The ‘ordinary woman’ who became Victims Commissioner
Baroness Newlove was, in her own words, just an “ordinary woman” from Warrington when she was propelled into the public eye by the savage murder of her husband Garry in 2007. A central heating engineer turned salesman, Garry had been at home on a summer evening when some local youths, high on drink and drugs, started vandalising their car. He rushed outside, in his bare feet, only to be surrounded, knocked to the floor and kicked in the head “like a football”, in front of their three daughters. He died 36 hours later. The Newloves and their neighbours had been very worried by the growing menace of antisocial behaviour in their once tranquil neighbourhood, said The Telegraph; but meetings with police had got nowhere. Helen Newlove recalled predicting that nothing would be done until someone was killed. Following the conviction of three teenagers for murder, she gave a powerful speech in which she urged parents and politicians to do more to combat youth violence.
A few months later, she founded an organisation, Newlove Warrington, to provide activities for youngsters; she also campaigned for measures to tackle antisocial behaviour. She had a meeting with Jack Straw, then the justice minister; but she got on better with David Cameron, who made her a life peer shortly after the Tories took office in 2010. On her first day in the House of Lords, she felt like “Hilda Ogden”, she said. Born in Salford, she had been a studious pupil at school, but had left at 16 to work in a chip shop, and had later worked as a court typist and court assistant.
She didn’t think she’d fit in in the Lords. She wanted to say to her fellow peers: “I’m Helen from the North and I live in a council house.” In fact, she fitted in very well; and in 2018 she was made deputy speaker. “Women are like teabags,” she would say. “You never know how strong it is until it’s in hot water.” Before that, though, Cameron had suggested she apply for the vacant role of Victims Commissioner. She duly did so – only to find that she had no staff, and no office. She accused the PM of making the role up on the “back of a cigarette packet”, and fought for it to be properly resourced. In the next few years, she worked hard to produce reports that would lead to action, not just sit gathering dust on the shelves, said The Guardian. Her achievements include the help and safeguards for crime victims contained in the Victims and Prisoners Act 2024.
She was appointed pro-vice-chancellor of the University of Bolton in 2019; on “Desert Island Discs”, she asked for “War and Peace” as her book, and lipstick as her luxury. She was appointed to serve a third term as Victims Commissioner in 2019; it was due to run until this year. She is survived by her second husband, whom she’d married in 2012, and her three daughters with Garry. |