Ruth Smeeth

Politician

Birthday June 29, 1979

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Edinburgh, Scotland

Age 44 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#55819 Most Popular

1890

Her maternal family is Jewish, and arrived in London during the 1890s, having escaped Russian pogroms.

However, she had no contact with her father after her parents divorced when she was aged three.

Smeeth attended school and taught at a Jewish school in Bristol, where her mother was later deputy general secretary for Amicus, and in her early life travelled extensively across the UK due to her mother's work.

1979

Ruth Lauren Smeeth, Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent (née Anderson; born 29 June 1979) is a British Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Stoke-on-Trent North from 2015 until 2019.

Since 2022 she has been a member of the House of Lords.

After working in public relations roles for the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre and Nestlé, Smeeth became more actively involved in the Labour Party.

2000

Smeeth graduated with a degree in Politics and International Relations from the University of Birmingham in 2000.

2004

She worked as a policy and research officer for a trade union before working in a public relations role from January 2004 to September 2005 at Sodexo.

2005

She then became director of public affairs and campaigns at the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM) in November 2005, leaving in early 2007 to work in PR for Nestlé.

2009

She was named as an intelligence source to "strictly protect" by the US embassy in London in a 2009 diplomatic cable published online in 2011.

During her parliamentary career she campaigned for the UK to remain in the European Union.

She served as Personal Private Secretary to Tom Watson, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, but resigned so she could vote against a second Brexit referendum.

Smeeth was named in a 2009 cable from the US embassy in London as a source to "strictly protect".

According to the cable Smeeth had supplied intelligence about Prime Minister Gordon Brown's intention to call an election in late 2009, and his subsequent decision against doing so at that time.

2010

She stood as an MP candidate in the 2010 election but was not elected.

From 2010 to 2015, she was a deputy director of anti-racist organisation, Hope not Hate.

She has also been employed by the Community Security Trust and has worked for the Board of Deputies of British Jews.

Smeeth was selected as Labour Party candidate for the Burton constituency in the 2010 general election, finishing 6,304 votes behind Andrew Griffiths of the Conservative Party.

2015

She was subsequently selected from an all-women shortlist to be Labour Party candidate for Stoke-on-Trent North, following the retirement of incumbent Labour MP Joan Walley, and was subsequently elected at the 2015 general election.

Smeeth backed Yvette Cooper in the 2015 Labour leadership election.

In October 2015, Smeeth was given an adjournment debate on holiday hunger.

2016

In June 2016, Smeeth resigned her post as Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to the shadow Northern Ireland and Scotland teams, alongside others, in protest at Jeremy Corbyn's leadership.

She supported Owen Smith in the failed attempt to replace him in the 2016 Labour leadership election.

In June 2016, Smeeth campaigned for the UK to remain in the European Union.

Her constituency voted for Brexit by 72.1%.

In November 2016, Smeeth said "I'll be voting for us to move to Article 50. The general public, especially in Stoke-on-Trent, sent a very clear message with some parts of my constituency voting 80/20 to leave. My whole priority and focus is how we can make it work".

In June 2016, at the launch of the Chakrabarti Report, Marc Wadsworth, a Labour Party activist, described Smeeth as working "hand-in-hand" with Kate McCann of The Daily Telegraph, after McCann passed Smeeth his press release.

Smeeth later issued a statement that Wadsworth was using "traditional antisemitic slurs to attack me for being part of a 'media conspiracy'" and criticised a lack of response from Corbyn or his office, calling on him to resign.

However, according to a video recording of the event, Wadsworth did not mention a general "media conspiracy", or refer to Jews.

Wadsworth said he was unaware Smeeth was Jewish, and that "I've never been called anti-semitic in my life...The Jewish people have an ally in me."

Smeeth said that she received 25,000 pieces of abuse during July and August, including 20,000 in the 12-hour period immediately following the incident.

However, the Jewish Voice for Labour group contested this, by comparing Smeeth's claim with a study by the Community Service Trust, who monitor anti-Semitic and abusive media content.

The study found that over an entire year (encompassing the 12-hour period of Smeeth's claim of 20,000 cases) only 9,008 original tweets concerning Jews were classified as antagonistic.

Other studies investigating the most abused MPs on Twitter found that Smeeth was not mentioned, since she did not exceed the threshold of abuse to be ranked.

2018

In April 2018, Smeeth was accompanied by around 40 Labour MPs and peers to a Labour hearing into Wadsworth's conduct.

2019

She was elected Parliamentary Chair of the Jewish Labour Movement in April 2019 and served until she lost the contest for the Stoke constituency in 2019.

Smeeth was born in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Her mother is from east London, and her father is a Scottish trade unionist.

2020

In July 2020, Wadsworth referred to Smeeth as a "pro-Israeli government zealot".

The police strengthened her security after she received a death threat.