Anne Campbell (born 6 April 1940) is an English Labour Party politician.
She studied at Newnham College, Cambridge, taking the Maths Tripos, and gaining an MA in 1965.
She was a secondary school mathematics teacher in Cambridgeshire, a lecturer in Statistics at Cambridge College of Arts and Technology (became Anglia Higher Education College in 1989) from 1970 to 1983, and head of Statistics and Data Processing at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany from 1983 to 1992.
Campbell's defeat was in part attributed to her perceived indecisiveness over the government's university top-up fee programme: she abstained on the second reading of the bill, then voted with the government on the third reading, despite a public promise that she would oppose the scheme.
[6] In 1963 she married Archibald Campbell, a Cambridge University engineering professor and Fellow of Christ's College, who died on 21 November 2019.