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Aneurin Bevan

Aneurin "Nye" Bevan PC (/əˈnrɪn ˈbɛvən/; Welsh: [aˈnəɨ.rɪn]; 15 November 1897 – 6 July 1960) was a Welsh Labour Party politician, noted for tenure as Minister of Health in Clement Attlee's government in which he spearheaded the creation of the British National Health Service. He is also known for his wider contribution to the founding of the British welfare state. He was first elected as MP for Ebbw Vale in 1929, and used his Parliamentary platform to make a number of influential criticisms of Winston Churchill and his Conservative government during the Second World War. Before entering Parliament, Bevan was involved in miner's union politics and was a leading figure in the 1926 general strike. Bevan is widely regarded as one of the most influential left-wing politicians in British history.

Aneurin Bevan
Bevan in 1943
Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
In office
4 May 1959 – 6 July 1960
LeaderHugh Gaitskell
Preceded byJim Griffiths
Succeeded byGeorge Brown
Shadow Foreign Secretary
In office
22 July 1956 – 4 May 1959
LeaderHugh Gaitskell
Preceded byAlf Robens
Succeeded byDenis Healey
Minister of Labour and National Service
In office
17 January 1951 – 23 April 1951
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byGeorge Isaacs
Succeeded byAlf Robens
Minister of Health
In office
3 August 1945 – 17 January 1951
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byHenry Willink
Succeeded byHilary Marquand
Member of Parliament
for Ebbw Vale
In office
31 May 1929 – 6 July 1960
Preceded byEvan Davies
Succeeded byMichael Foot
Personal details
Born(1897-11-15)15 November 1897
Tredegar, Monmouthshire, Wales
Died6 July 1960(1960-07-06) (aged 62)
Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England
Political partyLabour
Spouse
(m. 1934)
Alma materCentral Labour College, London

Raised in Monmouthshire by a Welsh working-class family, he was the son of a coal miner and left school at 14. Bevan first worked as a miner during his teens where he became involved in local miner's union politics. He was elected head of his Miners' Lodge when aged 19, where he frequently railed against management. He joined the Labour Party and attended Central Labour College in London. On his return to South Wales he struggled to find work, remaining unemployed for nearly three years before gaining employment as a union official, which led to him becoming a leading figure in the 1926 general strike.

In 1928, Bevan won a seat on Monmouthshire County Council and was elected as the MP for Ebbw Vale the following year. In Parliament, he became a vocal critic of numerous other politicians from all parties, particularly Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George.

After the war, Bevan was chosen as the Minister of Health in Clement Attlee's new Labour government, becoming the youngest member of the cabinet at 47, with his remit also including housing. Inspired by the Tredegar Medical Aid Society in his hometown in South Wales, Bevan led the campaign for a National Health Service to provide medical care free at point-of-need across the UK, regardless of wealth. Despite resistance from opposition parties and the British Medical Association, the National Health Service Act 1946 was passed and launched in 1948, nationalising more than 2,500 hospitals within the United Kingdom.

Bevan was named Minister of Labour in 1951, but resigned after two months in office, when the Attlee government proposed the introduction of prescription charges for dental and vision care and decided to transfer funds from the National Insurance Fund to pay for rearmament. His influence waned after his departure, although a left-wing group (not under his control) within the party became known as "Bevanites". Attlee and Labour were ousted from power in a snap election held six months after Bevan's resignation, but Attlee continued on as Labour Party Leader. When Attlee retired from the leadership in 1955, Bevan unsuccessfully contested the party leadership with Hugh Gaitskell, but was appointed Shadow Colonial Secretary and later Shadow Foreign Secretary. In 1959, he was elected Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and held the post for a year until his death from stomach cancer at the age of 62.

Bevan's death in 1960 led to "an outpouring of national mourning". In 2004, more than 44 years after his death, he was voted first in a list of 100 Welsh Heroes, having been credited for his contribution to the founding of the welfare state in the UK.

