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Nina Temple

Nina Temple
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain
In office
January 1990 – November 1991
Preceded by Gordon McLennan
Succeeded by Post abolished
General Secretary of the Young Communist League
In office
1979–1983
Preceded by Tom Bell
Succeeded by Douglas Chalmers
Personal details
Born Nina Claire Temple
(1956-04-21) 21 April 1956 (age 61)
Westminster, London, England
Political party Communist Party of Great Britain
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Left
Relatives
Alma mater Imperial College, London

Nina Claire Temple (born 21 April 1956) is a British former politician who was the last Secretary of the Communist Party of Great Britain and was formerly a think-tank director in the United Kingdom.

Temple was born in Westminster, London, the daughter of Barbara J. (Rainnie) and Landon Roy Temple. Born into a communist family (her father ran Progressive Tours and was a Communist Party of Great Britain member), she joined the Young Communist League when she was 13, later protesting in London against the Vietnam War. She has a degree in materials science from Imperial College, London. She is the sister of film director Julien Temple and the aunt of actress Juno Temple.

During the late 1970s she was general secretary of the Young Communist League and became a prominent member of the Eurocommunist grouping within the party. She became a member of the CPGB executive in 1979, and then a member of the Political Committee in January 1982.

She was the Press and Publicity Officer of the CPGB from January 1983 until 1989, when she became the last (General) Secretary of the party in January 1990, aged 33. She pledged to make the party "feminist and green, as well as democratically socialist." In this role Temple became one of the leading proponents of the dissolution of the CPGB in November 1991 and the founding of its legal successor, the Democratic Left.

The Democratic Left continued through the 1990s, becoming the New Politics Network in 1999. Temple was its first director and worked for five years for the Make Votes Count Coalition.

In June 2005 she started work as head of Development and Communications at the Social Market Foundation, a role she held until 2008.


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