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Elspeth Howe
Elspeth Howe
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Elspeth Rosamund Morton Howe, Baroness Howe of Idlicote, Baroness Howe of Aberavon,[1] CBE (née Shand; 8 February 1932 – 22 March 2022) was a British life peer and crossbench member of the House of Lords (2001–2020) who served in many capacities in public life.

Key Information

As the widow of Geoffrey Howe, she was formerly known as Lady Howe of Aberavon before receiving a peerage in her own right.

She was the paternal half-aunt of Queen Camilla.

Early life

[edit]

Born Elspeth R. M. Shand in Marylebone,[2] London, she was the daughter of the writer Philip Morton Shand by his fourth wife, Sybil Mary Shand (née Sissons, formerly Slee).[3][4]

As such, she was a half-aunt to Queen Camilla (née Shand, formerly Parker Bowles), whose father, Bruce Shand, was son of Philip Morton Shand by a previous marriage.[3] She grew up in Bath, Somerset,[3] and was educated at Wycombe Abbey, a private school for girls, and at the London School of Economics.[3]

She married the rising politician Geoffrey Howe in 1953, and had three children.[5]

Career

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Howe was deputy chairman of the Equal Opportunities Commission from 1975 to 1979,[3] and worked in other capacities from 1980. She was later chair of the Broadcasting Standards Commission. In the 1999 New Year Honours she was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE).[6]

Lady Howe was a Justice of the Peace in Inner London from 1964 until her retirement from the Bench in 2002. She sat in the Youth Court at Camberwell where she was a bench chairman.

On 29 June 2001, at the age of 69, she was made a life peer, as Baroness Howe of Idlicote, of Shipston-on-Stour in the County of Warwickshire,[7] in her own right, becoming one of the first People's Peers. She and her husband Geoffrey Howe were one of the few couples each of whom held a peerage in their own right.

Having already been styled Lady Howe by dint of her husband's knighthood and then his peerage, it was quipped when she received her own peerage that she was "once, twice, three times a Lady".[8]

Howe retired from Parliament on 2 June 2020.[1]

Death

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Elspeth Howe, Baroness Howe of Idlicote died at her home in Idlicote, Warwickshire, on 22 March 2022, aged 90, having had cancer.[9]

Arms

[edit]
Coat of arms of Elspeth Howe
Coronet
Coronet of a Baron
Escutcheon
Arms of her husband Geoffrey Howe (Chequy Or and Azure on a chief per pale Vert and Gules a portcullis chained Gold.) with arms of her half brother (Azure a Boar's Head erased behind the ears Argent armed and langued Or on a Chief engrailed Argent between two Mullets Gules a Cross crosslet fitchy Sable)
Supporters
Dexter a dragon Gules armed and langued Azure gorged with a collar compony Sable and Argent the Sable charged with a crescent Ermine the Argent with a rose Gules barbed and seeded Proper holding in its exterior foreclaw a sword erect Argent hilt pommel and quillons Or sinister a winged lion Or armed and langued Gules similarly gorged resting its interior hind leg upon a clarion also Gold.
Orders
The Order of the British Empire ribbon.
For God & Country