Early life

Aneurin Bevan was born on 15 November 1897 at 32 Charles Street in Tredegar, Monmouthshire, a working-class mining town, where an estimated 90 per cent of the town's inhabitants relied on the local mines for employment.[1] The town was situated in the South Wales Valleys and was on the northern edge of the South Wales coalfield. He was the son of coal miner David Bevan and Phoebe (née Prothero), a seamstress. David Bevan was born in Tredegar but his family had originally hailed from Carmarthenshire, and he followed his own father into the mines, starting work at 5:30am each day and returning home late in the evening. He was adept at construction and added several modern features when the family moved to 7 Charles Street, installing the first gas stove in the street, an inside toilet and running hot water.[1]

Both Bevan's parents were Nonconformists: his father was a Baptist and his mother a Methodist, although he became an atheist. Bevan had been a supporter of the Liberal Party in his youth, but was converted to socialism by the writings of Robert Blatchford in The Clarion and joined the Independent Labour Party. It was around this time that he first "reject[ed] his chapel upbringing" and became an atheist.[2] He was a member of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion and wrote his own poems, one of which won an inter-chapel eisteddfod. Aneurin's mother was also from Tredegar, but had English roots: her grandfather was from Hereford. Bevan's maternal grandfather John was a blacksmith who had moved to Tredegar from Hay-on-Wye to work in the Bedwellty mines.[1][3]

The couple had ten children altogether—six boys and four girls—although four died in infancy and one died at the age of eight.[4] Aneurin Bevan attended Sirhowy Elementary School, where he achieved little. He developed a severe stammer as a child and, according to his younger sister Myfanwy, became "a lonely chap", due to the need to shy away from the attention it brought him.[5]

His father died by pneumoconiosis (a lung condition caused by long term inhalation of coal dust) but no compensation was paid to him, as it was not classed as an industrial disease under the Workman's Compensation Act.

Working life as a miner

At the age of 13, in his last months of schooling, he worked as a butcher's boy at a local store.[6] He worked at the butcher's for several months before leaving school, instead working in the local Ty-Trist Colliery. There he earned around ten shillings per week with most going to his parents to help support the family. He began attending fortnightly meetings of the local Plebs' League where he studied, among other things, Marxism.[5] Bevan also joined the Tredegar branch of the South Wales Miners' Federation and became a trade union activist: he was head of his local Miners' Lodge at 19 years of age. He was called up for service during the First World War, and was briefly arrested when his sister Blodwen burnt his conscription papers and he failed to report for duty. Bevan appeared in court but was cleared when he produced confirmation that he suffered from nystagmus.[7]

Bevan became a well-known local orator and was seen by his employers, the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company, as a troublemaker. The manager of the colliery found an excuse to get him dismissed. With the support of the Miners' Federation, the case was judged as one of victimisation and the company was forced to re-employ him.[8][9] He and his brother Billy did eventually leave Ty-Tryst and worked at the Bedwellty pit, but were forced to move again after a disagreement with the site's deputy manager over Bevan reporting information to the miner's inspector. The pair went to work at Whitworth Colliery, but fell foul of management when Bevan refused to use cheaper second-hand timber as he deemed it unsafe. He was later fired for refusing to unload, and successfully challenged the motion but was moved to Pochin, generally considered a punishment due to the poor site conditions.[10]

1919 saw the foundation of the Tredegar Labour Party and Bevan was selected as one of four Labour delegates to contest the West Ward in the Tredegar Urban District election. Although he was defeated, he gained attention from his peers and he won a scholarship to the Central Labour College in London, sponsored by the South Wales Miners' Federation. There, he spent two years studying economics, politics and history. He read Marxism at the college and was a brief follower of Noah Ablett,[11][12] developing his left-wing political outlook. Reciting long passages by William Morris with the help of an elocution tutor, Bevan gradually began to overcome the stammer that he had since childhood.[11] Bevan remained at the college until 1921, attending at a time when a number of his contemporaries from South Wales, including Jim Griffiths, were also students at the college. Some historians have questioned how influential the college was on his political development. He was not, apparently, one of the most diligent students, and found it difficult to follow an organised routine, including arising early for breakfast.[13]

 
The Tredegar Query Club by friends including Aneurin Bevan and Walter Conway. Conway is in the middle of the picture. Aneurin is second from right on the back row and his brother Billy is second right on front row.[14]

Bevan was one of the founding members of the "Query Club" with his brother Billy and Walter Conway. Conway was a local miner who had been elected to the Bedwellty Board of Guardians and offered Bevan advice on overcoming his stammer, stating "if you can't say it, you don't know it". Bevan followed his advice, often practising his speeches to his friends to perfect his speech and wording, and remarked that Conway's words were the "best advice I ever had".[10] The Query club started in 1920 or 1921 and they met in Tredegar. They would collect money weekly for any member who needed it. The club intended to break the hold that the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company had on the town by becoming members of pivotal groups in the community.[14]

