her
family and their prowess in sport was what lay behind her
wanting to get the Olympics for the UK. She wanted them and
the Paralympics to be shared and to inspire every child and
young person across the country.
Tessa had a unique personal style. She befriended people
who were struggling, had difficulties or were powerless,
whom she felt she could support, but she also befriended
the powerful in order to get them to back her progressive
causes. She was no softie, though. Everybody has quite
rightly said how charming and nice she was, but there was
steel behind those clear blue eyes. As her constituency
neighbour for 23 years, we went to countless meetings
together and worked together on countless campaigns. She
was always courteous and polite to the police, the schools,
the hospitals and the council, but if ever she felt that
they were obfuscating or letting people down, she would be
tougher than anybody. She was true Labour, as an activist,
as a councillor, as a Member of this House and as a Member
of the Lords, but she was never afraid to work cross-party
for the causes that she supported or to forge friendships
across parties. We are so sad for her family, especially
David, Jess and Matthew, but I know they will be strong
because she will have prepared them for the loss they
faced, just as she supported, on behalf of the Government,
those who faced loss after the 9/11 and 7/7 terrorist
attacks. We send them all our sympathy.
All around the country there will be people who are
listening to these tributes and who have heard of Tessa’s
death who worked with her, who knew her and who will be
feeling sad but also immensely proud that they can say, “I
knew .”
3.50 pm
-
(Dulwich and West
Norwood) (Lab)
It is a privilege to pay tribute to my predecessor as MP
for Dulwich and West Norwood, Baroness of Brixton, on behalf of the thousands of my
constituents whose lives she touched.
Tessa served our area as the MP for Dulwich—later Dulwich
and West Norwood—for 23 years from 1992 with a commitment
to making a difference every single day. Her legacy is
extraordinary, from five brilliant new schools to Sure
Start centres, the turnaround of King’s College Hospital
and the countless community groups she championed. Tessa is
much loved across the constituency for the things she
delivered, but perhaps even more for her deep empathy and
compassion, her ability to connect with people and the way
she worked collaboratively to empower others.
Tessa’s legacy is national as well as local. Sure Start was
born of her passionate belief in the need to address the
disadvantage affecting children at the earliest
opportunity, and Sure Start centres have transformed the
lives of countless families. It was Tessa’s vision, which
she nurtured from idea to completion, that the London 2012
Olympics and Paralympics should be not just a singular
sporting event but the vehicle for transformative long-term
investment in east London and the most authentic and
glorious celebration of London and Londoners that we have
ever seen.
I last saw Tessa a few weeks ago, when her presence lit up
this Chamber as she attended the debate in her honour led
by my hon. Friend the Member for Croydon Central (Sarah
Jones). Tessa’s commitment to using her devastating brain
tumour diagnosis to campaign to make a difference for
others was no surprise to anyone who knew her, but it was
nevertheless extraordinary and extremely brave. At a
reception following the debate, Tessa was determined to
speak. Although her language was much affected by her
tumour, among the words she managed to articulate were
“determined,” “love” and “lucky”—the essence of Tessa,
whose determination and love led her to deliver so much and
who leaves so many of us feeling lucky to have known her.
Tessa’s legacy in Dulwich and West Norwood is in our
schools, our hospital and our community, and it is in our
culture of campaigning, which puts people at its centre. We
are grateful to have had so much of her time. Our thoughts
and love are with David, Jessie and Matthew and the rest of
Tessa’s family on their deep loss. I hope they will take
some comfort from knowing that Tessa leaves the world a far
better place than she found it, and that there are many in
Dulwich and West Norwood, and across the country, who will
ensure that her tremendous legacy lives on.
3.53 pm
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Mr (Orkney and
Shetland) (LD)
On behalf of Liberal Democrats in Parliament and, indeed,
throughout the country, I offer our condolences to the
family and friends of .
Tessa was already a Cabinet Minister when I was first
elected in 2001 so, unlike others, I cannot claim to have
had a close association with her as she made her way up
through the ranks. When I speak to my colleagues and former
colleagues who did know her well, either from her time in
office here or from working on the 2012 London Olympics, I
get the same messages time and again: always cheerful; good
at building consensus; boundless energy; and a natural team
player. Perhaps less well known and less remarked upon is
the fact that all those qualities were displayed towards
not just MPs, peers and Ministers, but all others with whom
she worked in Parliament and in the civil service. When I
was Secretary of State for Scotland, I acquired a member of
my private office who had previously worked as part of
Tessa’s private office in the then Department for Culture,
Media and Sport. Despite it being more than four years
since he had worked as part of Tessa’s team, he always
spoke warmly—and with very little prompting—about how great
it had been to work with her. Like so many others, he spoke
with pride and affection. He was always kind enough never
to draw a direct comparison with his experience working for
me; for once, I was sensible enough not to ask.
