Education
She finished her education at the University of Strathclyde where she received a postgraduate diploma in secretarial studies in 1972.
Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
She finished her education at the University of Strathclyde where she received a postgraduate diploma in secretarial studies in 1972.
Born Linda Wade Jarvie and educated privately at the Maynard School in Exeter, Devon and then Stirling High School, before attending the University of Edinburgh where she was awarded a master"s degree in history in 1971. She joined Age Concern Scotland (now Age United Kingdom), in 1972, leaving in 1979 as a deputy director to join the Gas Consumer Council as a regional manager for the South West of England, in which capacity she founded the Devon and Cornwall energy efficiency centre, before she left in 1996. She was elected as the secretary to the Plymouth Drake Constituency Labour Party in 1987-1988, and was elected chairwoman of the Cornwall Labour Party for four years from 1990.
She unsuccessfully contested Cornwall South East at the 1992 General Election where she finished in third place some 25,029 votes behind the sitting Conservative Member of Parliament Robert Hicks.
She also contested the European Parliament elections in 1994 when she was defeated at Devon East and Plymouth. Gilroy was selected to stand for Labour in the 1997 election through an all-women shortlist.
She was elected to the House of Commons at the 1997 General Election for Plymouth Sutton with a majority of 9,440 and made her maiden speech on 27 October 1997. She was re-elected at the 2001 and the 2005 General Elections.
Her attendance record was 80%.
Labour Company-operative, Labour Party.
52nd United Kingdom Parliament. 53rd United Kingdom Parliament. 54th United Kingdom Parliament]
In parliament she was a member of the European legislation select committee from 1997 until after the 2001 General Election when she was appointed as the Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of State at the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Raynsford.
She has been a member of the defence select committee since the 2005 General Election.
She was a loyal Member of Parliament: as at August 2006 she had rebelled in just seven of 2,300 votes made.