Kat Fletcher

Cllr
Kat Fletcher
Mayor of Islington
Assumed office
13 May 2016
Preceded by Richard Greening
Islington Borough Councillor
for St George's Ward
Assumed office
21 March 2013
Preceded by Jessica Asato
Deputy Mayor of Islington
In office
15 May 2015  12 May 2016
Preceded by Richard Greening
Succeeded by Una O’Halloran
51st President of the National Union of Students
In office
2004  March 2006
Preceded by Mandy Telford
Succeeded by Gemma Tumelty
Personal details
Born Kathryn Jane Fletcher
(1979-12-20) 20 December 1979
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Political party Labour
Residence Bristol and London
Alma mater University of Leeds

Kathryn "Kat" Jane Fletcher (born 20 December 1979) is a British Labour Party politician. In May 2016 she was sworn in as the Mayor of Islington, having served as a councillor of the borough's St George's Ward since 2013.[1] She was previously president of the UK National Union of Students, between 2004 and 2006, the first to be elected from a political slate clearly to the left of Labour Students.

Early life

Born in Sheffield, Fletcher was formerly the General Secretary of Sheffield College's students' union, where she joined the Campaign for Free Education (CFE) and the Alliance for Workers' Liberty, a small Trotskyist group. She later attended the University of Leeds where she studied Social Policy and Education.[2] After studying for two years, she was elected as the NUS National Women's Officer, and subsequently to the NUS Block of Twelve part-time officers. She then returned to Leeds, graduating in 2004.

NUS President

She was elected president in 2004 in an extremely close contest, which she won by only two votes after six rounds of transfers, having lost the 2003 election by only three votes to the incumbent candidate. Although a long-standing member of the Labour party, she ran on a leftist platform as a member of the Campaign for Free Education (CFE) criticising the NUS proximity to Tony Blair's Labour government, particularly on the issue of tuition fees. After being elected she pushed through a process of NUS reform which she claimed was necessary to save the organisation from a looming financial crisis.

There is some confusion about her political affiliations as president. She left the AWL long before being elected; during her first year in office, she disbanded CFE, as a result of reinstating free education policy. It was at this point that the AWL and other left-wing activists such as the CFE's successor organisation Education Not for Sale came into sharp opposition to her.

In 2005 she stood for re-election without any description, winning by the largest margin in NUS history. Other candidates standing included: Conservative Future's candidate Michael Champion and the Socialist Workers' Student Society candidate Suzie Wylie.

Career

After her presidency Fletcher worked for two years (2006–08) at the Centre for Excellence in Leadership,[3] a government quango in the Further Education sector. Between 2008 and January 2010 she worked as Director of Policy and Development for the 157 Group. In 2010 she started volunteering for Ed Miliband's Labour Leadership Campaign, being subsequently appointed as head of volunteers for the duration of the campaign. In the same year she was sworn in as one of the first female Freemen of Beverley as a result of a gender equality campaign of which her aunt was a key member; this act had to be passed by Parliament.

Fletcher stood as a Labour candidate at St. George's ward in the London Borough of Islington March 2013 by-election, and was elected as a councillor with relative ease.[4] She was subsequently reelected in the Islington London Borough Council election, 2014. Fletcher acted as election agent for Jeremy Corbyn in the 2015 general election, and was subsequently a part of Corbyn's campaign team when he won the 2015 Labour Party leadership election.[5]

In 2015, Fletcher was appointed the Deputy Mayor of Islington.[6] The following year she was sworn in as Mayor, a post she will hold until May 2017. She selected the Ben Kinsella Trust as her designated charity.[1]

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Mandy Telford
President of the
National Union of Students

20042006
Succeeded by
Gemma Tumelty
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