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Elspeth Rosamund Morton Howe, Baroness Howe of Idlicote, CBE (née Shand; 8 February 1932 – 22 March 2022), was a British crossbench life peer and public administrator. She served in the House of Lords from 2001 until her retirement in 2020, focusing on issues such as child protection and women's rights. Earlier in her career, she acted as deputy chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission from 1975 to 1979, advocating for improved educational and workplace opportunities for women, and chaired the Broadcasting Standards Council from 1993 to 1997 and its successor, the Broadcasting Standards Commission, from 1997 to 1999. She also contributed to tax policy reforms that enabled independent taxation for married women, implemented in the 1988 budget. Howe was married to Geoffrey Howe, Baron Howe of Aberavon, from 1953 until his death in 2015, and they had three children. She died at her home in Warwickshire following a battle with cancer.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Elspeth Rosamund Morton Shand was born on 8 February 1932, the only child of , a British writer, architectural critic, and bon vivant known for his expertise in and European architecture, and his fourth wife, Sybil Mary Shand (née Sissons, previously Mrs. Slee). (1888–1960), whose own father was the author and barrister , had three prior marriages that produced children, including a son, (1917–2006), from his third union; this made Elspeth the half-aunt of Bruce's daughter, Camilla (born 1947), who later became . The family resided in Bath during Elspeth's childhood, where she grew up amid her father's cultured but peripatetic lifestyle influenced by his interests in fine dining, wine, and modernist design—he was an early advocate for architects like and Mies van der Rohe in Britain. Little is documented about specific formative experiences or schooling in this period beyond the domestic environment shaped by Philip's intellectual pursuits and Sybil's background as a former actress and widow. The Shand family's aristocratic and literary connections, tracing back through Philip's lineage to Scottish lairds and English , provided a backdrop of relative privilege, though Philip's financial vicissitudes from multiple divorces and business ventures occasionally strained resources.

Formal Education

Elspeth Howe attended School, a prestigious independent boarding school for girls in , , where she excelled in leadership roles, serving as head girl and captaining the cricket team. She did not pursue higher education immediately after completing her secondary schooling, instead entering and family life in her early twenties. In her fifties, during her husband 's tenure as from 1979 to 1983, Howe enrolled as a mature student at the London School of Economics (LSE), completing a three-year degree in , with a focus on and social administration.

Personal Life

Marriage to Geoffrey Howe

Elspeth Morton Shand, daughter of businessman P. Morton Shand, married , a recently called to the in 1952, in 1953. The union produced three children: daughter Caroline (known as Cary) and twins Amanda and Alec. Throughout their 62-year marriage, Elspeth provided steadfast support to Geoffrey's rising political career within the Conservative Party, aiding his transition from a reticent legal practitioner to a key government figure, including roles as and Foreign Secretary. Their partnership was marked by mutual professional influence, with Elspeth's advocacy work complementing Geoffrey's policy positions, though she occasionally diverged on social issues such as . The marriage endured until Geoffrey Howe's death on 9 October 2015 at age 88.

Children and Family Connections

Elspeth Howe and married on 29 August 1953 and had three children: daughter Caroline (known as Cary), and twins and (Alec). Caroline pursued a career as a , while became a ; , formally Edward Thomson Howe, was born in 1959. Howe maintained close family ties, balancing her public service roles with motherhood. Her children survived her, as noted following her death in 2022. Through her paternal lineage, Howe was connected to the ; her father, , had a son from a previous , making Howe Bruce's half-sister and half-aunt to his daughter, (formerly ). This relation stemmed from Shand's multiple marriages, with Elspeth born to his fourth wife, Sybil Mary Sissons.

Public Service Career

Early Involvement in Policy and Advocacy

In the mid-1960s, Elspeth Howe engaged in policy advocacy through the Conservative Political Centre (CPC), a key forum for developing party ideas. She authored the 1966 pamphlet Under 5: A Report on Nursery Education, which argued for expanded pre-school provision, drawing on American research demonstrating benefits for children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Her work influenced contemporary debates on , as evidenced by references in parliamentary discussions on the Plowden Report in March 1967, where MP William van Straubenzee praised the pamphlet's suggestions for integrating nursery education with primary schooling.) This contribution reflected Howe's focus on evidence-based improvements to within a Conservative framework emphasizing practical welfare enhancements over expansive state intervention. Prior to formal public appointments, Howe's involvement aligned with broader Conservative efforts to modernize party policy on and issues, leveraging her position as the of rising politician to amplify these voices through CPC publications and internal advocacy.) Her early writings prioritized targeted interventions, such as nursery access for working mothers and underprivileged children, informed by empirical data rather than ideological overreach.

