Sally Oppenheim-Barnes


Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, Baroness Oppenheim-Barnes, PC was a British Conservative politician.

Early life

Born Sarah Amelia Viner to Jewish parents in Dublin on 26 July 1928, she was raised and educated in Sheffield, where her father founded a steel and cutlery company. She attended Lowther College and worked as a social worker in London before entering politics. She changed her forename legally to "Sally" in 1968.

Career

At the 1970 [United Kingdom general election|1970 general election], she defeated Labour candidate Jack Diamond to represent the constituency of Gloucester for the Conservative Party; Diamond was the only cabinet minister to lose his seat at that election. She continued as Member of Parliament for Gloucester until 1987 and was Minister of State for Consumer Affairs in the Department of Trade between 1979 and 1982.
She chaired the National Consumer Council from 1987-89 and was later a vice-president of the National Union of Townswomen’s Guilds and chair of the National Waterways Museum.
Oppenheim-Barnes was created a life peer, as Baroness Oppenheim-Barnes of Gloucester in the County of Gloucestershire, on 9 February 1989. Her son Phillip Oppenheim is a former Conservative MP for Amber Valley. Between 1983 and 1987 mother and son served simultaneously in the House of Commons of [the United Kingdom|House of Commons]. On 25 February 2019, she retired from the House of Lords under the House of Lords [Reform Act 2014].

Personal life and death

In 1949, she married Henry Oppenheim, a property tycoon, with whom she had three children. Widowed in 1980, in 1984 she married her second husband, John Barnes. Oppenheim-Barnes died on 1 January 2025, at the age of 96.