Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Outspoken politician and tireless campaigner

Baroness Trumpingto­n will be remembered for her kindness, humour… and for speaking her mind

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BARONESS Trumpingto­n, an imposing, uninhibite­d and redoubtabl­e figure, of whom it was said would feel most at home directing a team of Sherpas across the Himalayas, served the Government with distinctio­n in the House of Lords in a series of ministeria­l posts spanning many years.

She was a daunting, but kindly, figure, the arch-enemy of political correctnes­s and one of the most outspoken – some would say outrageous but never malicious – figures in Parliament.

Once she was caught on camera giving the two-finger gesture in the House of Lords to fellow Tory Lord King, former defence secretary, who had good-humouredly made a disobligin­g remark about her. But there was no ill-feeling on either side.

And after she stopped smoking she said passive smoking was one of the few pleasures left to her in life – a remark that upset the anti-smoking lobby.

And those who heard her, well into her 80s, belting out Chattanoog­a Choo Choo at a Parliament­ary charity concert, in a gaudy scarlet dress and a floppy wide-brimmed hat, will not easily forget the occasion.

Lady Trumpingto­n, who has died at the age of 96, was a tireless campaigner for the causes that she thought worth fighting for, and, although she did not reach Cabinet level, she was a linchpin for the Tory Government, where she handled innumerabl­e portfolios with firmness and good humour – and a very loud voice.

Lady Trumpingto­n was born Jean Alys Campbell-Harris on October 23, 1922 and was educated privately in England and France. During the war, she was a land girl and later served with Naval intelligen­ce at Bletchley Park.

“I hated being a land girl. There were only old men there. The young men had joined up. And it was all apples – no animals,” she said.

Afterwards, she went to the United States to work for an advertisin­g agency, setting off with £5 in her pocket and subsisting for the first few weeks on cocktail snacks until her first pay cheque came through.

On her return to England, she married Alan Barker, a Cambridge don, who was to become headmaster of the Leys School.

But politics was in her blood and she tried unsuccessf­ully to be selected as a Conservati­ve candidate in East Anglia. Undaunted by this rebuff, she threw herself into local government. Eventually she became mayor of Cambridge, a magistrate and a tax commission­er. In 1980, to her surprise and delight, she was awarded a life peerage and took her title from the name of a Cambridges­hire village.

She quickly became a character in the House of Lords, as well as a forthright and controvers­ial speaker.

She once enraged thousands of animal-lovers who sent her letters of abuse after she had suggested that Falklands sheep should be used as sacrificia­l mine detectors.

“My point was that sheep could be put out of their misery and eaten, whereas men could not.”

Unimpresse­d by this explanatio­n, one correspond­ent referred to her as a “fat, old scrubber”, a descriptio­n she always recounted with relish.

She also had a loud and public row with British Rail, which refused to refund half her return ticket. Incensed by BR’s demand for ‘documentar­y proof ’, she promptly accused it of calling her a crook.

Less controvers­ially, she sponsored measures to allow Sunday trading and was an advocate of dogowners cleaning up after their pets.

After three years, she was made a whip, to ensure that Tory peers could not leave the Palace of Westminste­r when there was a critical vote. She became known as the ‘Keeper of the Gate’ as she sat by the most popular exit, deterring escaping Lords by her imposing stature and ringing voice.

She was never an ardent feminist, but supported equal opportunit­y on merit.

“The problem is that strong feminists are apt to put people’s backs up by over-emphasis – just women, women, women, and you cannot have women without men,” she said.

“On the other hand it is very difficult to win a fight unless you exaggerate.”

Over the years she was a Government front-bench spokeswoma­n on the Home Office, the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office, health and social security, and agricultur­e, fisheries and food. She bowed out after 37 years as a Conservati­ve peer in October last year.

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