Upon returning home in 1921, he found that the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company refused to re-employ him. Bevan ended up in a fist fight with a group of miners who refused to strike over his rejection.[15] Apart from a six-week period as a labourer for Tredegar Council, he did not find work until 1924 and his employer, the Bedwellty Colliery, closed down ten months later. Bevan then endured another year of unemployment, the family surviving on his sister's wages, when his unemployment benefit was stopped due to her income, and his father's sick pay. In February 1925, his father died of pneumoconiosis, an illness caused by the inhalation of coal dust.[16][17] In 1926 he found work as a paid union official. His wage of £5 a week was paid by the members of the local Miners' Lodge. His new job arrived in time for him to head the local miners against the colliery companies during the General Strike. When the strike started on 3 May 1926, Bevan soon emerged as one of the leaders of the South Wales miners.[9] The miners remained on strike for six months. Bevan was largely responsible for the distribution of strike pay in Tredegar and the formation of the Council of Action, an organisation that helped to raise money and provide food for the miners.[18]

Parliament

MP for Ebbw Vale

In 1928, Bevan won a seat on Monmouthshire County Council in the Tredegar Central Division. He lost the seat in 1931, but regained it in 1932 before deciding against seeking re-election in 1934.[19] With his success in 1928, he was picked as the Labour Party candidate for Ebbw Vale (displacing the sitting MP Evan Davies),[20] and easily held the seat at the 1929 General Election. Bevan gained more than twice the votes of Liberal candidate William Griffiths, receiving 20,000 votes to Griffiths' 8,000.[9][20] In keeping with his background, Bevan described his initial thoughts on the House of Commons as a shrine to "the most conservative of all religions – ancestor worship".[12] In Parliament, he became noticed as a harsh critic of those he felt opposed the working man and woman.[21] His targets included the Conservative Winston Churchill and the Liberal David Lloyd George, as well as Ramsay MacDonald and Margaret Bondfield from his own Labour party (he targeted the latter for her unwillingness to increase unemployment benefits).[22][23] He had solid support from his constituency, being one of the few Labour MPs to be unopposed in the 1931 General Election, and this support grew through the 1930s and the period of the Great Depression.[22]

Soon after Bevan entered Parliament, he was briefly attracted to Smethwick Labour MP Oswald Mosley's arguments,[24] becoming one of the 17 signatories of the Mosley Memorandum in the context of the MacDonald government's repeated economic crises,[25] including the doubling of unemployment levels.[26] In January 1931, Bevan wrote a letter to the government on behalf of the Mosley group, raising concerns over its "failure to deal with unemployment".[27] Mosley broke from the Labour Party in early 1931 to form the New Party, but Bevan refused to defect and instead announced that he had no intention of leaving the Labour Party. By 1932, Mosley's New Party had migrated from the left over to the far-right of British politics and was rebranded as the British Union of Fascists. Bevan's past association with Mosley would be used against him in subsequent years by his political rivals.[28]

He married fellow Socialist MP Jennie Lee in 1934, after they met in London. Described as "more left-wing than Nye", Lee became a considerable influence on Bevan's political career.[29][30] They were early supporters of the socialists in the Spanish Civil War, and Bevan visited the country in 1938.[31] In 1936 he joined the board of the new socialist newspaper Tribune. His agitations for a united socialist front of all parties of the left (including the Communist Party of Great Britain) led to his brief expulsion from the Labour Party from March to November 1939 (along with Stafford Cripps, C. P. Trevelyan and three others). Bevan and Cripps had previously been threatened with disciplinary action by the party for sharing a stage with a Communist speaker, and all party members were threatened with expulsion if they were associated with the Popular Front.[32][33] Bevan and another expelled MP, George Strauss, appealed against the decision.[34] Bevan was readmitted to the party on 20 December 1939,[35] after agreeing "to refrain from conducting or taking part in campaigns in opposition to the declared policy of the Party".[36][37]

He strongly criticised the National Government's rearmament plans in the face of the rise of Nazi Germany, saying to the Labour conference in autumn 1937:

