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Her Excellency
The Right Honourable
Agnes Ingram
Portia Miller Shoot.Jpeg
Agnes Ingram, 2012
11th President of Imagua and the Assimas
In office
23 April, 2008 – 23 April, 2016
Prime MinisterSaverio Merante
Edmondo Privitera
Preceded byErico D'Antonio
Succeeded byEdmondo Privitera
18th Prime Minister of Imagua and the Assimas
In office
23 April, 2004 – 23 April, 2008
PresidentErico D'Antonio
DeputySaverio Merante
Preceded bySaverio Merante
Succeeded bySaverio Merante
Member of Parliament for Knowleston-South
In office
22 May, 1997 – 23 April, 2008
Preceded byRod Simpson
Succeeded byMoses Burton
Member of Parliament for Knowleston-South
In office
31 August, 1988 – 27 May, 1995
Preceded byGodfrey Smith
Succeeded byRod Simpson
Personal details
Born
Agnes Baldwin

(1945-08-16) 16 August 1945 (age 78)
Knowleston, Saint Isidore's Imagua
NationalityImaguan
Political partyNationals
SpouseEverett Ingram
Children3
Alma materUniversity of San Pietro

Agnes Ingram (née Baldwin, born 16 August, 1945) is a former Imaguan politician who served as the eleventh President from 2008 to 2016, and as the eighteenth Prime Minister. She was the first Bahio-Imaguan to serve as parliamentary leader of the National Party, the first Bahio-Imaguan to be elected as Prime Minister and as President for the National Party, and the first Bahio-Imaguan woman to have been elected to the Presidency.

Early life

Agnes Baldwin was born on 16 August, 1945 in the town of Knowleston in Saint Isidore's Parish, as the youngest of three children, and the second daughter. Her father, Wallace Baldwin was a bricklayer, while her mother, Linda Baldwin was a houswife.

While her early childhood was described as being a "time of struggle," as they lived in poverty, with the development of the suburbs, and Knowleston becoming a commuter town to Nua Taois in the late 1940s and early 1950s, they rose to the middle class.

In 1950, Agnes Baldwin enrolled at the Hugh Northway School, where she was described as being a "proper student." After taking the eleven-plus in 1956, she managed to get into a grammar school, but as the only grammar school in Knowleston was boys-only, she had to take the bus daily to and from Nua Taois to attend the Wensley Grammar School (present-day Wensley Comprehensive School).

At the Wensley Grammar School, she was described as being one of the "best and brightest students," with one teacher saying that if she were a boy, Agnes would be seen as an "exemplar of performance."

After taking the A-levels in 1961, she managed to enter Sixth Form, where she did well, although noted that it was a lonely experience, as there were "only a few girls who were in Sixth Form" at the time. Nonetheless, she graduated with "flying colours" in 1963, and gained a scholarship at the University of San Pietro.

In San Pietro, she majored in nursing, and became a registered nurse in 1966. She moved to Nua Taois, where she worked as a nurse at the King Charles Hospital in Nua Taois, where she met her future husband, Doctor Everett Ingram in 1967. After marrying him in 1969, Agnes continued working as a nurse until the birth of her third daughter, Cynthia, who was born prematurely, and suffered from Ohtahara syndrome and cerebral palsy.

Her daughter's condition forced her to quit her job in nursing, but it also helped introduce Agnes Ingram to politics, with Ingram recounting that during this period, she felt that the Conservatives were more willing to "represent parents of those with disabilities," than the Democratic Labour Party.

Political career

Early political career

After the death of Cynthia Ingram in 1975 from her medical conditions at the King Charles Hospital in Nua Taois, Agnes Ingram and her husband moved their family from Nua Taois to a new suburban development in Knowleston, as they felt that a new home would "ease their grief" and ensure that they would receive a "high-quality education."

There, Agnes Ingram became more involved with the Conservative Party, joining the local constituency association in 1976 on the urging of MP and long-time friend Godfrey Smith. After campaigning for Smith's re-election that year, Agnes Ingram started to work at Smith's constituency office, as a secretary.

During her time as secretary, she helped become Smith's closest confidante, and helped become influential in the local Conservative association. According to her, it "took my mind off my youngest daughter," and allowed her to "contribute to the community" in a meaningful way. She helped campaign for Smith's re-election in 1980, and in 1984.

When Godfrey Smith announced his retirement in 1988, he and the local constituency association nominated Agnes Ingram to run for Smith's old seat in the Lesser House of Parliament. Agnes Ingram accepted the offer, as she felt that she would be able to contribute to the community and to ensure change would occur.

After being approved by the Conservative leadership, she faced Democratic Labour candidate Angus Walsh in the 1988 general election. She ran on a platform of ensuring that "all Imaguans can experience a better economy," and accused Angus Walsh of supporting policies that "undermine our nation's values."

Thus, when the results came in, Agnes Ingram defeated Angus Walsh 54.5% to 42.1%, with the remainder split among other candidates, most notably National Reform candidate Don Atkinson.

Backbencher

On 23 April, 1988, Agnes Ingram was sworn into the Lesser House of Parliament, as a Conservative MP. As a new member of Parliament, she was a backbencher.

