Horse Racing

Harding to Be Jockey Club’s First Female Senior Steward


Baroness Dido Harding will become the first female senior steward of the British Jockey Club next year after her appointment was confirmed at the organization’s winter meeting Dec. 11.

Last month, Sky News reported that Harding, who joined the Jockey Club’s board of stewards in January 2018, would succeed Sandy Dudgeon as chair of British racing’s biggest commercial body when his five-year term comes to an end in July.

Her involvement in British racing has included more than 25 wins as an amateur jockey and owning Cool Dawn, the winner of the 1998 Cheltenham Gold Cup. She was previously a racecourse committee member at Cheltenham and a director of Racecourse Holdings Trust, later renamed Jockey Club Racecourses.

Harding, 56, has been a controversial figure due to her role in running the UK government’s COVID-19 test-and-trace program in England, a scheme that was criticized during the pandemic. She had previously been chief executive of TalkTalk, having also held senior positions at Sainsbury’s and Tesco.

“As a lifelong racing enthusiast, it’s a huge privilege to be appointed senior steward,” said Harding, who has been a member of the House of Lords since 2014. “The Jockey Club holds a unique position to protect the sport’s heritage and tradition, and also to innovate to attract and delight racegoers of the future to ensure horse racing can thrive for generations to come.”

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Dudgeon said Harding had been a “terrific asset” since joining the board of stewards and added: “She has brought a wealth of experience, deep knowledge of the industry, and a lifelong enthusiasm for our sport. I would like to wish her every success as senior steward when she takes up the role in July next year.”

Retired Gold Cup and Grand National-winning jockey Sam Waley-Cohen will join the Jockey Club’s board of stewards from Jan. 1. The 41-year-old, who became a member of the Jockey Club in 2017, has been on the body’s finance review committee since 2020 and was a trustee of the Injured Jockeys Fund between 2012-2021. Outside of racing, he is the chief executive of Portman Dental Care.

The Jockey Club elected nine new members Monday, including three new honorary members: Sheikha Hissa Hamdan Al Maktoum, Princess Zahra Aga Khan, and owner-breeder Gaynor Rupert.

It also elected six new ordinary members, including Zara Tindall, who is a member of the Cheltenham racecourse committee; ITV and Racing TV broadcaster Rishi Persad; Michael Wainwright, a racehorse owner and managing director of Gold Cup sponsors Boodles jewelers; racecourse committee members Sue Lucas and Guy Henriques; and the chair of Wincanton racecourse, David Wiggin.

The Jockey Club is the largest employer in British racing, with an annual turnover of more than £200 million. It runs 15 British racecourses, including Aintree, Cheltenham, Epsom, and Newmarket.

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