If the immediate international situation is used as an excuse to get us to drop our opposition to the rearmament programme of the Government, the next phase must be that we must desist from any industrial or political action that may disturb national unity in the face of Fascist aggression. Along that road is endless retreat, and at the end of it a voluntary totalitarian State with ourselves erecting the barbed wire around. You cannot collaborate, you cannot accept the logic of collaboration on a first class issue like rearmament, and at the same time evade the implications of collaboration all along the line when the occasion demands it.[38]

His opposition to the Labour leadership's approach was partly based on his view that the leadership of the Labour Party was not demanding assurances from the Government on its foreign policy as a price for the party's support for re-armament as expressed in his speech to the Bournemouth Conference of that year:

...we should say to the country we are prepared to make whatever sacrifices are necessary, to give whatever arms are necessary to fight Fascist powers and in order to consolidate world peace...[39]

The Labour conference voted to drop its opposition to rearmament. When Winston Churchill said that the Labour Party should refrain from giving Adolf Hitler the impression that Britain was divided, Bevan rejected this as sinister:

The fear of Hitler is to be used to frighten the workers of Britain into silence. In short Hitler is to rule Britain by proxy. If we accept the contention that the common enemy is Hitler and not the British capitalist class, then certainly Churchill is right. But it means abandonment of the class struggle and the subservience of the British workers to their own employers.[38]

Opposition to the war-time government

By March 1938, Bevan was writing in Tribune that Churchill's warnings about German intentions for Czechoslovakia were "a diapason of majestic harmony" compared to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's "thin, listless trickle".[40] Bevan now called unsuccessfully for a Popular Front against fascism under the leadership of the Labour Party, including even anti-fascist Tories.[40] When the government introduced voluntary national service in December 1938, Bevan argued that Labour should demand the nationalisation of the armaments industry, support the democratic government of Spain and sign an Anglo-Soviet pact in return for its support. When Labour supported the government's scheme with no such conditions, Bevan denounced Labour for imploring the people on recruiting platforms to put themselves under the leadership of their opponents.[41] The Military Training Act 1939 reintroduced conscription six months later, and Bevan joined the rest of the Labour Party in opposing it, calling it "the complete abandonment of any hope of a successful struggle against the weight of wealth in Great Britain".[42] He emphasised that the government had no arguments to persuade young men to fight "except merely in another squalid attempt to defend themselves against the redistribution of international swag".[42]

In August 1939 came the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, a non-aggression pact between the Nazi and Soviet governments that shocked democratic governments around the world. In Parliament, Bevan argued that this was the logical outcome of the government's foreign policy. He wanted the war to be not just a fight against fascism but a war for socialism.[43] Bevan was relieved that the country had united against Nazi Germany in the fight against fascism to provide a common enemy away from the working class.[36] He was a strong critic of Chamberlain, arguing that his old rival Winston Churchill should become prime minister.[12]

During the Second World War he was one of the main leaders of the left in the Commons, opposing the wartime Coalition government. Bevan opposed the heavy censorship imposed on radio and newspapers and wartime Defence Regulation 18B, which gave the Home Secretary the powers to intern citizens. Bevan called for the nationalisation of the coal industry and advocated the opening of a Second Front in Western Europe to help the Soviet Union in its fight with Germany. In one of his most noted speeches made against Churchill, he railed that the prime minister "wins debate after debate and loses battle after battle".[12] Churchill would later label Bevan "a squalid nuisance".[44] Churchill was a frequent target of Bevan's, who already held a dislike of him following his intervention in the Tonypandy riots and the 1926 United Kingdom general strike which Bevan considered heavy handed. Bevan believed that the key to the war was the involvement of Russia and considered Churchill was too focused on the intervention of the United States.[45] Bevan also feared that allowing Churchill to continue unopposed and unchallenged in Parliament during the war would leave him almost unbeatable for the Labour Party in future elections.[46] Historian Max Hastings described Bevan's role in Parliament during the war as "his figures were accurate but his scorn was at odds with the spirit of the moment—full of gratitude, as was the prime minister".[47] His fierce opposition made him unpopular with some portions of the public at the time, his wife later described how the couple would frequently receive parcels filled with excrement at their home.[48]

Bevan was critical of the leadership of the British Army, which he felt was class bound and inflexible. After General Neil Ritchie's retreat across Cyrenaica early in 1942 and his disastrous defeat by General Erwin Rommel at Gazala, Bevan made one of his most memorable speeches in the Commons in support of a motion of censure against the Churchill government.

