
Politician Kim Leadbeater, the sister of murdered MP Jo Cox has said collecting her MBE at Windsor Castle for her work tackling social isolation was âbittersweetâ.
The Labour MP described Tuesdayâs investiture ceremony, during which she received the honour from the Princess Royal as âbeautifulâ.
She told the PA news agency: âAny occasion that I attend, particularly something of this magnitude, for me is always bittersweet, because ultimately, the fundamental reason Iâm here is because of Joâs murder.
âSo itâs an emotional day as well, but I also know that Jo would be incredibly proud of everything that weâve done in her name.â
I'm extremely angry about whatâs happened to my life, but what I try and do is channel that anger into doing something positive
Kim Leadbeater MP
Her sister Jo Cox was killed in 2016 when she was shot and stabbed by a neo-Nazi outside her constituency surgery a week before the EU referendum.
Ms Leadbeater said she would celebrate the honour by doing Zoom calls with her parents and her sisterâs children to âshow them that Auntie Kim has been to Windsor Castle, was thinking about mummy and themâ.
She has represented the same seat occupied by her sister, Batley and Spen, since winning a by-election last summer.
She has championed the issues Mrs Cox had been passionate about, including fighting social isolation through the More In Common initiative and Jo Cox Foundation.
She said: âIâm so incredibly proud of those first few years of the Jo Cox commission on loneliness and the results of that in that weâve got the worldâs first ever minister for loneliness â Tracey Crouch MPâ.

Ms Leadbeater stepped up her efforts during the coronavirus pandemic as millions faced loneliness due to lockdowns, including setting up a national coalition of hundreds of organisation that joined forces to address the issue.
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In her West Yorkshire constituency, she helped deliver food and medicine to people in need.
The MP said: âItâs not just psychological damage that loneliness can do, thereâs a physical impact as well.
âThe research that we did through the Jo Cox commission said that itâs as dangerous as having 15 cigarettes a day.â
Ms Leadbeater said she has just signed up to co-chair the All Party Parliamentary Group on loneliness and connecting communities, and is also focusing on issues such as mental health, education and childrenâs health and wellbeing in Parliament.
She has previously called for MPsâ safety to be taken more seriously in the wake of her sisterâs murder, as well as that of Sir David Amess who was stabbed to death while he held a constituency surgery in October.
Asked whether she felt safe as a politician, she said: âI think weâve seen some positive steps in the area of MPsâ safety, but I think there is more work to be done.
âI have to say, the vast majority of time I feel fine, but thatâs because Iâve taken all the help has been offered.â

She went on to say: âI think thereâs this broader piece of work to be done around why people are so angry, and why we find it acceptable to take that anger and frustration out on the next person that we come across, whether thatâs an MP or whether itâs a nurse or a taxi driver.
âAnd Iâve often said, Iâm extremely angry about whatâs happened to my life, but what I try and do is channel that anger into doing something positive and trying to make a positive difference.â