Equal Opportunities Commission Role

Elspeth Howe served as deputy chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) from 1975 to 1979, a established under the to eliminate discrimination on grounds of sex and marital status, promote equality of opportunity between men and women generally, and eliminate discrimination in employment, education, and related services. Appointed under the leadership of the first chair, Baroness Lockwood, Howe's role involved supporting investigations into discriminatory practices, advising government on policy implementation, and advocating for reforms such as equal pay and workplace protections, aligning with her broader commitment to advancing women's opportunities without compromising conservative principles. During her tenure, the EOC focused on enforcing the new through formal investigations and public awareness campaigns, with Howe contributing to efforts addressing systemic barriers in and for women, though specific cases led by her personally are not prominently documented in primary records. She continued involvement with the EOC in advisory capacities after , extending her influence into the amid ongoing debates over the effectiveness of equality bodies in a market-oriented policy environment. Her approach emphasized practical, evidence-based advocacy rather than ideological overreach, reflecting a cross-party consensus on basic equalities while critiquing overregulation in later reflections.

Broadcasting Standards Commission Leadership

Elspeth Howe served as Chair of the Broadcasting Standards Commission (BSC) from its establishment on 1 April 1997 until 1999. The BSC was created under the Broadcasting Act 1996 by merging the Broadcasting Complaints Commission, which handled fairness and privacy complaints, with the Broadcasting Standards Council, focused on taste and decency; Howe had chaired the latter since 1993. The Commission's mandate included investigating public complaints about television and radio content, adjudicating breaches of codes on violence, sexual content, impartiality, and privacy, and commissioning research to inform standards. In the early months of her tenure, the BSC finalized and published codes of guidance on standards of fairness and , providing broadcasters with explicit rules to avoid unwarranted infringement on individuals' . The body also initiated research projects, including a 1998 survey commissioned by the Commission examining the portrayal of victims in factual programs and the associated risks to , which highlighted how such depictions could exacerbate harm to individuals. Howe's leadership addressed rising concerns over explicit content, as evidenced by decisions on programs like the satirical series , which tested boundaries on decency and public information. A prominent action in January 1999 involved the BSC issuing a public warning on the increasing scheduling of soft and erotic films in late-night slots, urging broadcasters to better align with decency codes to protect viewers from potentially offensive material. Howe participated in media discussions on the issue, emphasizing the need for self-regulation amid evolving content landscapes. Her term ended in April 1999, coinciding with her appointment as Commander of the in the for contributions to broadcasting regulation. The BSC's functions were later absorbed into in 2003.

House of Lords Tenure

Elspeth Howe was appointed a as Baroness Howe of Idlicote on 29 June 2001 and introduced to the on 11 July 2001, serving as an independent crossbench member. Her elevation was among the initial "People's Peers" selected through the , reflecting a push for non-partisan expertise in the reformed upper chamber. Throughout her nearly two-decade tenure, Baroness Howe focused primarily on legislative efforts to safeguard children from online harms, leveraging her prior experience in broadcasting regulation. She introduced multiple private member's bills targeting , including the Online Safety Bill [HL] in 2015, which mandated default pornography filters by internet service providers and mobile operators, alongside age verification for sites hosting harmful sexualized content. The bill aimed to curb children's exposure to explicit material but faced criticism for potential overreach into free expression; it progressed to second reading but did not become law. Baroness Howe reintroduced variants of the legislation in subsequent parliamentary sessions, such as the 2016-17 Online Safety Bill, maintaining pressure for statutory duties on platforms to protect minors. In total, she sponsored seven bills on online safety, consistently advocating for proactive measures like and enforcement against non-compliant providers. Her interventions extended to related debates, including support for amendments enhancing victim protections in the Modern Bill and scrutiny of data protection provisions affecting children. She retired from the on 2 June 2020, citing the chamber's size and her advanced age amid reforms to limit tenure. Her crossbench independence allowed unaligned advocacy, though her conservative-leaning priorities on family protections occasionally aligned with government positions on child welfare.

