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Theresa Stewart (née Raisman; 24 August 1930 – 11 November 2020) was a British Labour Party politician and the first (and as of 2020, only) female leader of Birmingham City Council, a position which she attained in October 1993, succeeding Dick Knowles, and in competition for which she was beaten by Sir
Albert Bore Sir Albert Bore (born 1946 in Ayrshire, Scotland) is a British nuclear physicist, academic and Labour Party politician. Bore has a doctorate in nuclear reactor physics from the University of Birmingham and worked as a lecturer in nuclear phy ...
in May 1999. She was also
Lord Mayor of Birmingham This is a list of the mayors and lord mayors of Birmingham in the West Midlands of England. Birmingham has had a mayor (and elected council) since 1838. The office was raised to the dignity of lord mayor when Queen Victoria issued letters pat ...
from May 2000 to May 2001, being only the sixth woman to hold that position. Harriet Harman described her as "a pioneer for women's equality & women's representation, a true sister to me and others. A truly exceptional woman".


Political career

Stewart was elected as a councillor for Birmingham City Council in a by-election in 1970. She remained a councillor, for Billesley ward, until 2002. She saw her role as a Labour Councillor as doing for poor people, what lawyers did for rich people. She was also a member of the Birmingham Regional Hospital Board in the late 1960s. She exposed failings in the hospital system including a ward kept locked for the use of the family and friends of consultants. The issue was taken up by a local newspaper. She was a founder of BPAS (then the Birmingham Pregnancy Advisory Group), campaigned for CND, for women's right to choose, for the family allowance to be paid to the mother as well as hosting striking miners and steelworkers in her home. She was member and chair of Social Services in Birmingham in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1991 she, with 20 other councillors, was expelled from the Labour Group, for opposing cuts to a children's home. However, in 1993 she was elected, by her fellow Labour councillors, as leader of Birmingham City Council. She moved the council from spending on infrastructure and convention centres to a focus on social services and education. She also hosted G8 in 1998, welcoming Tony Blair, Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin to the city. However the photo she was most proud of was the one with Nelson Mandela, which sat proudly on her mantelpiece.


Personal life and death

Stewart was born in 1930 in Leeds. (subscription required) She was Jewish. Stewart won a scholarship to study mathematics at Somerville College,
Oxford University Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the ...
. She met John Stewart, who was studying PPE at Balliol College. After her degree Theresa went to work at Marconi's, she was the only woman in the graduate entry. After their marriage in 1953 Theresa trained to teach maths in Edinburgh where John was a graduate trainee in the National Coal Board. They then moved to London and on the Doncaster. During these years they had four children. Theresa was active in the Labour Party throughout these years. They moved to Birmingham in 1966 and Theresa was elected councillor for the Billesley ward in 1970. Her husband had been appointed as a senior lecturer a INLOGOV (Institute of Local Government Studies) at the
University of Birmingham , mottoeng = Through efforts to heights , established = 1825 – Birmingham School of Medicine and Surgery1836 – Birmingham Royal School of Medicine and Surgery1843 – Queen's College1875 – Mason Science College1898 – Mason Univers ...
,. He was later made a professor and then Director of INLOGOV. Midland Metro named an
AnsaldoBreda T-69 The West Midlands Metro is a passenger light rail line in the West Midlands conurbation in England, which opened in 1999. Its rolling stock consists of 21 CAF Urbos 3 trams which came into service in 2014/15, replacing the older T-69 trams which ...
tram in her honour.Midland Metro
British Trams Online
She died on 11 November 2020, at the age of 90, following a long illness. She was survived by her husband, their four children, ten grandchildren and seven great grandchildren.


References

1930 births 2020 deaths 20th-century British Jews 20th-century English women politicians 20th-century English politicians 21st-century English women politicians 21st-century English politicians 21st-century British Jews Alumni of Somerville College, Oxford English Jews Fellows of Somerville College, Oxford Jewish British politicians Jewish women politicians Labour Party (UK) councillors Leaders of local authorities of England Lord Mayors of Birmingham, West Midlands Politicians from Leeds Women councillors in England Women mayors of places in England {{UK-politician-stub