Audrey Wise (née Brown; 4 January 1932 – 2 September 2000) was a British Labour politician who was the Member of Parliament for Coventry South West from 1974 to 1979, and for Preston from 1987 until her death.

Early life

Audrey Wise was born Audrey Brown in Newcastle upon Tyne, the daughter of a former Labour councillor. She married her husband John, a dispensing optician, in 1953, and they had two children: Valerie, who is also a political activist, and a son, Ian.

She visited Portugal in 1974 to report on and participate in the Carnation Revolution that overthrew the fascist dictatorship, recording her experiences and analysis in Eyewitness in Revolutionary Portugal. She was famously arrested on the picket line during the Grunwick dispute where Asian women workers were striking for union recognition.

With Jeff Rooker, she co-authored the Rooker-Wise Amendment to Denis Healey's 1977 budget which sought to freeze many annual fiscal changes to mitigate global inflation; this amendment introduced retrospective inflation-proofing on personal tax allowances (the tax-free portion of individuals' earnings), and resulted in £450 million being returned to taxpayers. endorsed by the Conservative government, called for services to become more woman-centred, and recommended increased access to home births and water births.

The conflict between Wise and the Labour Whips was highlighted in the National Theatre play This House by James Graham in 2012.

Death

On 2 September 2000, Wise died at her home in Stafford from a brain tumour, which had been diagnosed some five months earlier.

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