Key Positions and Advocacy

Support for and Ordination

Elspeth Howe served as deputy chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission from 1975 to 1979, during which she focused on advancing equal opportunities for women in and , including challenging discriminatory practices in workplaces and schools. Her tenure emphasized enforcing obligations on employers to address gender disparities, though such measures faced resistance amid prevailing free-market policies. In the , Howe advocated for the as priests and bishops. As vice-chair of the House of Laity in the General Synod from 1990 to 1996, she worked persistently to overcome opposition following setbacks like the 2012 failure of the women bishops measure. She served as vice-president of Women and the Church (WATCH), an organization dedicated to promoting women's ministry in the . During her time as a crossbench peer in the , Howe actively supported legislative efforts to enable women's consecration. On 14 October 2014, she addressed the Bishops and Priests (Consecration and Ordination of Women) Measure, expressing concerns over provisions permitting discrimination against female clergy and oversight by male bishops, which she argued embedded inequality contrary to broader equality laws. In February 2015, she contributed to the (Women) Bill debate, underscoring ongoing divisions and the need for timely progress on female episcopal appointments. Her interventions highlighted tensions between traditional ecclesiastical structures and modern principles, including challenges to exemptions overriding the Equality Act 2010.

Internet Safety and Child Protection Efforts

Baroness Howe of Idlicote was a prominent advocate for enhancing online protections for children during her tenure in the House of Lords, introducing seven private member's bills on online safety between 2011 and 2021. Her efforts focused on mandating stricter measures by internet service providers (ISPs) and mobile operators to block access to harmful content, including pornography and other material deemed inappropriate for minors. She collaborated with organizations such as CARE to prioritize legislative action against child exposure to explicit online material, emphasizing the need for default filtering and parental controls. In her 2015 Online Safety Bill, introduced as her fourth such measure over four parliamentary sessions, Howe proposed requiring ISPs to provide free network-level content filters to all customers and imposing duties on platforms to prevent children's access to harmful sexualized content through age verification systems. The bill sought to align with parallel efforts in the led by MP , aiming to enforce proactive safeguards rather than relying on voluntary industry compliance. Although not enacted, it influenced subsequent government consultations on digital regulation and highlighted deficiencies in self-regulation by tech companies. Howe reintroduced variants of the legislation in subsequent sessions, including the 2016-17 Online Safety Bill, which reiterated calls for mandatory age checks on commercial pornography sites and expanded protections against grooming and . By 2020, facing delays in the government's Online Harms framework, she tabled the Digital Economy Bill to compel platforms to verify users' ages and remove non-compliant content, critiquing inadequate fines for violations as insufficient deterrents. Her interventions in Lords debates, such as the 2016 discussion on online safety, underscored the urgency of shielding children from unregulated digital harms, drawing on evidence of widespread exposure to explicit material. Beyond legislation, Howe posed targeted written questions on enforcement, inquiring about the number of overseas-hosted websites containing non-photographic child sex abuse images accessible in the , pressing the for data on blocked sites and international cooperation. She also advocated for broader in parliamentary scrutiny of bills like the Children and Families Act, integrating online risks into discussions of duties for service providers. Her work reflected a consistent view that statutory obligations, rather than industry-led initiatives, were essential to mitigate the causal links between unfiltered internet access and child vulnerability to exploitation and psychological harm.

