Reynolds was selected as the
Labour candidate for the
2010 general election for
Wolverhampton North East in September 2008. Despite a 9% swing to the
Conservatives and a reduction in majority of more than 6,000, she held the seat for Labour. Reynolds spoke in the
House of Commons on
Building Schools for the Future,
free school meals,
human trafficking, cuts to police numbers and Mental Health Services. Shortly after her election in 2010 Reynolds was also elected to the
Foreign Affairs Select Committee of the House of Commons. In October 2010, Reynolds was promoted by Labour's
new leader,
Ed Miliband, to the
opposition frontbench as a shadow junior Foreign Office Minister under the then
Shadow Foreign Secretary,
Yvette Cooper. After the resignation of the Shadow Chancellor
Alan Johnson and resulting mini-reshuffle of posts, Reynolds continued working in her post under the new Shadow Foreign Secretary,
Douglas Alexander. In October 2011, Emma Reynolds was promoted by Labour leader, Ed Miliband, to the position of Shadow Europe Minister. In October 2013, Reynolds was promoted by Ed Miliband to the position of Shadow Housing Minister, replacing
Jack Dromey. In May 2015, after the
2015 general election, Reynolds was promoted to the position of
Shadow Communities and Local Government Secretary by
acting leader of the Labour Party Harriet Harman, following the resignation of Ed Miliband. Reynolds is former
Treasurer of the All-Party Parliamentary
China Group and
Vice Chair for the
All-Party Parliamentary Group for
British Sikhs, as well as
Secretary of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on
Human Trafficking. Reynolds resigned as
Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government following the
election of
Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the Labour Party. She later supported
Owen Smith in the
2016 Labour Party leadership election. She was
defeated in the
2019 election by the Conservatives'
Jane Stevenson.
Views on the European Union In an online article for the
New Labour pressure group Progress in 2011, Reynolds said that "Britain's membership of the
European Union is in our national interest". In an October 2012 interview with the
Total Politics website, Reynolds called for the
eurozone countries to integrate more closely. She also said she had differing opinions with
Jon Cruddas, Labour's policy review chief, on whether having a referendum on the EU was a priority. In the run-up to the
2016 EU referendum, Reynolds campaigned for
Britain Stronger in Europe. == Career outside Parliament (2019–2024) ==