Johnson was born in Northwich, Cheshire. After returning from wartime service in the Navy her father, Eric Johnson, founded the Eric Johnson electrical engineering company in Little Leigh near Northwich, Cheshire (now continued by his son). She passed the Eleven plus and attended the Northwich County Grammar School for Girls (later the County High School Leftwich). At sixth form level she studied at Sir John Deane's College from 1982 to 1984 where she studied History, English and Economics.[2]
In November 2005 Johnson was appointed as a Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of State for Pensions Reform, Stephen Timms. In 2007 she left this role to become an assistant Government Whip. She took on the additional role of Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Schools in the reshuffle of June 2009.
During the United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal it was revealed that Johnson had claimed £987 in architects fees for her second home, which she voluntarily repaid, and had a £563 claim for crockery rejected as "excessive"[5]
Diana Johnson in 2013
In the 2010 general election Johnson polled 39.2% of the vote and held onto the Hull North constituency for Labour with her majority reduced to 641 votes.[6]
In 2014, Johnson proposed a Bill under the Ten Minute Rule that would require sex and relationships education, including discussions around issues such as consent, to be made a compulsory part of the National Curriculum[7]
Johnson was appointed in September 2015 by Jeremy Corbyn, shortly after he became Labour party leader, as a shadow minister in the Foreign and Commonwealth team.[8] In late June 2016, along with colleagues, she resigned as a shadow minister, unhappy at Corbyn's leadership following the 'leave' vote in the European membership referendum.[9] She supported Owen Smith in the 2016 Labour Party leadership election.[10]
In September 2019, Johnson became the first Labour MP to face a full reselection process by her local party after members voted that she should face a challenge.[13] On 25 October 2019, Johnson's local party voted by 292 votes to 101 to reselect her as the candidate for the next election.[14] She was re-elected in the 2019 general election.[15]
Political positions
Prostitution
On 9 December 2020, Johnson introduced a Ten Minute Rule bill that would introduce the Nordic model approach to prostitution, which would criminalise those paying for sex and criminalise websites which advertise prostitution. The bill was strongly criticised and opposed by sex workers including the English Collective of Prostitutes group, women's rights organisations, trade unions, Amnesty International and thousands of individuals, who argued that this legislation would push the industry underground and put sex workers in danger.[16][17]
In July 2021, Diana Johnson proposed an amendment that would liberalise abortion in England and Wales.[20] Proponents of the amendment suggested this would bring English and Welsh law in line with recent legislative changes in Northern Ireland. However, Johnson was strongly criticised for not clarifying whether this would allow for abortion up until birth. It has also been suggested by pro-life organisations that this would have removed the requirement for a doctor to be involved, allow for sex selective abortion and removed conscience protections for those medical professionals who object to abortion.[21]
Johnson was also criticised by 800 medical professionals in a letter that suggested such an amendment would remove legal safeguards for both the mother and child and pointed out that extensions to the 24 week limit were only supported by 1% of the UK population according to a recent Savanta ComRespoll. Johnson received little support in Parliament for the amendment and was also criticised by some pro-choice politicians [citation needed]. Johnson declined to take the amendment to a vote.[22]
In 2024, Johnson's amendment to the Criminal Justice Bill, which would decriminalise women themselves in relation to their own pregnancies but would leave the rest of abortion law and regulation unchanged, has been backed by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, the British Medical Association, Mumsnet, and many groups who work with survivors of gender based violence such as Women's Aid and Karma Nirvana.[23] Conservative Chancellor Jeremy Hunt, who has previously backed a reduction in abortion time limits, has indicated he may support her amendment.[24] The Health Secretary Victoria Atkins has also suggested she may vote for the amendment.[25]