Political Views and Controversies

Relationship with Margaret Thatcher

Elspeth Howe's relationship with was marked by mutual antagonism, primarily indirect through her husband 's long tenure in Thatcher's cabinets but strained by personal and ideological differences. served as Thatcher's from 1979 to 1983 and Foreign Secretary from 1983 to 1989, positions in which he was instrumental in implementing her economic reforms, yet Elspeth reportedly detested Thatcher for exhibiting "" toward other women, implying a reluctance to aid female advancement despite her own success. Elspeth's advocacy for equal opportunities and social causes like clashed with Thatcher's more individualistic approach, irritating the and highlighting their divergent conservative feminism—Howe emphasizing collective advancement while Thatcher prioritized personal merit. Tensions escalated in 1989 when Thatcher demoted Geoffrey Howe from Foreign Secretary to Leader of the House of Commons and Deputy Prime Minister, a move Elspeth perceived as a humiliating snub that deepened her resentment. She loathed Thatcher's public and cabinet belittling of her husband, whom colleagues dubbed a "dead sheep" for his perceived passivity, and Thatcher in turn suspected Elspeth of fomenting disloyalty, viewing her influence as a threat to cabinet cohesion. This frosty dynamic reportedly contributed to Geoffrey Howe's decision to resign on November 13, 1990, delivering a Commons speech that criticized Thatcher's European policy intransigence and precipitated her leadership challenge, with accounts suggesting Elspeth's encouragement played a role in overcoming his hesitancy. Post-Thatcher, Elspeth maintained her critical stance, positioning herself as ideologically opposed to what she saw as Thatcher's divisive style, though both women operated within Conservative circles—Howe as a crossbench peer focused on social reforms rather than Thatcher's market-driven orthodoxy. Their interactions underscored broader rifts in the party between wets like the Howes, favoring consensus and social welfare, and Thatcher's conviction , with Elspeth's "Tory feminist" label reflecting a progressive edge that Thatcher dismissed.

Critiques of Her "Tory Feminist" Stance

Elspeth Howe's self-identification as a " feminist," blending Conservative Party allegiance with advocacy for women's equality, elicited criticism from traditionalists within her party who viewed as incompatible with core conservative values emphasizing family hierarchy and . Sir , a Conservative MP, lambasted her in 1993 as "the sort of woman who would have espoused the wonders of in the Thirties," portraying her and social as "trendyism" preferable to conservative , and accusing her of providing the "knife" that her husband Geoffrey wielded in his 1990 resignation speech against . This reflected broader conservative unease with her influence, exemplified by Thatcher's rejection of independent taxation for married women—a policy Howe championed—which attributed to Thatcher's suspicion that Elspeth was the driving force behind Geoffrey Howe's push for it. Feminists, conversely, critiqued Howe's Tory feminism as compromising core principles of gender autonomy, particularly her 1979 resignation from the deputy chairmanship of the Equal Opportunities Commission upon her husband's appointment as Chancellor of the Exchequer, which was interpreted as subordinating career to spousal loyalty amid perceived conflicts of interest. This move drew "derogatory criticism" from feminist circles, who saw it as emblematic of insufficient radicalism, reinforcing traditional marital roles rather than challenging them. Her mutual antagonism with Thatcher, whom Howe accused of "Queen Bee syndrome" for sidelining other women, underscored tensions: Howe's advocacy clashed with Thatcher's meritocratic individualism, which prioritized personal achievement over systemic feminist reforms. These critiques highlighted causal frictions in Howe's stance: her crossbench independence and focus on issues like women's ordination and equal pay aligned with progressive reforms but alienated Tory purists wary of diluting , while her Conservative roots and family-oriented decisions distanced her from demands for unyielding ideological purity in . Alan Clark's assertion that Elspeth's "hand [was] in every line" of Geoffrey's anti-Thatcher speech further fueled perceptions among party loyalists that her feminist lens undermined Thatcherite unity. Despite such opposition, Howe persisted in roles like chairing the Broadcasting Standards Council, where her oversight of media content on sex and drew from her dual commitments, though without resolving the ideological divides.

