Richard Rosser, Baron Rosser


Richard Andrew Rosser, Baron Rosser is a British former trade union leader and Labour politician, sitting in the House of Lords.

Trade Union career

Initially employed by London Transport he joined the staff of the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association early in his working career, representing London Transport's white-collar staff in negotiations with the management. He rose through the ranks of the TSSA to be an Assistant General Secretary, and in 1989 he was elected General Secretary of the union. Rosser was re-elected twice, serving a total of fifteen years in office before his retirement in 2004 – a record second only to the thirty years served by Alexander Walkden.
During his time at the TSSA, Rosser was also a magistrate and was Chairman of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party in 1997–98.

Political activity

Rosser was the Labour candidate for Croydon Central at the general election of February 1974, but was not elected.

House of Lords

Following his retirement from TSSA he was created a life peer on 14 June 2004 as Baron Rosser, of Ickenham in the London Borough of Hillingdon, taking his seat in the House of Lords on the Labour Party benches in the summer of 2004. In addition to transport matters, he takes an interest in penal policy, being chair of the Prison Service Audit Committee and a non-executive member of the Prison Service change programme board.