During her first term, Agnes Ingram mostly represented her constituency's interests, but also advocated for the rights of disabled persons, accusing the Democratic Labour Party of doing little to "improve the lot of people with disabilities" in Imagua and the Assimas. However, this approach made Agnes Ingram popular among both those residing in Knowleston-South, and among both disabled peoples and activists.

By the time the writ for the 1992 general election was dropped, she faced a three-way race between DLP candidate Nathan Foster, and National Reform candidate Andy Palmer.

During her campaign for a second term, she criticized the DLP's "soft on crime" strategy, and accused Foster of "not caring enough for our community and for disabled people," while attacking the National Reform Party for being "too pie-in-the-sky" and for their "racism against our Etrurian community."

Thus, when the results came in, she won with 42.5% of the vote, compared to Foster's 31.8%, and Palmer's 25.7%, allowing her to stay in the Lesser House for a second term.

While Agnes Ingram remained a backbencher in her second term, as the Conservatives now formed a minority government, Agnes Ingram was assigned to the Standing Committee on Health, allowing her to exercise influence over healthcare legislation passed during this period in time. This allowed her to play a more important role in the Imaguan parliamentary system.

However, when the Conservative government was defeated in a budget motion in 1995, Agnes Ingram ran for a third term against Democratic Labour candidate Angela Brown, and National Reform candidate Rod Simpson.

During the campaign, while Rod Simpson ran on a platform of change and "representing the interests of Knowleston-South" over the elites, and Angela Brown campaigned on criticising Rod Simpson and Agnes Ingram for "not doing enough for Knowleston-South," Agnes Ingram defended her record, saying that over the past seven years, she "represented the best interests of Knowleston-South," and accused Rod Simpson of pandering to conspiracy theorists, and accused Brown of being "soft-on-crime."

Despite a vigorous campaign, when the results came in, Rod Simpson won with 39.5% of the vote, defeating Agnes Ingram, who only had 36.7% of the vote, and Angela Brown, who had 23.8% of the vote. Ingram conceded defeat to Rod Simpson.

Political wilderness

Following her loss of Knowleston-South, there were some calls among the local Conservative association for Agnes Ingram to resign as head of the constituency association, and to have her replaced with someone else.

However, Ingram refused, saying that her second-place finish, and a 2.8% separation indicated that she performed well, and should deserve a second chance when the National Reform government inevitably collapsed, and an election called. With the support of most of her association, Ingram remained head of the local constituency association.

During this period, Agnes Ingram continued to build her influence within the Conservative Party, campaigning for Erico D'Antonio's re-election in 1996 before D'Antonio suspended his campaign and endorsed Ornell Elliott to stop the National Reform Party from taking the Imaguan presidency.

When the Conservatives and the Democratic Labour Party voted to defeat the budget in 1997, she was nominated as the Conservative candidate, and ran against National Reform MP Rod Simpson, who during his term became very unpopular, in part due to Rod Simpson's maiden speech which called for illegal immigrants to Imagua to be "shot on sight."

As the DLP candidate, Gloria Watts, was a paper candidate, she was able to build a huge lead, and by the time the results were in, Ingram won with 70.1% of the vote, compared to Simpson's 28.5%, and Watt's 1.4%. This allowed Agnes Ingram to return to the Lesser House.

Return to the Lesser House

On 22 May, 1997, Agnes Ingram was sworn in for a third term in the Lesser House of Parliament.

Following her return to the Lesser House, she was appointed as Shadow Minister of Minority Affairs, which was noted by some, including newly-elected Prime Minister Viviana Andreoli to be ironic, as Bahio-Imaguans formed (and continues to form) a majority of the population, while as an Estmerophone, she was seen as not being part of a linguistic minority.

Despite the criticism, Agnes Ingram performed her job well, criticizing efforts by the governing Democratic Labour Party to "undermine minority rights" by entrenching the autonomy of the Assimas Parish over "education, welfare, and social development," which she feared would be used to harm non-Etrurians on the islands, and criticizing the "neglect of indigenous Imaguans" by the current government.

(TBC)

Personal life

Agnes Ingram married Doctor Everett Ingram in 1969, after first meeting him at the King Charles Hospital in Nua Taois. Together, they have three children: Jerry Ingram, born in 1970, Judy Duran, born in 1971, and Cynthia Ingram, born in 1973, and died in 1975 from Ohtahara syndrome and cerebral palsy.

Of the two children that survived to adulthood, Jerry Ingram was a footballer who played from 1991 to 2001 in the Imaguan Football League, while Judy Duran is a doctor. They have three grandchildren: two from Jerry, with a grandson born in 1996, and a granddaughter 1999, and a grandson from Judy Doran in 2002.

Religion

While Agnes Ingram was baptized as a Low Estmerian and was confirmed in the Low Estmerian tradition, following the birth of her youngest daughter, she became disillusioned with religion, as she felt that a "merciful God would not have allowed Cynthia to be the way she was." By the late 1970s, she effectively became an atheist.

However, following her election in 1988 to the Lesser House, when she was in Cuanstad on a Sunday morning, she felt "drawn to a little church in the city centre," and attended a service. After the service, she started following the beliefs of the Bahian Estmerian Church, and became "very devout" by 1991.

As of 2019, she still is an adherent to the Bahian Estmerian Church.

Honours

Domestic

Foreign