Michael Foot: A LifeThe authorised (but not uncritical) life of one of the great parliamentarians and orators of our times, the former Labour Party leader, now in his nineties, who is also an eminent man of letters. Michael Foot has been a controversial and charismatic figure in British public life, political and literary, for over sixty years. Emerging from a famous west-country Liberal dynasty, he rose as a crusading left-wing journalist in the late 1930s: 'The Guilty Men' (his book on the pre-war appeasers of Nazi Germany) is one of the great radical tracts of British history. He has been the voice of libertarian socialism in parliament, an international socialist and government minister, and was Labour leader for two-and-a-half -years between 1980 and 1983. His political friendships with people like Beaverbrook, Cripps, Aneurin Bevan and Barbara Castle were passionate and profound, but he also had a remarkable and quite different career as a man of letters ... |
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Page 26
... less appealing , in part because of his relative lack of interest in maths or statistics . His tutor , Russell Bretherton , a brilliant twenty - five - year - old who taught both economics and modern history , was congenial enough as a ...
... less appealing , in part because of his relative lack of interest in maths or statistics . His tutor , Russell Bretherton , a brilliant twenty - five - year - old who taught both economics and modern history , was congenial enough as a ...
Page 290
... less than Michael Foot . Dawe's unusual selection did both men credit.20 There were other able civil servants at the Department of Employ- ment , very bright and very young . Douglas Smith , later the head of the Advisory , Conciliation ...
... less than Michael Foot . Dawe's unusual selection did both men credit.20 There were other able civil servants at the Department of Employ- ment , very bright and very young . Douglas Smith , later the head of the Advisory , Conciliation ...
Page 291
... less to do . The powerful Ministry of Labour over which Ernest Bevin had massively presided during the war was being hived off and becoming a shadow of its former self . Under Foot's successor Albert Booth , a far less imposing minister ...
... less to do . The powerful Ministry of Labour over which Ernest Bevin had massively presided during the war was being hived off and becoming a shadow of its former self . Under Foot's successor Albert Booth , a far less imposing minister ...
Contents
Nonconformist Patrician 19131934 I | 1 |
Cripps to Beaverbrook 19341940 | 37 |
Pursuing Guilty Men 19401945 | 75 |
Copyright | |
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amongst Aneurin Bevan attacked Attlee Barbara Castle Beaverbrook became Bevanite Bill Blair Britain British Byron Cabinet Callaghan campaign cent Churchill colleagues Conservative constituency Cripps crisis critic Crossman debate defeat democratic Denis Healey devolution Devonport Diaries Dingle Ebbw Vale economic election Foot Papers PHM Foot's Gaitskell George Gollancz Guardian Harold Wilson Hazlitt House Hugh Ibid India industrial Interview with Lord Interview with Michael Isaac Foot Jack Jones Jenkins Jennie Lee Jim Callaghan John journalists Kinnock Koestler Labour MPs Labour Party later leader leadership left-wing Liberal literary major March Michael and Jill Michael Foot Mikardo National Neil Kinnock November nuclear Nye Bevan October Oxford Parliament parliamentary party conference passionate perhaps Plymouth political poll Prime Minister role Secretary socialism socialist speech Swift Tony Benn Tony Blair Tory trade union Tribune vote Wales Welsh Williams wrote