Education
Rawlings was educated in the United Kingdom and Switzerland. She trained as a nurse at Westminster Hospital and is an active member of the British Red Cross (she was awarded the British Red Cross national Badge of Honour in 1987). She was a mature student at University College London and studied for a postgraduate diploma in International Relations from the.
She was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Buckingham in 1998.
Career
Baroness Rawlings was Chairman of King"s College London Council 1998–2007, and she was made a Fellow of the university in 2003. She has been President of the National Council for Voluntary Organisations since 2002, and President of the British Antique Dealers" Association 2005-2013. She is also a trustee of the Chevening Estate.
Rawlings was elected at the 1989 European election as the Member of the European Parliament for Essex South West.
That constituency was abolished for the 1994 European election when she was defeated by Labour"s Hugh Kerr in the new Essex West and Hertfordshire East constituency. She was created a life peer with the title Baroness Rawlings, of Burnham Westgate in the County of Norfolk on 5 October 1994 and entered the House of Lords where she has held several frontbench positions.
She served as an Opposition Whip (1997–1998), Spokesperson on Culture, Media and Sport (1997–1998), Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1998–2010) and International Development (1998–2010). Following the 2010 general election, she served as the Government Whip with responsibility for Culture, Media and Sport and for Scotland.
She retired from Government on 25 June 2012.
In 2002 Baroness Rawlings became involved in a controversy over a 1.8-acre (7,300 m2) piece of land, owned by King"s College London, and formerly owned by Street Thomas" Hospital. King"s had instructed Jones Language LaSalle to value the site, resulting in a valuation of £10 million. An offer to buy the land for up to £24 million came unexpectedly from the Aga Khan Development Network, causing opposition from Street Thomas’.
lieutenant was rumoured that Baroness Rawlings had engineered the unsolicited offer which she strenuously denied, saying that as Chairman of King"s College London Council she knew absolutely nothing about any such bid.
Baroness Rawlings insisted that it was a valuable part of the King’s College London estate and that it should be sold to the highest bidder on the open market. The College eventually decided to retain the property.
In 1991 Patricia Rawlings is the first British woman to be awarded the Order of the Rose (Silver), which was bestowed upon her by President Zhelyu Zhelev of Bulgaria, in recognition of her interest in Bulgaria. Rawlings is permitted to wear the decoration whenever she visits Bulgaria or goes to the Bulgarian embassy.
Membership
She was also a Member of the European Parliament (Member of the European Parliament) from 1989 to 1994. She trained as a nurse at Westminster Hospital and is an active member of the British Red Cross (she was awarded the British Red Cross national Badge of Honour in 1987).