Her mother, Annie Marie Antoinette of the Dutch Van Lanschot family, married Ian Mackeson-Sandbach in 1967.
Antoinette Sandbach was educated at Haileybury and Imperial Service College[7] and subsequently at the University of Nottingham, where she studied law.[8][1] She practised as a criminal barrister in London for 13 years, latterly at 9 Bedford Row chambers. She was twice elected to the Bar Council in that time.
She then ran the family farming business, Hafodunos Farms Ltd, at Llangernyw in the Elwy valley[9] of North Wales from where she embarked on a political career.
Political career
In the 2007 Welsh Assembly election, Sandbach contested the Labour-held constituency of Delyn. She lost, but achieved a swing of 3.7% from Labour to Conservative and Labour narrowly held the seat by just 511 votes. Sandbach contested the Delyn parliamentary constituency in the 2010 general election, but lost again, though achieving a larger swing of 6.7% from Labour to Conservative.[10] Following the death of Brynle Williams in 2011, she became a Conservative Regional Assembly Member for North Wales.[9]
During her time in the Assembly she was appointed Shadow Rural Affairs Minister.[9] In 2014, she was appointed Shadow Minister for the Environment. Sandbach also sat on the Assembly's Environment and Sustainability Committee.
In March 2015, Sandbach was selected as the Conservative Party candidate for the Conservative-held seat of Eddisbury in Cheshire, England.[11] She held the safe Conservative seat with a majority of nearly 13,000, and promptly resigned from the Welsh Assembly, to be succeeded by Janet Haworth.[12]
On entering the House she was elected to the Welsh Affairs Select Committee and the Energy and Climate Change Select Committee, which she sat on until it was disbanded in October 2016. In March 2017, she was elected on to the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee and was subsequently re-elected to the committee after the 2017 General Election.[13] Sandbach was appointed to the joint committee examining the failure of Carillion and was highly critical of the lack of oversight by the auditors and directors of the company.[14]
She was also an elected executive member of the 1922 Committee of backbench Conservative MPs from 2015 to 2019.
One of her main policy interests was improving services for those who suffer the loss of a baby.[15] Following a debate in the House of Commons in November 2015, she helped set up the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Baby Loss, of which she was appointed co-chair. The group worked with all the major child loss charities to develop the national bereavement care pathway which has since been adopted by 108 NHS trusts in England.[16] Ms Sandbach secured a £1.5 million grant for a new counselling centre at Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool, the hospital which provided support for her after the loss of her son [17]
Sandbach has been a strong advocate for improving representation of women in the workforce, women's rights and female representation in Parliament. In some of her first appearances in the House she raised the issue of encouraging more girls to study Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths subjects in order for them to access those highly paid, highly skilled jobs and reduce the gap between men and women in the workplace.[citation needed]
Sandbach supported the United Kingdom remaining within the European Union (EU) in the 2016 EU membership referendum.[18] In the referendum, the UK voted to leave the EU (Brexit).[19] She retained the Eddisbury seat at the 2017 general election, with a majority of 11,942.[20]
Sandbach was one of 11 Conservative MPs to rebel against then Prime Minister Theresa May's government in voting for an amendment to the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 on 13 December 2017, which guaranteed MPs a vote on the final Brexit deal agreed with the European Union.[21] She voted for May's withdrawal agreement on all three opportunities.[22]
Sandbach endorsed Rory Stewart during the 2019 Conservative leadership election.[23] She was one of 21 Conservative MPs who had their whip withdrawn on 3 September after rebelling against the government by voting for opposition MPs to control the parliamentary process to try to prevent a no-deal Brexit, after which she sat as an Independent.[24] On 12 September, she declared her support for a referendum on the Brexit withdrawal agreement.[25] Ms Sandbach was one of a number of female MPs, including Nicky Morgan MP and Anna Soubry MP who went public about the increasing threats received by female MPs featuring in the ITV documentary "Exposed" filmed in 2019 [26]
On 15 October 2019. the members of the Eddisbury Conservative Association passed a motion of no confidence in her. She commented that the local Conservatives were "an unrepresentative handful of people" and they should not get to decide the question.[27]
On 31 October 2019, it was announced that Sandbach would stand in her constituency as a Liberal Democrat candidate.[28] On 12 December, standing as a Liberal Democrat, she lost her seat to the Conservative candidate, Edward Timpson. Timpson received 30,095 votes to Sandbach's 9,582.[4]
Personal life
Sandbach's daughter Sacha was born in 2002. Sandbach separated from Sacha's father in 2003 and moved back to her family estate in 2005.[9] She lost a five-day-old son, Sam, to sudden infant death syndrome in 2009[6] and married Matthew Sherratt, a sculptor, in 2012.[1][9]
Sandbach is believed to be the tallest woman to sit in the UK parliament, her height stated to be 6 feet 5 inches (1.96 m) in 2019.[29]
In August 2020, Sandbach announced she had breast cancer and was to start chemotherapy.[30] In March 2021, she announced that a biopsy had found no remaining cancer cells, but that she would require additional chemotherapy.[31]
Ancestral slavery links and legal action
Antoinette Sandbach is a descendant of prominent merchant and slave owner Samuel Sandbach, being one of his 3 times great-grandchildren. Her paternal grandmother was Geraldine Mackeson-Sandbach, a great-granddaughter of Samuel Sandbach and a prominent landowner in North Wales, whose estates included Hafodunos near Abergele and Bryngwyn Hall near Llanfyllin, as well as a 4,000 acre logwood plantation in Jamaica.[32] The family sold the main house at Hafodunos in the 1930s, but has continued to own land in the area.[9][33] Ms Sandbach has downplayed the contribution of inherited wealth to her family's property portfolio, stating on Twitter (now X) that one cottage on the family estate was purchased in 2015 and two were built in 2020.
In August 2023, it was reported that Ms Sandbach had asked for her name to be removed from research into slavery conducted by Malik Al Nasir. Al Nasir was interested in how Samuel Sandbach's fortune was derived and in particular in his activities in British Guiana.
In a TEDx talk given in 2021 Al Nasir had identified Ms Sandbach as one of many descendants of Samuel Sandbach,[33] and linked her to family properties in Wales. Ms Sandbach was unhappy that she had been "singled out".
She complained to Cambridge University about perceived inaccuracies in Mr Al Nasir's work and she asserted that she had a right to be forgotten given the relative shortness of her parliamentary career.[34] She also argued that there was no public interest which outweighed the threat to her personal safety by releasing her address. At the time of the TEDx talk Ms Sandbach was in court to give evidence against a former police officer who had harassed and threatened to kill her because of her views on Brexit. (Having received a suspended prison sentence in 2019,[35] he appealed[needs update]).
Sandbach was reported as having threatened legal action against Cambridge University for failing to apply their GDPR policies and their policy on naming living individuals.[36]
On 1 September 2023, Sandbach appeared on Times Radio where she asserted that her complaint related to "concerns for her personal safety" and that she did not object to being linked to her family's slavery history. She specified that she would be[needs update] making a complaint to the UK information commissioner. Sandbach also claimed that she "only learned about her family history three months ago".[37]