In 1959, aged 16, Triesman became a member of the
Labour Party but eleven years later resigned and joined the
Communist Party where he remained for six years, following which he rejoined the Labour Party. For a number of years, he was a lecturer and research director at South Bank Polytechnic (now
London South Bank University) and held roles in the lecturers' union,
NATFHE. Triesman became a full-time union official of NATFHE in 1984, with the post of National Negotiating Secretary. He was also
General Secretary of the
Association of University Teachers from 1993 until 2001. Triesman then was appointed the
General Secretary of the Labour Party from 2001 to December 2003, where a significant part of his job was to maintain the support of the trade unions who had become disillusioned with
Tony Blair's government. He was created a
life peer on 9 January 2004, taking the title
Baron Triesman, of Tottenham in the London Borough of Haringey, prior to which he was elected a
Visiting Fellow of
Wolfson College, Cambridge in 2000, for the study of economics and Higher Education. He has published a number of academic papers in economics and epidemiology. He was a senior visiting fellow at the
University of Warwick and a visiting fellow at the
London School of Economics. Triesman was a Fellow of the
Royal Statistical Society and the
Royal Society of Arts. In 2015, he was awarded the Icebreaker Award by the Chinese Ambassador to the UK for services to Chinese-UK relations, including football. Triesman served as
HM Opposition (Labour)
Lords Shadow Spokesperson for
Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from 2010 to 2014. He was a member of the
Henry Jackson Society's Political Council, and a member of the
European Leadership Network Board and
Top Level Group. Triesman resigned from the Labour group in the House of Lords in July 2019 in protest at the party leadership's behaviour and policies with regard to
antisemitism in the party,
Brexit and defence.
Government office Under
Tony Blair's
third Labour administration, Triesman served as
Parliamentary Under-Secretary in the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office with responsibility for relations with Africa, Latin America, the
Caribbean,
Overseas Territories, the
Commonwealth, UK
visas,
migration policy working directly to the prime minister, consular policy, the
British Council, the
BBC World Service and the
Chevening Scholarships Scheme. During this period, he conducted negotiations with Iran to secure the release of a group of British naval and marine personnel who had been taken prisoner in the Upper Persian Gulf. In the reshuffle of 29 June 2007, he was moved to the newly created post of Parliamentary Under-Secretary of the
Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills. In this role, he had responsibility for quality in higher education, innovation and intellectual property and future planning. In 2004, he was appointed a
Lord in Waiting. He was a member of the European Affairs External Affairs Select Committee. He was chairman of the Design Commission. He was co-chairman of the All Party St Lucia Group and a member of the All Party China and Chinese in Britain Group. == Football administration ==