Practitioners of trades are usually only invited into parliament to fix pipes, patch roofs or some such. Yet because of the upset in British politics Hannah Spencer, plumber and recent recipient of a plastering certificate, won the Gorton and Denton by-election. So we now have a tradesperson who before being elected was busying herself as a small businesswoman plying her trade.
Over the decades trade unionists have been one of the pools for Labour to draw upon as MPs. Top trade unionists have been ushered into the House of Lords. But a tradesperson, someone who hasn’t climbed up the greasy pole of union politics, is, as far as I can remember, a first. Admittedly Spencer was a local councillor and Greens spokesperson for migration and refugee support, so she is not your average plumber. But near enough.
Alan Johnson, former home secretary and holder of other ministerial appointments, started his working life as a postman, but climbed up the ranks. To shop steward and on into union prominence, and there was able to stand for parliament and win. And then to become a government minister.
But straight off the frontline of work, and then into parliament, needs to be savoured. Does this for instance herald a world of steel erectors, heating and ventilating engineers, printers, painters and decorators standing for election and getting into the House of Commons? And then maybe a scaffolder or two for the House of Lords? Of course there have been top doctors, and even top nurses, in both Houses of Parliament; but an ordinary nurse? Or a hospital porter?
Spencer may be as rare as hens’ teeth, and remain so. The onslaught of trade into parliament is not happening any time soon. Of course there are many tradespeople in parliament; but they are trying to fix the cables, pipes, plasterwork and roof of this crumbling palace of Victorianism.
And sometime soon parliament’s members will have to decide how do they address the collapse of the fabric, only held back right now by expensive stopgap actions. Tradesmen keep the place standing and limit a dangerous collapse. Parliament is falling apart: perhaps Spencer can do a few nightshifts to help the stopgappism necessary to hold the place up.