Although one would not have known it to listen to her
speak, Tessa had a long- standing association with the
north-east of Scotland. She was educated there, in St
Margaret’s School for Girls in Aberdeen and later at
Aberdeen University, where she was both a graduate and an
honorary graduate. The university principal, Professor Sir
Ian Diamond, spoke yesterday of her helpfulness and
humanity. Unlike some universities, the University of
Aberdeen has never been over-represented on these Benches
but—I declare an interest as an alumnus—I like to think
that what we lack in quantity we have been able to make up
for in quality. I have never been able to think of a better
way of advancing that argument than by reference to
.
leaves a legacy that is substantial in politics,
and it will be enduring. I think that she would be a little
frustrated to think that her life might be defined by the
way in which it ended but, as a member of the all-party
group on brain tumours, I want to comment on the
enormous impact she has made for those who suffer from
brain cancers. A couple of years ago, I raised with
at Prime Minister’s
questions the subject of funding for brain tumour research.
I was astonished at the response I got—emails and messages
from people thanking me for raising the issue and saying
that this was something that affected their son, daughter,
husband, wife, friend or neighbour. They came from people
whose lives had been touched by the condition—some of whom
I knew quite well—but never felt able to talk about it. For
some reason that is well beyond my understanding, brain
cancers seem to be the last cancer taboo in our society,
but because of the way in which dealt with hers—with courage and candour—I am
sure that that taboo is weaker today than it has ever been.
The money for research will doubtless help us to find
better cures, but Tessa’s courage will be the biggest hope
and encouragement to thousands.
3.57 pm
-
(Croydon Central)
(Lab)
Last month we held a debate on cancer and paid tribute to
Tessa. Just before that debate, Tessa said to me, “This is
not about me; this is about what comes next.” She would
therefore not forgive me if I did not both welcome the new
Government money that has been announced today and say that
together we can go further. I look forward to working with
the Government on the data sharing, clinical trials and
research to come.
Having been helped by Tessa, having been friends with her
and having been her employee, I saw the velvet and the
steel in . She always got what she wanted, but she always
wanted the best for others. The best advice she ever gave
me—and gave anyone—was, “Never take no for an answer.” She
never gave up. I wish to repeat the words from Tessa that I
read out in the debate here last month:
“It was the honour of my life to be one of you, and I shall
cheer on from the sidelines as you keep fighting the good
fight. So remember our battle cry: living with, not dying
of, cancer. For more people, for longer. Thank you.”
3.59 pm
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Dame (Barking) (Lab)
I first really got to know Tessa when we were both very
pregnant—I with my last child, and she with her first,
Jessie. In those days, we did try to cuddle each other, but
we were both slightly vertically challenged, so with these
big bellies, it was—
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Mr Speaker
There is a lot to be said for it.
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(Rhondda) (Lab)
What, pregnancy?
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Mr Speaker
The vertical challenge.
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Dame
It was jolly hard to get your arms around her, but that was
what you always wanted to do with Tessa: you did want to
give her a cuddle. I remember the early days of our
relationship, when we would spend the time talking about
nappies and sleepless nights on the one hand, and on the
other discussing how we would make Labour electable and our
latest very good idea. That was her, really; as my right
hon. and learned Friend the Member for Camberwell and
Peckham (Ms Harman) said, the personal was very much the
political with Tessa.
Tessa was already a successful politician before she came
into Parliament. I knew her when she was chair of social
services in Camden, and she chaired the social services
committee at the Association of Metropolitan Authorities.
She did incredibly radical things on diversity and on care
for the elderly in the community. I well remember that she
worked for a while for Birmingham City Council and tried to
devise its policy for caring for the elderly outside of old
people’s homes. She did what Tessa would always do: she
spent endless nights in those homes so that she could
really feel what the people who were living that life felt.
That informed the way in which she devised policy.
