Helen Cox Popular Books

Helen Cox Biography & Facts

Helen Joanne Cox (née Leadbeater; 22 June 1974 – 16 June 2016) was a British politician who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Batley and Spen from May 2015 until her murder in June 2016. She was a member of the Labour Party. Born in Batley, West Yorkshire, Cox studied Social and Political Sciences at Pembroke College, Cambridge. Working first as a political assistant, she joined the international humanitarian charity Oxfam in 2001, where she became head of policy and advocacy at Oxfam GB in 2005. She was selected to contest the Batley and Spen parliamentary seat after the incumbent, Mike Wood, decided not to stand in 2015. She held the seat for Labour with an increased majority. Cox became a campaigner on issues relating to the Syrian civil war, and founded and chaired the all-party parliamentary group Friends of Syria. On 16 June 2016, Cox died after being shot and stabbed multiple times in the street in the village of Birstall, where she had been due to hold a constituency surgery. Thomas Mair, who held far-right views, was found guilty of her murder in November and sentenced to life imprisonment with a whole life order. In July 2021, Cox's sister, Kim Leadbeater, was elected as the Labour MP for Batley and Spen, following a by-election. Early life and career beginnings Helen Joanne Leadbeater was born on 22 June 1974 in Batley, West Yorkshire, England, to Jean, a school secretary, and Gordon Leadbeater, a toothpaste and hairspray factory worker. Raised in Heckmondwike, she was educated at Heckmondwike Grammar School, a state grammar school, where she was head girl. During summers, she worked packing toothpaste. Cox studied at Pembroke College, Cambridge, initially studying Archaeology and Anthropology before switching to Social and Political Science, graduating in 1995. She later studied at the London School of Economics. Following her graduation from Pembroke College, Cox worked as an adviser to Labour MP Joan Walley from 1995 to 1997. She then became head of Key Campaigns at Britain in Europe (1998–99), a pro-European pressure group, before moving to Brussels to spend two years as an assistant to Glenys Kinnock, wife of former Labour leader Neil Kinnock, who was then a Member of the European Parliament. From 2001 to 2009, Cox worked for the aid groups Oxfam and Oxfam International, first in Brussels as the leader of the group's trade reform campaign, then as head of policy and advocacy at Oxfam GB in 2005, and head of Oxfam International's humanitarian campaigns in New York City in 2007. While there, she helped to publish For a Safer Tomorrow, a book authored by Ed Cairns which examines the changing nature of the world's humanitarian policies. Her work for Oxfam, in which she met disadvantaged groups in Darfur and Afghanistan, influenced her political thinking. Cox's charity work led to a role advising Sarah Brown, wife of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who was spearheading a campaign to prevent deaths in pregnancy and childbirth. From 2009 to 2011, Cox was director of the Maternal Mortality Campaign, which was supported by Brown and her husband. The following year, Cox worked for Save the Children (where she was a strategy consultant), the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, and as director of strategy at the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood. In 2013, she founded UK Women, a research institute aimed at meeting the needs of women in the UK, where she was also the CEO. Between 2014 and 2015, Cox worked for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Cox was the national chair of the Labour Women's Network from 2010 to 2014, and a strategic adviser to the Freedom Fund, an anti-slavery charity, in 2014. She was also on the board of Burma Campaign UK, a human rights NGO. Political career Cox was nominated by the Labour Party to contest the Batley and Spen seat being vacated by Mike Wood at the 2015 general election. She was selected as its candidate from an all-women shortlist. The Batley and Spen seat was a Conservative marginal between 1983 and 1997 but was considered to be a safe seat for Labour, and Cox won the seat with 43.2% of the vote, increasing Labour's majority to 6,051. Cox made her maiden speech in the House of Commons on 3 June 2015, using it to celebrate her constituency's ethnic diversity, while highlighting the economic challenges facing the community and urging the government to rethink its approach to economic regeneration. She was one of 36 Labour MPs who nominated Jeremy Corbyn as a candidate in the Labour leadership election of 2015, but said she had done so to get him on the list and encourage a broad debate. In the election she voted for Liz Kendall, and announced after the local elections on 6 May 2016 that she and fellow MP Neil Coyle regretted nominating Corbyn. Cox campaigned for a solution to the Syrian Civil War. In October 2015, she co-authored an article in The Observer with Conservative MP Andrew Mitchell, arguing that British military forces could help achieve an ethical solution to the conflict, including the creation of civilian safe havens in Syria. During that month, Cox launched the all-party parliamentary group Friends of Syria, becoming its chair. In the Commons vote in December to approve UK military intervention against ISIL in Syria, Cox abstained because she believed in a more comprehensive strategy that would also include combatting President Bashar al-Assad and his "indiscriminate barrel bombs". She wrote: "By refusing to tackle Assad's brutality, we may actively alienate more of the Sunni population, driving them towards Isis. So I have decided to abstain. Because I am not against airstrikes per se, but I cannot actively support them unless they are part of a plan. Because I believe in action to address Isis, but do not believe it will work in isolation." Andrew Grice of The Independent felt that she "argued forcefully that the UK Government should be doing more both to help the victims and use its influence abroad to bring an end to the Syrian conflict." In February 2016, Cox wrote to the Nobel Committee praising the work of the Syrian Civil Defense, a civilian voluntary emergency rescue organisation known as the White Helmets, and nominating them for the Nobel Peace Prize, stating: "In the most dangerous place on earth these unarmed volunteers risk their lives to help anyone in need regardless of religion or politics." The nomination was accepted by the committee, and garnered the support of twenty of her fellow MPs and several celebrities, including George Clooney, Daniel Craig, Chris Martin and Michael Palin. The nomination was supported by members of Canada's New Democratic Party, who urged Stéphane Dion, the country's Foreign Affairs Minister, to give his backing on behalf of Canada. Cox, a supporter of the Labour Friends of Palestine & the Middle East, called for the lifting of the blockade of the Gaza Strip. She opposed efforts by the government to curtail the.... Discover the Helen Cox popular books. 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  • How to Write Page-Turning Fiction synopsis, comments

