Theresa Mary Brasier Net Worth

Theresa Mary Brasier Net Worth is
$1.4 Million

Theresa Mary Brasier Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Theresa Mary May PC MP (née Brasier; born 1 October 1956) is a British Conservative politician, and the current UK Home Secretary.May was first elected to Parliament in 1997 as Member of Parliament for Maidenhead. She went on to be appointed Chairman of the Conservative Party and was sworn of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council in 2002.She served in a number of roles in the Shadow Cabinets of Iain Duncan Smith, Michael Howard and David Cameron, including Shadow Leader of the House of Commons and Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary.When Cameron became Prime Minister in May 2010, May was appointed Home Secretary and Minister for Women and Equalities; delegating the latter role in 2012 to Maria Miller, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (2012–14).

Full NameTheresa May
Date Of BirthOctober 1, 1956
Place Of BirthEastbourne, East Sussex, England, UK
Height5' 6" (1.68 m)
ProfessionPolitician
EducationSt Hugh's College, Oxford
NationalityBritish
SpousePhilip May have took some back handers
ParentsHubert Brasier, Zaidee Brasier
Star SignLibra
#Trademark
1Leopard print kitten heels
#Quote
1[January 2017] The heart of the plan is a commitment to building a fairer society, and tackling the burning injustices that have been allowed to stand for too long. And I want to turn to one of those burning injustices in particular. The burning injustice of Mental Health and inadequate treatment that demands a new approach from Government and Society as a Whole. Let me be clear: Mental Health Problems affect people of all ages and all backgrounds, and an estimated one in four of us has a common Mental Disorder at any one time.
2What is absolutely clear is that we have, with the U.S., an extradition treaty which is important, I believe it is an important treaty, for both sides, the United States and the United Kingdom. It is a treaty that I believe is balanced and we work on that basis.
3We campaigned on the fact that we were going to have to take difficult decisions because of the state of the public finances. When we got into government we discovered that actually the public finances were in an even worse state than we thought.
4When you first come into Parliament, it's a daunting place because you feel you've so much to learn. Once you've been re-elected, you feel much more confident. It just gives you a bit of a boost.
5What we're also doing is helping police forces in terms of issues like procurement and IT, so that savings can be made in those areas which I think is the sort of thing that everybody is going to want us to be doing.
6You don't think about it at the time, but there are certain responsibilities that come with being the vicar's daughter. You're supposed to behave in a particular way. I shouldn't say it, but I probably was Goody Two Shoes.
7So we mustn't lower our guard in any sense because of what has happened in terms of the death of Osama Bin Laden and we are certainly not doing that. The terror threat level here in the U.K. remains at severe and we're very conscious of the need to continue that.
8Now there is a growing feeling, it's something that David Cameron led on actually, he said this some time ago, that MPs should not be voting on their own pay.
9We are mandating forces to hold regular neighbourhood beat meetings. These meetings will give local people the chance to scrutinise the work of their local police.
10The concept of doing something with child benefit, of changing the rules around child benefit, is something that has been being discussed for some time.
11People feel that they're being required to meet all sorts of regulations and rules and requirements in their areas of work and MPs are not imposing those sort of restrictions on themselves.
12I'm not someone who feels anger on particular issues.
13I think for voters what matters is the values that drive the government.
14I will not allow a Delia Smith cookbook in my house! It's all so precise with Delia, and it makes cooking seem so inaccessible.
15It's always an interesting experience for a politician to be heard in silence, I have to say.
16I want a counter-terrorism regime that is proportionate, focused and transparent.
17Look, we constantly live looking at the issue of the threat of terrorism.
18I believe it's important that we ensure that the police have a modern and flexible workforce. I think that's what is necessary, so that they can provide the public with the service that they want.
19Tying money up for 40 years doesn't sound appealing when you are young.
20No, I can tell you one of the first things that happens to a home secretary when they arrive in the job is that they are given a briefing about the security matters that they will be dealing with and I deal with security matters on a daily basis.
21I am willing to consider powers which would ban known hooligans from rallies and marches and I will look into the powers the police already have to force the removal of face coverings and balaclavas.
22I am a vicar's daughter and still a practicing member of the Church of England.
23If you can speak English, and you can get a place on a proper course at a proper university, you can come to study in Britain.
24Starting with the highest-risk countries, and focusing on the route to Britain that is widely abused, student visas, we will increase the number of interviews to considerably more than 100,000, starting next financial year. From there, we will extend the interviewing programme further across all routes to Britain, wherever the evidence takes us.
25Just as the police review their operational tactics, so we in the Home Office will review the powers available to the police.
26Countries across the world are taking action now to help them track paedophiles and terrorists who abuse new technology to plot their horrific crimes.
27People will be able to raise their concerns: what are local officers doing about the drug dealing in the local park? What's happening about the pub where all the trouble is? And the police will have to respond.
28Within the E.U., in a wider context, people are increasingly recognising the need to prevent the abuse of free movement.
29For voters what matters is what government actually delivers for them.
30Sham marriages have been widespread; people have been allowed to settle in Britain without being able to speak English; and there have not been rules in place to stop migrants becoming a burden on the taxpayer. We are changing all of that.
31National security is the first duty of government but we are also committed to reversing the substantial erosion of civil liberties.
32I think there is a break down of trust generally, between people and politicians. I think that's come about for a whole variety of reasons.