"The Prime Minister must realise that in this country there is a taunt on everyone's lips that if Rommel had been in the British Army he would still have been a sergeant ... There is a man in the British Army who flung 150,000 men across the Ebro in Spain, Michael Dunbar. He is at present a sergeant ... He was Chief of Staff in Spain, he won the Battle of the Ebro, and he is a sergeant."[49]

Dunbar had been recommended for a commission, but rejected it himself to remain with his unit.[50]

Bevan was subject to further disciplinary action in 1944, when he deliberately voted against Labour's stance on new defence regulations.[51] He also voiced criticism of trade union leaders, which drew complaints from both the Miners' Federation and the Trades Union Congress.[52] An administrative committee voted 71 to 60 in favour of retaining Bevan as an MP,[53] although it was announced that party discipline was to be strengthened in future.[54]

He believed that the Second World War would give Britain the opportunity to create "a new society". He often quoted an 1855 passage from Karl Marx that was published in The New York Times in 1865: "The redeeming feature of war is that it puts a nation to the test. As exposure to the atmosphere reduces all mummies to instant dissolution, so war passes supreme judgment upon social systems that have outlived their vitality."[55] At the beginning of the 1945 general election campaign, Bevan told his audience that his goal was to eliminate any opposition to the Labour programme: "We have been the dreamers, we have been the sufferers, now we are the builders. We enter this campaign at this general election, not merely to get rid of the Tory majority. We want the complete political extinction of the Tory Party, and twenty-five years of Labour Government."[56]

Government

The 1945 general election resulted in a landslide victory for the Labour Party, giving it a large enough majority to allow the implementation of the party's manifesto commitments and to introduce a programme of far-reaching social reforms, that were collectively dubbed the "Welfare State".[57][58] These reforms were achieved in the face of great financial difficulty following the war. The new Prime Minister, Clement Attlee, appointed Bevan as Minister of Health, with a remit that also covered housing. Thus, the responsibility for instituting a new and comprehensive National Health Service, as well as tackling the country's severe post-war housing shortage, was given to Bevan, the youngest member of Attlee's Cabinet in his first ministerial position at the age of 47.[22] Although described in The Times as "an outstanding back-bench critic" and "one of (Labour's) most brilliant members in debate", his appointment was regarded as a relative surprise, given his previous disciplinary issues.[59] Bevan had clashed frequently with Attlee during his time as an MP, believing that the Labour leader failed to apply enough pressure on the Tory government during the war. He had also seen disputes with some of Attlee's closest allies, Ernest Bevin and Herbert Morrison, who were appointed Foreign Secretary and Leader of the House respectively. However, Attlee commented that Bevan was "starting with me with a clean sheet" following his appointment.[60] Bevan tested this newfound solidarity early on by arriving to a royal banquet at St James's Palace wearing a navy lounge suit.[60] He earned a rebuke from Attlee, but Bevan contended that his Welsh mining constituency did not send him to Parliament to "dress up", and he declined to wear formal attire at further Buckingham Palace functions.[61]

Minister of Health (1945–1951)

 
Bevan talking to a patient at Park Hospital, Manchester, the day the NHS came into being.

The free National Health Service was paid for directly through public money. Bevan had been inspired by the Tredegar Medical Aid Society in his hometown, where residents would pay a subscription that would fund access for all of the town's inhabitants to have free access to medical services such as nursing or dental care.[62] This system proved so popular that 20,000 people supported the organisation during the 1930s. In 1947, Bevan stated "All I am doing is extending to the entire population of Britain the benefits we had in Tredegar for a generation or more. We are going to Tredegar-ise you."[62] Government income was increased for the welfare state expenditure by a large increase in marginal tax rates for wealthy business owners in particular, as part of what the Labour government largely saw as the redistribution of the wealth created by the working-class from the owners of large-scale industry to the workers.[63] Having been a member of the Cottage Hospital Management Committee around 1928 and serving as chairman in 1929–30, Bevan had received an insight into the management of health services by local authorities, which proved to be a bedrock of his work in founding the National Health Service.[48]

The collective principle asserts that ... no society can legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means.

