She was elected to Parliament at the
1997 general election for the safe seat of Liverpool Riverside. She held the seat with a majority of 21,799 and has held the seat comfortably at successive general elections. When she was re-elected in 2001, the turnout was the lowest in the country at 34.1%.
Positions and voting She was a member of the
Transport Committee and its predecessor,
Transport, Local Government and the Regions, since she was first elected. On 21 May 2008, she was selected to become the Chair of the Commons Transport Select Committee after the death of
Gwyneth Dunwoody MP, being returned unopposed after the 2015 general election. According to website
Public Whip, Ellman repeatedly voted for the Iraq War, against an investigation into that war, and for renewal of
Trident, Britain's nuclear weapons programme. She very rarely voted against the Party line. In the
2015 Labour Party leadership election, she nominated
Liz Kendall. She supported
Owen Smith in the failed attempt to replace
Jeremy Corbyn in the
2016 leadership election.
Israel Ellman was Chair of the Jewish Labour Movement from 2006 to 2016, after which she became its Honorary President. She was also Vice Chair of Labour Friends of Israel and succeeded
Joan Ryan as Chair in August 2019. She said that she intended to remain a member of LFI following her resignation from the Labour Party. She was the chair of the All-Party Britain-Israel Parliamentary Group. The
Times of Israel called her "tough-as-nails" and "an unabashed friend of Israel". According to one biographer in the
Jewish Chronicle, "Ellman can always be called on to defend Israel on the green benches" (i.e. in Parliament). The
Jewish Telegraph said "Doughty Labour MP Louise Ellman is never scared to openly proclaim her Jewish identity and fight for Israel and against Islamic extremism at every Parliamentary opportunity". In September 2019, Ellman said she "shared the fears" of other Jews living in the UK about the prospect of a Labour government led by Jeremy Corbyn and understood why they "would seriously consider leaving the country". In October 2019, she said "I'm not absolutely convinced he will bring great danger to the Jewish community but I'm very concerned it is possible he could".
Constituency party In 2016, Ellman said that a small number among the members who joined her constituency Labour party after Corbyn's election as leader seemed "obsessed on Middle East issues", that there had been a "very unpleasant atmosphere" in constituency meetings and that remarks which she considered were antisemitic had been made to her. She also alleged that the local
Momentum group was acting as a "party within a party" and asked for her constituency party to be suspended and investigated. A leading local Momentum member rejected the allegations.
2019 resignation from Labour Party In early October 2019, a motion of no confidence in Ellman, scheduled to take place on
Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, was submitted for discussion at a branch of her constituency Labour Party. The timing of the motion was criticised by Ellman herself, who called it "particularly insidious"; and by
Marie van der Zyl, President of the
Board of Deputies of British Jews, who said it meant that Ellman would have "no opportunity even to respond". A Labour Party spokesperson said that no confidence motions "had no formal standing", with another source intimating that the motion was unlikely to be taken to a vote. The North-West Labour Party office later advised local branches that none of the motions should be discussed, citing the potential prejudicial effect that such discussion may have on the upcoming
trigger ballot. On 16 October 2019, Ellman resigned from the Labour Party, citing concerns that
antisemitism had grown under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership. She believed Jewish members faced bullying and abuse, while antisemitic views and conspiracy theories had spread. She also accused Corbyn of associating with antisemites and failing to challenge them. Labour responded by stating that both Corbyn and the party were committed to supporting the Jewish community and tackling antisemitism. Ellman’s
Constituency Labour Party acknowledged her long service but noted her opposition to a Corbyn-led government made reselection unlikely. They cited political disagreements, including her support for the Iraq War and criticism of Corbyn, as reasons for the contest. While condemning antisemitism, they argued she misrepresented the local party and said many Jewish members did not share her views. Ellman did not stand for re-election as an MP at the
2019 United Kingdom general election. ==Life after parliament==