Nadia Edith Whittome (, born 29 August 1996)
is a British politician serving as Member of Parliament (MP) for Nottingham East since 2019. A member of the Labour Party, she was previously the youngest MP upon her election at the age of 23. She is a member of the Socialist Campaign Group.
Whittome grew up in a single-parent household, with a brother. She attended private schools in Nottingham, between the ages of 7 and 11 and later attended West Bridgford School. She also attended Bilborough Sixth Form College, sitting two A Levels, going on to complete an access course at Nottingham College.
Whittome began study for a law degree at the University of Nottingham but did not complete it. She was later employed as a crime project worker and a carer. She has lived in The Meadows, Top Valley, and West Bridgford areas of Nottingham.
Whittome says she became interested in politics in 2013 due to the effects of the "bedroom tax" and austerity on her local community. She worked in the constituency office of the Member of Parliament (MP) for North West Durham, Pat Glass, Shadow Minister of State for Europe, during the 2016 European Union referendum campaign.
Whittome contested the 2017 Nottinghamshire County Council election as the Labour candidate for the West Bridgford West ward, coming second. Before her election, she was a national committee member of the pro-Remain organisations Another Europe Is Possible and Labour for a Socialist Europe.
Following her election, Whittome said that she would keep what she termed "a worker's wage" of £35,000 (after tax), and would donate the remainder of her £79,468 salary as an MP to local charities. Whittome initially supported Clive Lewis in the 2020 Labour Party leadership election but when Lewis withdrew, nominated Emily Thornberry. On 28 February 2020, Whittome announced that she would be voting for Rebecca Long-Bailey for leader and Dawn Butler for deputy.
In February 2020, Whittome organised a letter signed by 170 MPs demanding that Jamaican-born offenders not be deported to Jamaica.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, she worked as a part-time carer at a care home. Whittome appeared on Newsnight in April where she discussed shortages in PPE at her workplace. Shortly after her appearance on the show, she claimed that she had been dismissed from her job as a carer for "spreading misinformation". Her employer ExtraCare denied that there were any shortages in PPE at the care home, and also stated that Whittome had not been dismissed, but that her services were "no longer needed" as their own in-house care team could now meet their needs. In September ExtraCare issued a statement in which they admitted that there had been shortages of PPE at the care home, and that Whittome had helped to resolve this through public appeals in March and April.
Following election of Keir Starmer as Leader of the Labour Party in April 2020, Whittome was appointed as the parliamentary private secretary to Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. In response to the toppling of the statue of Edward Colston on 7 June 2020, Whittome tweeted "I celebrate these acts of resistance" and called for "a movement that will tear down systemic racism and the slave owner statues that symbolise it".
In September 2020, Whittome was one of 18 Labour MPs who defied the whip and voted against the Overseas Operations Bill. She said the bill was "anti-veteran, anti-human rights, and would effectively decriminalise torture". In response, she was sacked from her role as a parliamentary private secretary. In November, she signed an open letter condemning violence and discrimination against transgender people.
Whittome was critical of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, calling it "the next step in our descent to authoritarianism" and claiming the Bill was "born out of Priti Patel's fury at Black Lives Matter". In May 2021, alongside celebrities and other public figures, she was a signatory to an open letter from Stylist magazine which called on the government to address what it described as an "epidemic of male violence" by funding an "ongoing, high-profile, expert-informed awareness campaign on men's violence against women and girls".
During the 2022 United Kingdom railway strike, she donated £2,000 of her parliamentary salary to the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers strike fund, and also joined strikers at Nottingham railway station. Following the October 2022 Conservative Party leadership election, she tweeted that Rishi Sunak becoming Britain's first British-Asian Prime Minister was not "a win for Asian representation". She was later instructed by her party's whips to delete the tweet.
Whittome has led calls for Georgia to be removed from the UK Home Office's list of 'safe' states to return asylum seekers to, saying that it is 'vital that Georgia is now removed from the safe states designation to ensure that the claims of LGBTQIA refugees are properly assessed'.
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