33We've got a first class leader at the moment. David Cameron is dealing with the issues that he was left by the last government very well indeed.
34I think if you talk to anybody who would like to have had children... I mean, you look at families all the time and you see there is something there that you don't have.
35Communities need to feel that they can accommodate people. Rather than feeling that it's not possible to integrate and that the stress and strain on housing and public services is too great.
36I was in the Commons recently and saw a young lady wearing a nice pair of shoes. I said I liked them and she said my shoes were the reason she became involved in politics.
37And it is crucial of course that chief constables are able to make decisions within their budgets about how they deploy their police officers to the greatest effect to ensure that they're able to do the job that the public want them to do.
38If the police need more help to do their work, I will not hesitate in granting it to them.
39Local people do want to see more police on the streets.
40I think it's important to do a good job and not to feel that you've got to make grand gestures, but just to get on and deliver.
41I was a teenage godmother.
42I believe in marriage. I believe marriage is a really important institution, it's one of the most important institutions we have.
43The U.K. needs a system for family migration underpinned by three simple principles. One: that those who come here should do so on the basis of a genuine relationship. Two: that migrants should be able to pay their way. And three: that they are able to integrate into British society.
44Today, there's an expectation that you get to know public people. In the past, it was much more what you did and how you presented yourself.
45It is quite widely known that I like shoes. This is not something that defines me as either a woman or a politician, but it has come to define me in the eyes of the newspapers. I wore a pair of leopard-print kitten heels to a Conservative Party Conference a few years ago and the papers have continued to focus on my feet ever since.
46We're getting rid of bureaucracy, so that we're releasing time for police officers to be crime fighters and not form writers.
47We are seeing, we have seen in the last figures a significant drop in the number of net migrants coming into the United Kingdom. So we are cutting out abuse, we've restricted the number of economic - non-EU economic migrants. We're cutting out abuse across the student visa system, particularly, and we're having an impact.
48People have to make journeys, what we want is people to have alternatives in public transport so that they can make a choice about the sort of way in which they're going to travel.
49We all know the stories about the Human Rights Act... about the illegal immigrant who cannot be deported because, and I am not making this up, he had a pet cat.
50Today I can announce a raft of reforms that we estimate could save over 2.5 million police hours every year. That's the equivalent of more than 1,200 police officer posts. These reforms are a watershed moment in policing. They show that we really mean business in busting bureaucracy.
51Like Indiana Jones, I don't like snakes - though that might lead some to ask why I'm in politics.
52Targets don't fight crime.
53I'm not willing to risk more terrorist plots succeeding and more paedophiles going free.
54Uncontrolled, mass immigration displaces British workers, forces people onto benefits, and suppresses wages for the low-paid.
55You only have to look at London, where almost half of all primary school children speak English as a second language, to see the challenges we now face as a country. This isn't fair to anyone: how can people build relationships with their neighbours if they can't even speak the same language?
56Well can I just make a point about the numbers because people talk a lot about police numbers as if police numbers are the holy grail. But actually what matters is what those police are doing. It's about how those police are deployed.
57I was looking at a photograph of the 1997 election campaign yesterday, and I thought: 'My God. Did I really have that hairstyle? And that Tory blue suit?'
58I will be ruthless in cutting out waste, streamlining structures and improving efficiency.
59There is nothing inevitable about crime and there is nothing inevitable about anti-social behaviour.
60The universities have got a job here as well in making sure that people actually understand that we're open for university students coming into the U.K. There's a job here not just for the government, I think there's a job for the universities as well to make sure that people know that we are open.
61One area in which we can be certain mass immigration has an effect is housing. More than one third of all new housing demand in Britain is caused by immigration. And there is evidence that without the demand caused by mass immigration, house prices could be 10% lower over a 20-year period.
62I'm not sure I should reveal the sources of my clothes.
63Obviously local people will have their local voice through the police and crime commissioners that they've elected to determine their local policing.
64Flexible working is not just for women with children. It is necessary at the other end of the scale. If people can move into part-time work, instead of retirement, then that will be a huge help. If people can fit their work around caring responsibilities for the elderly, the disabled, then again that's very positive.
65I'd personally like to see the Human Rights Act go because I think we have had some problems with it.
66In tough times, everyone has to take their share of the pain.
67Dealing with a simple burglary can require 1,000 process steps and 70 forms to be completed as a case goes through the Criminal Justice System. That can't be right.
68There's much more we can be doing in Parliament, we could be giving more power back to people at local government level, through local referendums.
69A lot of men in politics suddenly woke up to the issue of women in politics when they realised: hey, there are votes in this!
70The aim is to create here in Britain a really hostile environment for illegal migration.
71On gay adoption I have changed my mind.
72Anti-social behaviour still blights lives, wrecks communities and provides a pathway to criminality.
73You can't solve a problem as complex as inequality in one legal clause.
#Fact
1Introduced The Draft Communications Data Bill (nicknamed the Snooper's Charter).
2Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (13 July 2016 - present).
3The second female Prime Minister of the United Kingdom after Margaret Thatcher.
476th Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
5Is known for her love of shoes.
6British Conservative MP for Maidenhead (1 May 1997 - present).