As well as being a feminist—she was a feminist with many of
us during the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s—Tessa was incredibly
feminine. Her home was always filled with fresh flowers,
and Friday was Tessa on the splurge, going to buy lots of
flowers. While her husband David cooked the meals, she
created the ambiance that made people feel positive and
comfortable, with beautiful things around the room. She was
the go-to person if you wanted any advice on style: for
hair—we shared the same hairdresser; for fitness—she went
to this absolutely ghastly place in Austria where they
really pulled it out of you; and for the most beautiful
clothes. When we went to Pontignano for an annual
get-together of the Italian and UK left, we would go off
for an afternoon to see what was in the Siena shops.
Tessa was a people-focused politician and a feminist, and
she showed awesome courage all the way through her life,
but particularly in her last years. Death is a part of all
our lives, but the people who were with us yesterday remain
a part of all our present and our future. Tessa touched
countless people’s lives when she lived; their experience
will form part of the legacy that she leaves behind. We
salute her and celebrate who she was and what she achieved.
4.02 pm
-
(Normanton, Pontefract
and Castleford) (Lab)
Tessa was the mother of Sure Start, and also Britain’s
first Public Health Minister. She started some amazing
things, including the teenage pregnancy strategy, which
worked, and Sure Start itself, into which she threw so much
of herself—literally. I was lucky enough to follow her into
the Public Health job and to see some of the amazing work
she had done. The things that were most valuable in Sure
Start—not only the warmth, the empathy, and the focus on
families and whole communities, but the ambition, the
aspiration, and that wider support and emotion—were also
all the things that we valued about Tessa and her life.
What she saw in her own family, with David, Jessie and
Matthew—all her family, for whom we now feel so much—was
what she worked so hard to provide for other families
throughout the country.
I know that when we think about Tessa and the Olympics, we
are supposed to think about her steely determination in
getting the games to happen. We are supposed to think about
her amazing values of inclusion and diversity, which she
infused throughout the Olympics, whether in the amazing
Danny Boyle opening ceremony that she commissioned, the
games makers she championed, or the sending of the torch
all around the country. All that is true, but I cannot help
but keep remembering a meeting before the London Olympics
in which she briefed us in some detail, and with great
frankness, about her plans to distribute condoms throughout
the Olympic village. She said, “Well, there are going to be
all these athletes with their beautiful bodies, and when
they finish their races they’re going to have a lot of sex,
and we have a responsibility to keep them safe!” That, in
the end, along with the twinkle in her eye, was Tessa. She
was completely down to earth and practical; she had no
qualms or squeamishness about all aspects of people’s
lives. That was what made her so remarkable—that
down-to-earth quality and also the great visions that she
had. We know that she leaves a huge legacy not just around
cancer, not just around the Olympics, not just around Sure
Start, and not just in the hearts of all those who met her
and were inspired by her, but for all those who did not
meet her but whose lives were changed for the better by the
work that she did.
4.05 pm
-
(Don Valley)
(Lab)
In following my right hon. Friend the Member for Normanton,
Pontefract and Castleford (Yvette Cooper), as a former
Public Health Minister, I can say that I was so glad that
Tessa put the public health case for condoms during that
briefing—once a Public Health Minister, always a Public
Health Minister.
Tessa was a lovely and delightful person, but she was not a
saint. There were a few off-the-record conversations and
discussions that we had when she let rip with a few choice
swear words. We were part of a relatively small group of
colleagues—, , , —who had a “Come
Dine with Me” club. Occasionally we would try to escape
this place, and one of us would cook for the rest of the
group. I remember the papers got a sniff of this somewhere
and said that we were plotting some terrible overthrow or
what have you. To be honest, we just got together to have a
nice glass of wine, give points for the food that we were
being served by the person whose turn it was, and to have a
good gossip about this place.
Tessa was a great listener. She was always hands on in
every job that she did. In many respects, she sets an
example for Ministers today and in the future. One thing
about the jobs she did—whether it was Minister for Public
Health, for the Olympics or for London—was that she put her
heart and soul into them. She was not looking to the next
job or the next promotion. She devoted herself to the job
in hand. Truthfully, Tessa had so many firsts to be proud
of, but she would have been a great Secretary of State for
Health. Actually, she would have been a great Foreign
Secretary, given her talent for bringing people together.
At this very sad time, emotions will be raw for her family,
but she will live on through them and their children. For
all of us, she will live on in our hearts.