— Aneurin Bevan, In Place of Fear, p. 100

On the 'appointed day', 5 July 1948, Bevan's National Health Service Act 1946 came into force. On the day, Bevan attended a ceremony at the Park Hospital, Trafford (now Trafford General), at which he symbolically received the keys to the hospital.[64] The scheme was achieved having overcome political opposition from both the Conservative Party and from within his own party. Confrontation with the British Medical Association (BMA) was led by Charles Hill, who published a letter in the British Medical Journal describing Bevan as "a complete and uncontrolled dictator". Members of the BMA had dubbed him the "Tito of Tonypandy".[48][65] They threatened to derail the National Health Service scheme before it had even begun, as medical practitioners continued to withhold their support just months before the launch of the service. After eighteen months of ongoing dispute between the Ministry of Health and the BMA, Bevan finally managed to win over the support of the vast majority of the medical profession by offering a couple of minor concessions, including allowing consultants to keep their own private practices and continuing to allow doctors to be paid in capitation fees rather than salaries,[66] but without compromising the fundamental principles of his National Health Service proposals. At a dinner in late 1955 or early 1956 to celebrate the publication of the Guillebaud Report into NHS costs Bevan remarked to Julian Tudor Hart "ultimately I had to stuff their mouths with gold" about his handling of the consultants. This is often quoted as "I stuffed their mouths with gold".[67][65] Some 2,688 voluntary and municipal hospitals in England and Wales were nationalised and came under Bevan's supervisory control as Health Minister. Two of the key elements of Bevan's proposals were this nationalisation of the hospital services and the abolition of the sale and purchase of goodwill by general practitioners. The former aimed to provide a uniform standard of consultant led care and expertise throughout the country and to replace the patchwork of voluntary and municipal hospitals which existed at that point. The latter – sale and purchase of goodwill – often placed new entrants to the GP profession under large amounts of debt. Along with this, the Medical Practices Committee was to oversee the distribution of GP practices – a proposal which the previous Coalition Minister had withdrawn after opposition from the British Medical Association.

Bevan said:

The National Health Service and the Welfare State have come to be used as interchangeable terms, and in the mouths of some people as terms of reproach. Why this is so it is not difficult to understand, if you view everything from the angle of a strictly individualistic competitive society. A free health service is pure Socialism and as such it is opposed to the hedonism of capitalist society.[68]

— Aneurin Bevan, In Place of Fear, p. 81

Conservative opposition of the National Health Service scheme feared that the sudden access to free health care would be overrun. In its early stages this proved true, as the service went vastly over budget in its inaugural year, and Attlee was forced to make a radio address to the nation in an attempt to limit the strain on the system. Bevan countered that the initial overspending was down to years of underinvestment in the British medical system prior to the Second World War: by the start of the 1950s, the early overspending had come to an end.[65]

Housing reform

 
Statue of Bevan in Cardiff by Robert Thomas

When Bevan was made a minister in 1945, he envisaged the social housing sector as a housing service similar to the National Health Service, ensuring that everyone had access to decent and affordable homes, with people still having the option to live in owner occupation or the private sector if they so chose (with grants made available to owner-occupiers and private landlords to bring dwellings up to decent standards).[69][70] The removal of the criteria of "working class" from local authority housing provision was seen as a first step, widening access to the council housing that was becoming an ever larger part of the UK housing stock and which made up a majority of new homes built after the war.[70][71] The aim was to create new homes and communities with a place for all sections of society :

We should try to introduce in our modern villages and towns what was always the lovely feature of English and Welsh villages, where the doctor, the grocer, the butcher and the farm labourer all lived in the same street. I believe that is essential for the full life of citizen ... to see the living tapestry of a mixed community.[72]

— Aneurin Bevan, Parliament speech, 1949[73]