    How to Write Page-Turning Fiction

    Helen Cox

    Do you want to know how to write stories that grab readers and never let them go? Are you looking for new ways to satisfy your current readership? This practical and inspiring guid...

  • The Collected Kitt Hartley Mysteries synopsis, comments

    The Collected Kitt Hartley Mysteries

    Helen Cox

    The Kitt Hartley Mysteries: the first three books in the charming cozy crime series from Helen Cox, perfect for fans of Betty Rowlands or Faith Martin.Murder by the Minster (Book 1...

  • Disarming the Wildest Warrior synopsis, comments

    Disarming the Wildest Warrior

    Helen Louise Cox

    A steamy historical romance novella.1725, Williamsburg.No more English tea parties with her father's medical colleagues for Gilda Griffiths. She left those behind for the...

  • Surrendering to the Gentleman Pirate synopsis, comments

    Surrendering to the Gentleman Pirate

    Helen Louise Cox

    A steamy historical romance novella.1750, Pembrokeshire WalesBronwyn Rees is about to marry Leonard Price Viscount of Pembroke, the most eligible peer west of Bristo...

  • Once Upon a Rugged Knight synopsis, comments

    Once Upon a Rugged Knight

    Helen Louise Cox

    Maddie Dawson has spent weeks looking forward to 'Once Upon a Dream', an annual Fairytale Convention in Nottingham. When a mysterious crone serves her a 'special cocktail' tha...

  • Murder at the Seaview Hotel synopsis, comments

    Murder at the Seaview Hotel

    Glenda Young

    'I loved this warm, humorous and involving whodunnit with its host of engaging characters and atmospheric Scarborough setting' CLARE CHASE'Just the heartwarming tonic readers need ...