4.07 pm
-
Mr (Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
I first met Tessa in a stable. It was the 1992 general
election, and I was the shadow Home Office Minister—the
deputy to Roy Hattersley—covering policing. Roy said, “Go
down to the stables where the Metropolitan police have
their horses and get a photo opportunity with this
candidate.” I pitched up somewhere, which must have been in
the constituency, and saw this very lovely young candidate
standing near three enormous horses snorting—there was not
exactly fire coming out of their noses, but it was pretty
close. If anyone has been close to one of those horses,
they will know how big they are. The PR person said, “One
of you has to get on that horse for the photograph.” I
said, “Well, I’m only here to support Tessa.” I will tell
you what: Tessa—and she was small—stepped up and stroked
the nose of the horse, and in about two minutes, she was
his best friend. She got up on the horse—I remember putting
the hat on—and we had the photo opportunity. That was how I
first met Tessa. When she arrived in this House, we already
had something in common.
I have been in this place for quite a long time. I have
seen some really superb parliamentarians on both sides of
the House, but there are some who bring a certain sparkle
to this place—they are just different. Mo Molam was one,
and Tessa was as well. David Beckham was not the only
person who got a hug from Tessa. If you pleased her or if
you did something as part of her team, she gave you a hug.
She liked to give a hug. She also brought fun into this
place. Sometimes we are a bit dreary in these Chambers. If
Tessa walked into a room, it felt like a bit of joy was
coming through the door. I remember her with love and
affection. I remember her enlivening this Parliament, which
can sometimes be a bit dry and dusty. I especially remember
that she had that quality of sparkle. Although I am a bit
of a bad Christian, I still think of both of them—Mo Molam
and Tessa—up there smiling and bringing joy wherever they
are.
4.09 pm
-
(Hove) (Lab)
There have been many wonderful tributes to Tessa. One of
the many that would have pleased her hugely was yesterday’s
from the former Prime Minister, . He described in
detail the rigour with which Tessa put forward her case in
the now famous meeting at which she pitched the Olympics to
him. Tessa described that same meeting to me a few years
ago, and it was identical to Mr Blair’s description—with
one addition. She said that at the end of the meeting she
turned informally to him and said, “Do you want to be the
Prime Minister who had the Olympics within their grasp and
chose to turn away?” That, for me, was Tessa. She had
learnt to weaponise the male ego, and woe betide any big
beast that stood between her and one of her political
objectives. That somebody could have an Olympic-sized
vision and make it happen, yet do so leaving nothing but a
trail of love and laughter, is a modern day political
miracle. For those of us who knew her, she was that
miracle. [Hon. Members: “Hear, hear.”]
4.11 pm
-
(Strangford) (DUP)
I wish to add my contribution and heartfelt words on behalf
of the Democratic Unionist party. I commend all who have
spoken so far, including you, Mr Speaker. You have a
tremendous grasp of the English language and set things out
in a succinct and helpful way—we all appreciate that very
much.
I may have only been here a short time, but I recall
’s wise and helpful contributions in this House
both while I was here and before I came to the House. She
had an everlasting smile. I always felt that she was a lady
who I would not want to get on the wrong side of, as other
Members have said, but she reached out to people
everywhere. One of my constituents phoned me this morning
to say that she was moved by Tessa’s life, and by her
courage, strength and determination that shone through.
Tessa touched the lives of many.
On a Thursday some three weeks ago, we had a debate in this
Chamber on brain cancer. You were also present for that
very emotional debate, Mr Speaker. Tessa sat right through
the debate—very much a campaign warrior—not too far from
where I stand now. She was so very obviously in pain, with
her head gently resting on her husband’s shoulder,
alongside her family, who were there to support her.
At this time of sorrow and grief, I say to Tessa’s husband,
family, friends and the many colleagues in this House who
knew her much better than I did: we have fond memories of a
lady who we will all miss greatly, but we remember with joy
what she did in this House right to the very end. God bless
Tessa.
4.12 pm
-
(Wakefield) (Lab)
We have heard a lot today about what Tessa did—her
outstanding legacy of bringing the Olympics and Paralympics
to London, and her amazing work—but I want to talk a little
bit about how she did it. I remember a fantastic speech
that she gave at the Labour party conference in 2005, when
I was a newly elected MP. She spoke about her plans to roll
out music education to every child, and mentioned a
conversation that she had had with a lady in a tower block
in Lambeth. She talked about that lady’s daughter, saying,
“I want this music education programme to reach everyone.
The test will be: will Rosa learn to play the violin?” I am
pretty certain that Rosa, in that tower block in Lambeth,
did get to play her violin.
I remember running into Tessa in the middle of the Olympic
games, when she was incredibly busy and under pressure. I
asked her, “What’s going on? How are you, Tessa?”, and she
said, “Well, I’m living here for the next six weeks.” I
said, “Gosh, are you not even going home? Do you have
enough stuff with you?” and she said, “Yes. Essentially, me
and Sebastian Coe are the joint mayors of the Olympic
village.” I just knew that she was glorying in that amazing
six weeks of tremendous sport.
