Matthew Pennycook

Politician

Birthday October 29, 1982

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Hammersmith, London, England

Age 41 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#63701 Most Popular

1982

Matthew Thomas Pennycook (born 29 October 1982) is a British politician who has served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Greenwich and Woolwich since 2015.

A member of the Labour Party, he has been Shadow Minister for Housing and Planning since 2021.

Matthew Thomas Pennycook was born on 29 October 1982, and was raised in a single-parent family in South London.

He was educated at Beverley Boys Secondary School, a comprehensive school in New Malden, London.

He joined the Labour Party at the age of nineteen.

2005

Pennycook studied History and International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science, graduating with a first-class Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 2005.

He was awarded the CS MacTaggart Scholarship Prize for the best overall degree performance in any subject.

He subsequently won a scholarship to attend Balliol College, Oxford, studying for a Master of Philosophy (MPhil) degree in International Relations.

While still a student, he volunteered with the Child Poverty Action Group and worked with then-Chief Executive, Kate Green, who became a Labour MP.

Before becoming an MP himself, Pennycook worked for a number of charitable and voluntary organisations including the Fair Pay Network and the Resolution Foundation where he led on issues relating to welfare reform, low pay and working poverty.

He also worked for a while in Parliament as an assistant to Labour MP Karen Buck.

2010

Pennycook was a Labour councillor for Greenwich West from 2010 to 2015, resigning in March 2015 just before the general election.

He also served as a trustee of Greenwich Housing Rights and was a school governor at James Wolfe Primary School in West Greenwich.

He has written multiple articles for The Guardian about the need for a living wage in the UK and has served on the Living Wage Foundation's advisory board.

2013

In November 2013, he was selected as the official Labour Party candidate for Greenwich and Woolwich, as the sitting MP, Nick Raynsford was retiring.

2015

At the 2015 general election, Pennycook was elected as MP for Greenwich and Woolwich with a majority of 11,946 votes and a 52.2% share of the vote on a turnout of 63.7%.

This was a 3% increase on Nick Raynsford's previous majority five years earlier.

Pennycook gave his maiden speech in the House of Commons during a debate on the economy on 4 June 2015.

In the leadership election following Labour's defeat at the 2015 general election, Pennycook endorsed Yvette Cooper and for the deputy leadership endorsed Tom Watson.

In July 2015, Pennycook became a member of the Energy and Climate Change Select Committee.

He served as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Shadow Minister of State for Housing, John Healey MP from 2015, resigning from the position in June 2016.

2016

He supported Sadiq Khan in the campaign for selection of the candidate for the 2016 London Mayoral election.

He was one of 161 Labour MPs who backed Owen Smith in his unsuccessful Labour Party leadership campaign to replace Jeremy Corbyn in September 2016.

Pennycook campaigned in favour of a "Remain" vote for the 2016 referendum on EU membership and his Greenwich and Woolwich constituency voted 64% to remain.

After the referendum results were announced, Pennycook was appointed one of the Shadow Ministers for Brexit in October 2016, and, in accordance with the Labour Party whip, voted for the Bill to trigger Article 50.

2017

At the snap 2017 general election, Pennycook was re-elected with an increased vote share of 64.4% and an increased majority of 20,714.

2018

In October 2018, Pennycook expressed concerns about newly qualified teachers leaving the profession.

He stated in an interview that "The crisis in teacher retention in London did not begin the day before yesterday, yet this Tory government still has no coherent plan to address the problem and no appetite to get to grips with the underlying drivers – workload, stagnant pay, rising living costs and a lack of genuinely affordable housing to rent and buy – that lie behind this worrying trend."

2019

In September 2019, he resigned as shadow Brexit minister in order to campaign actively in favour of holding a second referendum and unequivocally for the UK to stay in the EU.

At the 2019 general election, Pennycook was again re-elected, seeing his share of the vote decrease to 56.8% and his majority reduced to 18,464.

2020

Pennycook returned to the Opposition frontbench as Shadow Minister for Climate Change, following Keir Starmer's victory in the 2020 Labour Party leadership election.

In the December 2021 frontbench reshuffle, he was appointed Shadow Minister for Housing and Planning.

In May 2021, Pennycook announced his opposition to a 1,500-home development project in his constituency over concerns about the height of its planned high rises.

In March 2022, Pennycock argued that housing supply is not a "panacea for affordability".

Pennycook is married to civil servant Joanna Otterburn and they have two children.