Chuka Umunna

Chuka Umunna
Official portrait, 2017
Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills
In office
7 October 2011 – 13 September 2015
Leader
Preceded byJohn Denham
Succeeded byAngela Eagle
Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Leader of the Opposition
In office
10 October 2010 – 23 May 2011
Serving with Anne McGuire
LeaderEd Miliband
Preceded byDesmond Swayne
Succeeded byMichael Dugher
Member of Parliament
for Streatham
In office
6 May 2010 – 6 November 2019
Preceded byKeith Hill
Succeeded byBell Ribeiro-Addy
Change UK portfolios
2019Group Spokesperson
2019Cabinet Office
Liberal Democrat portfolios
2019Business and Industrial Strategy
2019HM Treasury
2019International Development
2019International Trade
2019Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Personal details
Born
Chuka Harrison Umunna

(1978-10-17) 17 October 1978 (age 46)
Lambeth, London, England
Political partyLiberal Democrats (since 2019; before 1997)
Other political
affiliations
Spouse
Alice Sullivan
(m. 2016)
RelationsSir Helenus Milmo (grandfather)
Children2
Alma mater
Websitechuka.org.uk

Chuka Harrison Umunna // (/ˈʊkə əˈmnə/; born 17 October 1978) is a British businessman and former politician who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Streatham from 2010 until 2019. A former member of the Labour Party, he was part of the Shadow Cabinet from 2011 to 2015. He left Labour in February 2019, when he resigned to form The Independent Group, later Change UK, along with six other MPs. Later in 2019, he left Change UK and, after a short time as an independent MP, joined the Liberal Democrats. In the 2019 general election, he failed to be re-elected, and did not return to the House of Commons.

Born in Lambeth to a Nigerian father and English-Irish mother, Umunna was educated at St Dunstan's College, a private school in Catford, Lewisham. He then studied law at the University of Manchester and Nottingham Trent University. A teenage member of the Liberal Democrats, he joined the Labour Party in 1997 when the party was styling itself as "New Labour". He worked as a solicitor in the City of London, first for Herbert Smith and then for Rochman Landau, while writing articles for the Compass think tank.

Umunna was selected as Labour's parliamentary candidate for Streatham in 2008, and was elected MP in the 2010 general election. When in parliament, he aligned with the party's "Blue Labour" trend, which rejects neoliberal economics. He sat on the Treasury Select Committee until 2011, when he joined Ed Miliband's Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills. He was re-elected in the 2015 and 2017 general elections. Following Miliband's resignation, Jeremy Corbyn was elected Labour leader in 2015; Umunna was critical of the party leadership and resigned from the Shadow Cabinet to sit as a backbencher.

A supporter of the unsuccessful 2016 referendum campaign to retain UK membership of the European Union, Ummuna campaigned for a referendum on the final deal with the EU. In February 2019, he resigned from Labour and joined The Independent Group, later Change UK. He was its group spokesperson but left in June 2019 to sit as an independent MP following "disappointing" European Parliament election results showing the party had "failed to get a single MEP elected". One week later, Umunna joined the Liberal Democrats and was appointed their Treasury and Business Spokesperson by leader Vince Cable. In August 2019, he was appointed Foreign Affairs, International Development and International Trade Spokesperson by new leader Jo Swinson. He stood for Cities of London and Westminster in the 2019 general election but lost to Nickie Aiken of the Conservatives.

In 2021, Umunna joined JPMorgan Chase as Managing Director of its Environmental, Social, Governance (ESG) advisory group in London. In July 2024, he was promoted to Global Head of Sustainable Solutions & EMEA Head of Green Economy Investment Banking, where he will co-lead the firm's global ESG practice.[1]

  1. ^ Segal, Mark (29 July 2024). "JPMorgan Promotes Chuka Umunna to Co-lead Global ESG Investment Banking". ESG Today. Retrieved 29 July 2024.