McCarthy qualified as a solicitor in 1994 and worked as a lawyer for Abbey National Treasury Services (1994–1996), Merrill Lynch Europe (1996–1999) and the Labour Party (2001). She was a director of London Luton Airport Ltd (1999–2003), a director at Britain in Europe (2002–2004), and Head of Public Policy at the Waterfront Partnership (2004–2005).[4]
In 2005, McCarthy was selected as the Labour candidate for Bristol East through an all-women shortlist[6] and retained the seat for her party at the 2005 general election. She was appointed a member of the Treasury Select Committee, and was involved in its inquiries into financial inclusion, globalisation and the role of the International Monetary Fund, and the administration of tax credits. She has also sat on two Finance Bill committees, as well as the UK Borders Bill Committee, the Offender Management Bill Committee and the Mental Health Bill Committee. She was described as a Gordon Brown loyalist, stating in 2005 that "The Chancellor's nine Budgets are the bedrock of all that we have achieved in government".[5]
In April 2007, McCarthy was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to Rosie Winterton, Minister for Health Services, and helped her steer the Mental Health Bill through the Commons. From July 2007 to January 2009, she worked as PPS to Douglas Alexander, the Secretary of State for International Development, before being made a Junior Whip in June 2009.[7] She is chair of the South West Group of Labour MPs, secretary of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Somaliland, a member of Labour's National Policy Forum, and lead contact for the End Child Poverty campaign among Labour MPs in parliament.
She was re-elected at the 2010 General Election, with her majority reduced by more than a half.[8] McCarthy was appointed as an acting Shadow Minister for Work and Pensions in May 2010 with responsibility for disability.[9] She supported Ed Balls in the 2010 Labour leadership election,[10] and became a junior Shadow Treasury Minister following Ed Miliband's election in October 2010.[11][12] In September 2011, McCarthy was made Shadow Foreign Office Minister with a responsibility for East Asia, South Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America and human rights.[13]
On World Vegan Day in November 2011, McCarthy became the first MP to set out in Parliament the case for becoming vegan.[14] She is also believed to be the first MP to deliver a speech in Parliament with the aid of an iPad.[15]
After being re-elected with an increased majority in the 2015 General Election, McCarthy nominated Andy Burnham in that year's Labour leadership campaign.[16] She was appointed by Jeremy Corbyn as Shadow Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in September 2015. She argued in a Spring 2015 interview with Viva!life, a magazine for vegans, that meat should be treated like tobacco, with "public campaigns to stop people eating it".[17] Tim Bonner of the Countryside Alliance said her opinions "are completely out of step with the vast majority of people".[18] "The world is not going to turn vegan because I am in post", McCarthy said on BBC Radio 4's Farming Today shortly after her appointment. "I have my own personal views on what I choose to eat, but I accept that we have a livestock industry in this country. What I want is for the industry to have the best welfare standards possible, to be sustainable as well as economically viable."[18]
On 26 June 2016, McCarthy was among dozens of shadow ministers who resigned from Corbyn's team.[19] She argued that "a new leader is needed to take on the challenges ahead".[20] According to McCarthy, in an article for The Huffington Post: "When the leader's office did venture into Defra territory, they didn't talk to the shadow team".[21] McCarthy did not believe Corbyn was the right Labour leader or a potential prime minister.[22] She supported Owen Smith in the 2016 Labour leadership election.[23]
In November 2017, McCarthy raised a complaint of inappropriate behaviour against Kelvin Hopkins, Labour MP for Luton North,[24] which remained unresolved at the time Hopkins stepped down as an MP before the 2019 General Election.[25]
McCarthy nominated Keir Starmer in the 2020 Labour leadership election, and was appointed Shadow Green Transport Minister following his election in April 2020.[26][27] She stepped down from the front bench owing to 'personal reasons' in Autumn 2021.[28]
On 29 June 2022 McCarthy returned to the Labour frontbench as Shadow Minister for Climate Change following the resignation of Olivia Blake.[29]
In May 2024, McCarthy introduced a ten minute rule bill requiring the Government to identify and support children with a parent in prison.[30]
Controversies
In May 2009, McCarthy repaid £402 for a second bed claimed in expenses for her one bedroom flat. She stated the claim had been made in error.[31][32]
In October 2010, McCarthy admitted a charge of electoral fraud, accepting a police caution for revealing on Twitter the number of postal votes cast per party in her constituency at the 2010 election, and apologised for this action.[11][33][34][35]
In May 2012, McCarthy branded a fellow train passenger a "lager drinking oaf" and suggested he should "have been killed before he could breed" in comments made to her followers on Twitter. According to McCarthy, he was playing loud techno music on the train and wearing a t-shirt emblazoned with an obscene phrase about his sex life.[36]
^Ltd, Hudson Berkley Reinhart. "About Kerry McCarthy". www.kerrymccarthymp.org. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
Also see Kerry McCarthy MP videoArchived 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine (starts at 22:27) and full transcriptArchived 1 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine (columns 895–904), World Vegan Day, Adjournment Debate, House of Commons, 10.27 pm – 10.56 pm, 1 November 2011.
^McCarthy, Kerry (31 August 2016). "On 'Betrayal' and Badgers". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on 2 September 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2016.