A friend of mine sent me a text to say that she had been at
a housing association trust, where a nervous young man had
introduced Tessa as “Jessa Towell”. Tessa had just roared
with laughter. My friend said that everybody in the room
simply fell in love with Tessa at that moment. That is what
she was—irresistible, charming and funny, but with a little
bit of steel inside. She loved fashion. She could rock a
frock and she liked to shop. In the end, the moments I
treasure are the lifts home that she gave me, having some
pretty salty conversations on the way as well.
In an era of fast food, fast politics and fast media, Tessa
was a slow politician. I mean “slow” in the very best sense
of the word: every word, every deed, measured out for
kindness, for thoughtfulness and for compassion. Seamus
Heaney wrote in “At the Wellhead”:
“Being with her
Was intimate and helpful, like a cure
You didn’t notice happening.”
She leaves a legacy in our hearts. Rest in peace, Tessa.
4.15 pm
-
Mr (Wolverhampton South
East) (Lab)
was both a very special person and a very
special politician, and the qualities of one reinforced the
brilliance of the other. She was the best friend that
anyone could wish for: loyal, true, uplifting and
empathetic. There are many people in this House and outside
it who, when they found themselves at a low ebb, would know
that Tessa was there for them, holding out love and
support: never your judge and jury, always your friend and
shelter in a storm.
She was quite simply full of love—full of love for her
family, her friends, and the causes she believed in. She
loved London, our great capital city. She loved it for its
openness, its diversity, its endless opportunities, and its
focus on tomorrow rather than yesterday. As a politician,
she was a change-maker, a moderniser. Her mission was not
to preserve Britain or seek illusory solace in nostalgia
but to change it for the better—and always, always in a
progressive direction. For her, Sure Start—the mission to
give every child from whatever background the best possible
start in life—was not just a Government programme but a
symbol of what she believed the United Kingdom should stand
for.
For the London Olympics, she not only played a vital role
in winning the bid but helped to shape the character of
what, for many of us, was the greatest moment of
Britishness and the coming together of the country in our
lifetimes. She understood more than anyone that how we
hosted the games was as important as what happened in the
competition itself. She gave us our golden summer. She gave
the country our united golden moment.
Her love and empathy were there for the families of the
victims of terrorism on 9/11 and in the 7/7 London
underground bombings. There was Tessa, full of love and the
desire to help—the human embodiment of the total antithesis
of the hatred that had caused those people their grief.
And in her final illness, she was determined not to go
quietly into that good night. She fought for better
treatment for cancer sufferers and for international
collaboration on how to treat the disease, and—as the
Secretary of State can testify—used all her firmness and
charm to ensure that Ministers backed their words of
support with the very welcome new resources announced for
cancer research today. She was both proud of what she had
achieved and immensely grateful for having had the
opportunity to achieve it. She was thankful for the era
that she lived through—the modernising movement for
progressive change and social justice of which she was such
a vital and brilliant part.
At a time when there is so much that divides the country,
and when demonisation of others is all too readily reached
for and transmitted in the world of politics, we should
remember that represented the opposite of all that. Let us
give thanks and remember her not only for the wonderful
things that she did, but for the way that she did them, and
for the many lives that she changed for the better along
the way.
4.19 pm
-
(Feltham and Heston)
(Lab/Co-op)
Many of us walked around yesterday slightly dazed and
deeply saddened by the news of Tessa’s passing. She was
funny, kind, strong, generous, warm and brilliant, and she
was always there for any of us. She was a great support to
me and, I know, to many others when we were first elected
to this House, and her advice on politics and, indeed, the
practicalities of being an MP was incredibly helpful.
Winning the Olympics and all that did for our country, our
pride in each other and our place in the world, owed much
to her vision, her passion, her integrity and her
determination. It was a story of the best of our country, a
story of the best of politics and a story that showed the
best of Tessa. She was an inspiration, and in her final
months she gave voice and comfort to those who have been
suffering from brain tumours and their families,
like our friends Tara and Michelle Brady, who lost their
teenage daughter Addie to brain cancer just a few months
ago and who will be visiting me in Parliament tomorrow. We
had hoped that they would be able to meet Tessa and, had
she still been here with us, she would have hoped to meet
them.
