Quin entered the
House of Commons in the
1987 election as
Member of Parliament for
Gateshead East. In Opposition (1987–1997) she served on the Labour front bench as a Shadow Minister for Consumer Affairs, Trade Policy, Regional Policy and Employment (dealing with the EU Social Chapter). From 1994 to 1997 she served as Shadow Europe Minister and was Deputy to Shadow Foreign Secretary
Robin Cook. After boundary changes for the
1997 general election, she represented the new
Gateshead East and Washington West constituency from 1997 until she stepped down at the
2005 general election and was replaced by
Sharon Hodgson. Quin served as prisons minister,
Minister for Europe, and as Minister of State for Agriculture (and deputy to Cabinet Minister, Nick Brown). She asked to retire as a minister in 2001 to concentrate on her constituency interests. She had intended to stand for membership of a
North East Regional Assembly on her retirement from Westminster, but the proposed body was rejected by a margin of 4–1 in a
referendum in November 2004. In Parliament as a backbencher Quin was the first woman to chair the Northern Group of Labour MPs and Chaired the All-Party Group for France (Franco-British Parliamentary Group). She successfully lobbied Chancellor Gordon Brown to bring in the nationwide concessionary bus travel scheme for pensioners == Life peer ==