Lady Starmer grew up in Gospel Oak, North London, where her mother was a community doctor. Like her future husband, Victoria went into a career as a solicitor, ...
Now, she works in occupational health for the NHS. Lady Victoria is Jewish and, together with her husband, is known to be raising her two children according to her faith. Today, although the couple are private about their lives, they are known to have two children together, teenager Toby and a younger daughter.
Despite her husband being in the public spotlight, she prefers a more private and quiet life. Lady Victoria Starmer has been married to Labour leader Sir Keir ...
He said: "It is about just being with the family. - He has said being vegetarian is "better for yourself and for the environment" - He has defended the rights of migrants and demanded an immigration system based on "compassion and dignity" - He has expressed that he is a socialist Sir Keir has previously identified himself as a socialist and has been described as being on the soft left within the Labour Party. Victoria is a follower of the Jewish faith - as her family are Jewish.
Today, joining her husband at the annual Labour conference in Liverpool, publicity-shy Lady Victoria Starmer opted for an eye-catching red wrap dress as she ...
And so we lurch from crisis to crisis, always reacting, always behind the curve, a sticking plaster, never a cure. We will end the blight of low pay and insecure work with our New Deal for Working People. The future wealth of this country is in our air, in our seas, in our skies. And what about those in the middle? In 1964, we harnessed the white heat of technology to pay our way in a modern economy. About the fairness and better society that I came into politics to create the biggest opportunity we've had in decades to make this country work for working people. In 1945, out of the rubble of the Second World War, we built a land fit for heroes. And the choice โ the political choice โ is: who pays? This party is always on the side of working people in times of crisis. And we will do it with a fresh start, a new set of priorities and a new way of governing. A common sense that teachers up and down the country drum into their pupils: 'fail to prepare and you prepare to fail'. I said on Sunday that a fitting tribute to The Late Queen would be to turn our collar up and face the storm.