Teresa Ellen Gorman (néeMoore; 30 September 1931 – 28 August 2015) was a British politician. She was ConservativeMember of Parliament (MP) for Billericay, in the county of Essex, from 1987 to 2001 when she stood down. She was a leading figure in the rebellions over the Maastricht Treaty that nearly brought down John Major's government. She worked in both education and business.
Early life
Gorman was born Teresa Ellen Moore in Putney, London, England.[1] Her father was a demolition contractor, her mother a waitress. She was educated at Fulham County School in London,[2] leaving the all-girls grammar school at 16, at her parents' insistence to start work. She then trained to teach at BrightonTeacher Training College, qualifying in 1951. While working as a teacher, she studied biology and zoology part-time at University College London, graduating with first class honours.[3]
After marrying her first husband, James Gorman, whose surname she would keep throughout her life, she worked on an exchange programme in New York City.[citation needed] Besides teaching she ran a business selling teaching aids, Banta,[2] and was involved in property development with her first husband.[citation needed]
Political career
Under her maiden name Moore, Gorman attempted to enter the House of Commons as an Independent candidate for the Conservative-held seat of Streatham in the October 1974 general election, polling 210 votes.[3] In the same year she founded (and later chaired) the Alliance of Small Firms & Self-Employed People. She later sat as an elected member of Westminster City Council from 1982 to 1986.[2]
Gorman was elected to the House of Commons in the 1987 election. When she sought the candidature for Billericay in 1986, she claimed to have been born in 1941, aged 45, rather than 1931, aged 55, believing this would increase her chances.[4] The night after she was elected she appeared on a notable edition of the Channel 4 late-night discussion programme After Dark when she "stormed off the set".[5]
In 1992, Gorman introduced an amendment to the Representation of the People Act under the Ten Minute Rule to give two seats to each constituency, one for a male MP and one for a female. The amendment received only a first reading. She was a prominent figure in the group of Conservative rebels over European issues. In 1994, she had the Conservative whip withdrawn for refusing to back the EC Finance Bill.[6]
In February 2000, she was suspended from the House of Commons for a month for failing to disclose on the Register of Members Interests between 1987 and 1994 three rented properties in south London and for her failure to register two rented-out properties in Portugal from 1987 to 1999. The Commons' Standards and Privileges Committee also found she should not have introduced a Ten Minute Rule Bill in 1990 proposing the repeal of the Rent Acts without registering and declaring a financial interest.[4]
Considered an able but maverick politician, Gorman was known for her public endorsement of hormone replacement therapy[4] her tattooed eyebrows (she shaved them off as a teenager and they never grew back) and her belief that rapists should be castrated.[8]
Censure by the House of Commons Standards & Privileges Committee
Gorman was censured by the House of Commons Standards and Privileges Committee for a failure to declare a relevant interest and other breaches of the code of conduct.[4]
The committee found that she failed to declare that her husband Jim Gorman owned three properties in London when she proposed the repeal of the Rents Act. Moreover, during its investigation the privileges committee MPs found she gave "seriously misleading and inaccurate information", breached the code of conduct for members and improperly contacted witnesses. She subsequently announced her resignation from Parliament, although her retirement was also influenced by caring for her husband Jim, who had cancer.[citation needed]
Personal life
Teresa and James Gorman were married on 18 October 1952. He died of cancer in 2008. On her birthday in 2010, she married Peter Clarke, a Scottish widower, who survived her until January 2017.[11] Clarke was a columnist for Private Eye and a wildlife activist.[12]
She had no children.[13] In Who's Who (2014) she did not detail her marital status beyond "married".[2][14]