Anna Catherine Turley (born 9 October 1978) is a British Labour and Co-operative politician serving as Member of Parliament (MP) for Redcar since 2024, having previously served from 2015 to 2019. She has served as Chair of the Labour Party and Minister Without Portfolio since 2025.
From 2001 to 2005, Turley was a fast-stream civil servant at the Home Office, initially working on youth crime issues, and later moved to the Department for Work and Pensions, specialising in child poverty issues. In 2005, Turley became a special adviser in the Department for Work and Pensions under David Blunkett, then in 2006 for the Cabinet Office under Hilary Armstrong.
In 2007, Turley worked for public relations agency The Ledbury Group. In April 2008, she became deputy director of the local government research organisation the New Local Government Network, and in 2010 co-founded the Co-operative Councils Innovation Network designed to enable local authorities to work in partnership with local communities.
Turley was shortlisted for the North West Durham seat for the 2010 general election but lost out to Pat Glass.
In 2011, Turley founded a consultancy and online forum ProgLoc (Progressive Localism) for progressive debate of key issues affecting local government, and became an associate researcher for the NGO Future of London. In 2012 Turley was listed as a speaker for the New Labour pressure group Progress.
In 2013, Turley became a senior research fellow at IPPR North.
In 2013, Turley was selected to stand in the Redcar constituency from an all-women shortlist, in a contentious selection process that was ultimately associated with the resignation of ten Labour councillors.
Soon after becoming an MP, Turley had to respond to major local employer SSI UK, which operated Teesside Steelworks, going into liquidation, leading to about 3,000 local job losses. The steelworks had once employed about 40,000. Turley set up a local SSI Taskforce, and secured £50 million from the government to help support retraining and new jobs.
She supported Andy Burnham in the 2015 leadership election. In September 2015, the newly elected Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn appointed Turley as shadow civil society minister in his first shadow cabinet. Turley was a critic of Corbyn, and resigned as a Shadow Minister in June 2016. In the 2016 leadership election campaign soon afterwards, Turley stated that Corbyn was "completely out of touch with reality", and supported Owen Smith for leader. She would later argue that Labour had "moved too far to the left" and had "issues around national security as well as with antisemitism".
In 2016, Turley introduced a private member's bill to increase the maximum sentences available to the courts for specified offences related to animal cruelty to five years. She queued from 2am until 10am to table the bill. The Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Act was passed in April 2021, and came into force on 29 June 2021.
In the 2017 general election, Turley was re-elected with 23,623 votes, a share of 55.5%. She became chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Groups ("APPGs") on Hydrogen and Bingo, Secretary of the APPG on Steel and Metal Related Industry and a member of the APPGs on Endometriosis, Speedway, Loan Charge, Carbon Capture and Storage, Performers Alliance, Music, Equitable Life, Fair Business Banking and the All-Party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group. She is also a member of various Labour Party groups, including the Labour Movement for Europe, LGBT Labour, Jewish Labour Movement, Labour Campaign for International Development, Labour Friends of Israel and Labour Party Irish Society.
In 2018, Turley worked with the charity, Family Rights Group, to establish the cross party Parliamentary Taskforce on Kinship Care, to campaign for improvements to support for children raised by relatives and friends when they cannot remain with their parents. Turley later completed the 2023 Great North Run for Family Rights Group.
She served as chair of the Co-operative Party from 8 June 2019 until December 2019.. She was Chair of the Labour Movement for Europe from 2018 to 2020.
In the 2019 general election, Turley lost her seat to the Conservative candidate. She blamed party leader Jeremy Corbyn for the loss. Turley had been re-elected at the 2017 general election under Jeremy Corbyn. In December 2019, the Conservative party defeated Turley's 9,485 majority, taking the seat for the first time.
On 19 December 2019, following a six-day trial at the Royal Courts of Justice, Turley won a libel claim against Unite the Union and Stephen Walker (editor of The Skwawkbox); the court upheld that her reputation had been damaged by Walker and Unite during the election.
She worked as a sports consultant for the Betting and Gaming Council, an organisation which represents the gambling industry, and in April 2021 wrote a paid advertorial in the New Statesman for the organisation opposing limits on betting, suggesting that they would alienate red wall voters. In May 2022, Turley was appointed as an associate director at Arden Strategies, a political lobbying firm founded by former Labour cabinet minister Jim Murphy.
On 4 July 2024 she was re-elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Redcar. In the days following her re-election, Turley was appointed as a Junior Lord Commissioner of the Treasury, a Government Whip.
In the 2025 British cabinet reshuffle, she was appointed Minister without Portfolio and Chair of the Labour Party. She was subsequently appointed to the Privy Council.
In the second half of 2017, Turley required five operations to alleviate problems with infected cysts; the emergency surgery caused her to suspend parliamentary work for over a month. She became a vocal campaigner on endometriosis, and launched an inquiry into women's experiences through the APPG on Endometriosis.
Early political career
Parliamentary career
2019 – 2024
2024 – present
Personal life
External links
|
|