We send our love to all Tessa’s family. I hope that she
would be as proud of how we take her legacy forward as we
are of her.
4.21 pm
-
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
was one of the greatest entrepreneurs in public
life that we have seen in this country for decades. She was
such a brilliant idealist not because she could talk with
people late into the night about the newest ideas or the
latest trends in thinking, but because she thought that the
best thing to do with ideas is turn them into action. She
was a practical idealist unlike any that we have seen for
many years.
She was tremendously persistent, but with that persistence
came the wisdom to know that sometimes progress did not
always happen in a straight line. She had one of the best
political sat-navs in the business. She knew that if you
hit a roadblock, that was not the end of the story. You
just had to figure how you went on round it.
She had tremendous passion, but she matched that with her
compassion. She knew that this business is a contact sport
and that many of us are perfectly capable of self-inflicted
wounds sometimes. She was never one to judge. She was
always the one—the first—to ring you, to hug you, and to
tell you reassuringly that it is always darkest before
dawn.
Above all, though, it was her political style that many of
us will remember. I was taught at the beginning of my
political career that there are two kinds of politicians:
those who try to divide us and those who try to make change
happen by bringing us together. With the Olympics, as with
so much in her life, she brought the whole world together
to make progress. Sometimes we on this side of the House
ask ourselves how futures are really built. provided the example, not just with her words
but with her deeds.
-
Mr Speaker
Thank you so much.
4.23 pm
-
Mr (Croydon North)
(Lab/Co-op)
For all that Tessa achieved on the national and
international stage, she never forgot the local. It was as
a local campaigner and politician that I first knew Tessa,
when I was leader of the opposition and then of the council
in Lambeth, where she was one of our fantastic local MPs.
Whether it was the young people, like Solomon and his
friends who set up the Brixton Soup Kitchen, or the
women—it usually was women, formidable, generous women—who
were running the residents associations on the estates she
represented, or the parents she worked with to set up the
country’s first parent-promoted secondary school, the
Elmgreen School in West Norwood, Tessa’s love was with
people and the communities they were part of.
Yesterday I spoke with Andy Troke, who for 20 years was
Tessa’s organiser in Dulwich and West Norwood. Andy said to
me that a very important part of Tessa’s legacy is that
there is a little bit of Tessa in thousands of us around
south London and around the country. We have been inspired
by her vision, her passion, her love and her empathy, and
we will take that legacy forward. As fantastic as Sure
Start is and as the Olympics were, those people are Tessa’s
legacy.
Tessa did me the enormous honour of asking me to chair her
mayoral bid—not with enormous success, it has to be said.
It is funny how things work out sometimes, because instead
of sitting in City Hall, she spent the past two years with
her family. Who could begrudge them the precious, treasured
moments that they spent together in what turned out to be
her last two years?
If I may, I would like to address my final comments to
Tessa’s family. Thank you for sharing Tessa with us. Today,
we stand with you in love and respect for this remarkable
woman.
-
Mr Speaker
Before 2010, the current Secretary of State for Health and
Social Care shadowed , and Tessa later came to shadow him, so I think
it is fitting that the final words in these exchanges
should go to the Secretary of State for Health and Social
Care.
4.25 pm
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr Jeremy
Hunt)
Thank you, Mr Speaker, for graciously allowing a second
contribution from the Government Front Bench.
Some people may wonder why a Conservative Government are so
determined to mark the legacy of a Labour Cabinet Minister,
but those who know, or knew, Tessa will not be surprised at
all, because she had an incredible gift for bringing people
together and breaking down barriers in a way that was unique
and inspiring. As many have said this afternoon, we saw that
in London 2012, when as Culture Secretary I had the
terrifying responsibility of making her dream come true—and
faced with Tessa, I never dared to put a foot wrong. What an
incredible success that was: real Tessa magic, bringing the
whole country together.
We saw those qualities latterly, and more tragically, when
almost as an aside in her final harrowing few months, she
decided that the Government needed to tear up our policy on
brain cancer and start again, so basically we have done so.
Thanks to her, and many other campaigners from this House and
outside this House, we are proud to announce today the
brain cancer mission, which seeks massively to increase
research and improve the treatment of this most challenging
of cancers. Today, the thoughts of all of us are with David,
Jess and Matthew. We hope and pray that, as a result of her
efforts, many more will survive this terrible disease—a final
and most wonderful gift of Tessa magic to the nation.
-
Mr Speaker
Thank you, colleagues, for what you have said and the manner
in which you have said it, which has witnessed the House at
its best.
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