Independent Crossbench Perspective

Baroness Howe of Idlicote was appointed a in 2001, sitting as a crossbench member of the until her retirement on 2 June 2020, a position that freed her from party whips and enabled decisions guided by personal conviction rather than partisan allegiance. As one of the first "people's peers" nominated under Tony Blair's Labour government—despite her marriage to the prominent Conservative —her elevation reflected an emphasis on expertise and independence over traditional political affiliations, broadening the Lords' composition to include non-party figures committed to public service. This status positioned her to critique policies across the spectrum, prioritizing evidence-based reforms in areas like media regulation and child welfare over ideological conformity. In Lords debates, she consistently advocated for institutional , as evidenced by her 2011 interventions on the funding, where she stressed preserving to maintain its credibility and global reliability amid government pressures. Similarly, during the 2004 Children Bill discussions, she pushed for enhanced safeguards in frameworks while supporting operational for regulatory bodies, arguing that such ensured effective, non-politicized implementation. Her approach exemplified a crossbench of scrutinizing executive overreach, often aligning with amendments that imposed duties on private entities—like providers—to filter harmful content for minors, as proposed in her 2014 motion during the Children and Families Bill. This independent vantage allowed Baroness Howe to embody a distinct from Thatcherite orthodoxy, which she viewed as overly rigid; contemporaries described her as advancing a Toryism rooted in and empirical policy outcomes rather than market absolutism. Free from electoral pressures, her contributions emphasized cross-party consensus on long-term societal risks, such as online harms and broadcasting standards, consistently questioning successive governments—Labour and Conservative—on enforcement gaps without deference to ruling administrations. Her tenure thus highlighted the crossbench role's value in providing unwhipped, expertise-driven perspectives that tempered partisan extremes in legislative scrutiny.

Death and Legacy

Final Years and Death

In her later years, Baroness Howe of Idlicote remained active as an independent crossbencher in the , where she had served since 2001, advocating for and online safety measures. In a 2017 debate on the Queen's Speech, she highlighted pressing concerns over online harms to children, urging stronger regulatory frameworks. She continued contributing to parliamentary discussions into 2019, including on the Queen's Speech, adapting her prepared remarks in response to contemporary political developments. She retired from the in 2020 at the age of 88. Baroness Howe died peacefully at her home in Idlicote, , on 22 March 2022, aged 90, following a battle with cancer. Her family described her passing as occurring after a "brave battle" with the illness. Tributes noted her enduring commitment to public service, with the , her half-niece, praising her influence.

Assessment of Contributions and Criticisms

Baroness Howe's advocacy for enhanced online safety measures for children represented a significant contribution to , particularly through her persistent efforts to regulate access to harmful digital content. She introduced the Online Safety Bill in the in 2015, aiming to impose statutory duties on internet service providers to block pornography and other inappropriate material for minors, a measure she pursued amid growing evidence of children's exposure to explicit content via smartphones and . Her role as chair of the parliamentary Select Committee on Communications' inquiry into children and the in 2012 further amplified calls for proactive industry self-regulation and government intervention, influencing subsequent legislation like the Digital Economy Act 2017, which incorporated age verification requirements for pornographic sites. Organizations such as CARE praised her as a "" for highlighting pornography's detrimental effects on youth when such concerns were often dismissed. In media regulation, her tenure as chair of the Broadcasting Standards Commission from 1997 to 2003 advanced standards for impartiality and protection against offensive content, building on her earlier deputy chairmanship of the Equal Opportunities Commission (1975–1979), where she promoted workplace equality during a period of nascent sex discrimination laws. Her crossbench independence facilitated support for causes like the bishops in the , contributing to legislative changes enabling female episcopal appointments by 2014. Criticisms of Howe's approach centered on perceived overreach in regulatory proposals, with some viewing her bills as infringing on free expression by mandating broad content controls without sufficient evidence of efficacy. Her resignation from the Equal Opportunities Commission upon her husband's 1979 appointment as drew accusations of or from contemporary observers, though she maintained it was to avoid perceptions of partisanship. Additionally, her personal animus toward , reportedly influencing her husband Geoffrey Howe's 1990 resignation speech that precipitated the Prime Minister's downfall, alienated Thatcher loyalists who saw it as disloyalty amplified by familial dynamics. Despite these, her legacy is predominantly affirmed in obituaries for intellectual rigor and public service, with limited substantive critiques of her policy impacts emerging from establishment sources.

References

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