Sarah Jones
Sarah Jones MP | |
---|---|
Official parliamentary portrait, June 2017 | |
Member of Parliament for Croydon Central | |
Assumed office 9 June 2017 | |
Preceded by | Gavin Barwell |
Majority | 5,652 (9.9%) |
Personal details | |
Born |
Sarah Ann Jones 20 December 1972 |
Website |
sarah-jones |
Sarah Ann Jones (20 December 1972) has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Croydon Central since the 2017 general election. She was appointed as Shadow Minister for Housing in May 2018.
Life and career
A former Head of Campaigns at the housing charity Shelter, Jones worked for Labour MP and Northern Ireland Secretary Mo Mowlam and later ran campaigns at the NHS Confederation.
Jones was part of the team delivering the 2012 London Olympic and Paralympic Games working with Tessa Jowell, who was Minister for the Olympics at the time. She remained close with Jowell, and in 2018 Jones led a debate in the House of Commons paying tribute to Jowell's fight against brain cancer and her campaign for improved cancer treatment.
Parliamentary career
Jones was selected to contest the marginal Croydon Central constituency at the 2015 General Election. Despite achieving a 5.9% swing to Labour, Jones lost by 165 votes to the incumbent Conservative Gavin Barwell.
At the 2017 General Election, she successfully fought the seat and defeated Barwell gaining a majority of 5,652 votes. Jones's victory made further headlines due to Barwell publishing a book titled 'How to Win a Marginal Seat' after his 2015 victory.
After highlighting the rise in knife crime in Croydon during the General Election, Jones has run a campaign calling for a stronger Government response to knife crime across the UK. She launched the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Knife Crime in September 2017, being elected as the group's Chair. At its launch over 30 MPs and Peers joined the group, which is supported by charities Redthread and Barnardo's. The APPG's stated aims are to 'look in detail at the root causes of knife crime – with particular focus on prevention and early intervention'.
Jones was appointed as Parliamentary Private Secretary to John Healey, Labour's Shadow Housing Secretary in January 2018, and was subsequently promoted to Shadow Housing Minister in 2018, succeeding Tony Lloyd.