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Paul Murray Live2017TV SeriesHerself - British PM
Meet the Lords2017TV Mini-Series documentaryHerself
Good Morning Britain2016-2017TV SeriesHerself - Prime Minister of the United Kingdom / Herself
Sky Midnight News2017TV SeriesHerself
Sophy Ridge on Sunday2017TV SeriesHerself
Lorraine2016TV SeriesHerself - Interviewee
BBC North West Tonight2016TV SeriesHerself
Peston on Sunday2016TV SeriesHerself - Guest, Home Secretary
BBC News 8pm Summary2015TV Series shortHerself - Home Secretary
Election 20152015TV MovieHerself - Conservative, Home Secretary
Inside the Commons2015TV Mini-Series documentaryHerself - Home Secretary
International Desk2014TV SeriesHerself - UK Home Secretary
ITV Lunchtime News2014TV SeriesHerself - Home Secretary
Sky News: Sunrise2012TV SeriesHerself
Question Time1999-2011TV SeriesHerself
Breakfast2010-2011TV SeriesHerself - Home Secretary / Herself - Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary
Daybreak2011TV SeriesHerself
Election 20102010TV MovieHerself - Shadow Work & Pensions Secretary
The Politics Show2003-2009TV Series documentaryHerself
Newsnight2007TV SeriesHerself
Election Night2007TV MovieHerself (as Theresa May MP)
The Sunday Programme2000-2007TV SeriesHerself / Herself - Newspaper Reviewer
GMTV2006TV SeriesHerself
The Daily Politics2005-2006TV SeriesHerself
Sunday AM2005TV SeriesHerself
The Wright Stuff2004TV SeriesGuest Panelist
Breakfast with Frost2002-2003TV SeriesHerself
Jonathan Dimbleby2000-2003TV SeriesHerself
Vote 20012001TV MovieHerself - Conservative
A Week in Politics1995TV SeriesHerself

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Good Morning Britain2016-2017TV SeriesHerself / Herself - Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Dispatches2016-2017TV Series documentaryHerself
Breakfast2016-2017TV SeriesHerself
Panorama2016-2017TV Series documentaryHerself
Sunrise2017TV SeriesHerself
Revolting2017TV SeriesHerself
The Bolt Report2017TV SeriesHerself
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon2017TV SeriesHerself - White House Press Conference
Have I Got News for You2016TV SeriesHerself
What's the Facts2016TV SeriesHerself
Lorraine2016TV SeriesHerself
Victoria Derbyshire2016TV SeriesHerself
Brexageddon?!2016TV MovieHerself - Prime Minister (uncredited)
The Project2016TV SeriesHerself
The Jihadis Next Door2016TV Special documentaryHerself - Home Secretary (uncredited)
The Wright Stuff2012TV SeriesHerself - Home Secretary

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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