  • Forgotten synopsis, comments

    Forgotten

    Susan Lewis

    When Lisa Martin and David Kirby were forced to part, they never dreamed they might one day have a second chance. Many years later, they meet again and it is clear that, despite ev...

  • Foul Play at the Seaview Hotel synopsis, comments

    Foul Play at the Seaview Hotel

    Glenda Young

    The third in the pageturning cosy crime series from Glenda Young, this unputdownable whodunnit is perfect for fans of Julia Chapman's Dales Detective Agency, Richard Osman's The Th...

  • The Hair of the Dog synopsis, comments

    The Hair of the Dog

    Karl Sabbagh

    Science is full of surprises: the peculiar peepshow beginnings of baby incubators; the unexpected positive fallout from the Hbomb; the dinosaurs that caused sonic booms; the irrati...

  • Billions of Besties synopsis, comments

    Billions of Besties

    Peggy Panosh & Susie Arons

    This beautifully illustrated and joyful tribute celebrates famous friendships (both real and fictional) and proves that there is no relationship more important than friendship. Our...

  • How to Write Sex synopsis, comments

    How to Write Sex

    Helen Cox

    Does the idea of writing a sex scene scare the pants off you? Are you looking for strategies to heat up the sex you write or show your characters' sensuality in a more realistic li...

  • Water Signs synopsis, comments

    Water Signs

    Helen Cox

    'Each poem in this startling debut is sensual, powerful and jewellike. Water Signs is a rallying cry, a love letter, a celebration of sex and sexual pleasure the refusal to be swe...

  • How and When to Sign a Book Deal synopsis, comments

    How and When to Sign a Book Deal

    Helen Cox

    Have you always dreamed of getting published? Do you want to know how to land and close a traditional book deal? Have you already been offered a deal and want to make sure this is ...

  • More Power synopsis, comments

    More Power

    Hugh Matheson & Christopher Dodd

    Arguably the greatest coach in British sporting history.SHORTLISTED FOR THE TELEGRAPH SPORTS BOOK AWARDSJurgen Grobler’s Olympic coaching career is one of legend, yet the man himse...

  • The Consolation of Nature synopsis, comments

    The Consolation of Nature

    Michael McCarthy, Jeremy Mynott & Peter Marren

    ONE OF THE GUARDIAN'S BEST NATURE BOOKS OF 2020SHORTLISTED FOR THE RICHARD JEFFERIES SOCIETY & WHITE HORSE BOOKSHOP LITERARY PRIZE'Lovely: full of fascinating detail and anecdo...

  • Death Awaits in Durham synopsis, comments

    Death Awaits in Durham

    Helen Cox

    A pageturning cosy mystery set in Durham, for fans of Faith Martin and Betty Rowlands. Meet Kitt Hartley: librarian, nononsense Yorkshirewoman ... detective?'Fabulous!' 'Brilliant...

  • Curtain Call at the Seaview Hotel synopsis, comments

    Curtain Call at the Seaview Hotel

    Glenda Young

    'A perfect example of what cosy crime should be like drama, mystery and intrigue' Ginger Book GeekThe second in the pageturning cosy crime series from Glenda Young, this unputdown...

  • Murder in a Mill Town synopsis, comments

    Murder in a Mill Town

    Helen Cox

    'Cosy, unique, atmospheric' Woman'Brilliantly funny and charming' Northern LifeWhen a violent murder shatters the otherwise peaceful idyll of Andaby near Hebden Bridge, DS Charlott...

  • Swept Away by the Merman synopsis, comments

    Swept Away by the Merman

    Helen Louise Cox

    Never interfere with humans.That was Lawrence's cardinal rule. One that he lived by. And yet, at this very moment, the most beguiling human woman he had ever seen lay in his cave.1...

  • The Mersey Girls synopsis, comments

    The Mersey Girls

    Katie Flynn

    FROM SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR KATIE FLYNN: Set in Liverpool in the 1920s, The Mersey Girlsis a heartwarming novel of family, love and triumph against the odds. 1913Seventeen...