Substantial bombing damage, with over 700,000 homes needing repair in London alone,[74] and the continued existence of pre-war slums in many parts of the country made the task of housing reform particularly challenging for Bevan. Indeed, these factors, exacerbated by post-war restrictions on the availability of building materials and skilled labour, collectively served to limit Bevan's achievements in this area. Bevan was also limited due to his desire for new homes to be bigger and of better quality than the ones they were being built to replace, based on the recommendations of a 1943 report by the Dudley Committee, and a shortage of skilled workers to undertake the work.[75][76][77] 1946 saw the completion of 55,600 new homes; this rose to 139,600 in 1947 and 227,600 in 1948. While this was not an insignificant achievement: the 850,000 homes built in the four years immediately after the war ended was the biggest housing programme ever introduced,[78] Bevan's rate of house-building was seen as less of an achievement than that of his Conservative (indirect) successor, Harold Macmillan, who was able to complete some 300,000 new homes a year as Minister for Housing in the 1950s. These numbers were reached by lowering the quality standards originally put forward by Bevan, with council houses featuring gardens being largely dropped in favour of tower blocks and flats.[75][79] Macmillan was also able to concentrate full-time on the housing crisis, instead of being obliged, like Bevan, to combine his housing portfolio with that for Health (which for Bevan took the higher priority: he once stated tongue-in-cheek that he devoted "five minutes a week to housing").[80]

At a party rally in 1948, during a speech, Bevan stated: "That is why no amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party that inflicted those bitter experiences on me. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin. They condemned millions of first-class people to semi-starvation."[81] The comment inspired the creation of the Vermin Club by angry Conservatives, who attacked Bevan for years for the metaphor. Labour Party deputy leader Herbert Morrison complained that Bevan's attack had backfired, for his words "did much more to make the Tories work and vote ... than Conservative Central Office could have done".[82] It was later claimed that his words had cost Labour more than two million votes.[45][by whom?]

In 1951, with the retirement of Ernest Bevin, Bevan was a leading candidate for Foreign Secretary. Prime Minister Attlee rejected Bevan in favour of Herbert Morrison because he distrusted Bevan's personality. In his biography of Bevan, John Campbell wrote, "Bevan's impetuous temperament, undiplomatic tone and reputation as an extreme left-winger combined to make the Foreign Office seem the last place a prudent Prime Minister would think of putting him at any time. His "vermin" speech still resonated: imagination shuddered at a repetition of that on the international stage."[83]

Minister of Labour and National Service (1951)

Bevan was instead appointed Minister of Labour in January 1951 in place of George Isaacs. The move was seen by some as a sideways or backwards step, although a potential rearmament program was expected to make the post of future importance.[84][85] During his tenure, he helped to secure a deal for railwaymen which provided them with a significant pay increase.[86] However, three months after his appointment, Hugh Gaitskell introduced a proposal of prescription charges for dental care and spectacles—created to save a potential £25m to meet the financial demands imposed by the Korean War. An infuriated Bevan stated that he would never be a member of a government that imposed charges on the National Health Service.[87] The Labour MP David Marquand has stated that the savings were introduced by Gaitskell simply to "impose his will" upon Bevan who he saw as a political rival.[12] Bevan resigned from his position two weeks later, stating both the proposed changes and the increase in military expenditure that necessitated the need for such proposals.[88][89] Two other ministers, John Freeman and Harold Wilson, resigned at the same time.[90] Bevan received unanimous support for his actions from his local Labour constituency leaders.[91]

Later the same year, the Labour Party were defeated at the general election. After Bevan left the Health ministry in 1951 he could never regain his level of success and feuded with fellow Labour leaders, using his strong political base as a weapon. Historian Kenneth O. Morgan says, "Bevan alone kept the flag of left-wing socialism aloft throughout—which gave him a matchless authority amongst the constituency parties and in party conference".[92]

Opposition

 
Aneurin Bevan speaking in Corwen in 1952

Bevan's last decade saw his political position weaken year by year as he failed to find a winning issue that would make use of his skills.[93] In 1952 Bevan published In Place of Fear,[94] "the most widely read socialist book" of the period, according to a highly critical right-wing Labour MP Anthony Crosland.[95] According to The Times Literary Supplement, the book was a "dithyramb with meanderings into the many side-tracks of Mr Bevan's private and public experience".[96] In the opening page of the book, Bevan begins: "A young miner in a South Wales colliery, my concern was with the one practical question: Where does power lie in this particular state of Great Britain, and how can it be attained by the workers?"[97]

In March 1952, a poorly prepared Bevan came off the worse in an evening Commons debate on health with Conservative backbencher Iain Macleod, whose performance led Churchill to appoint him as Minister of Health some six weeks after the debate.[98]

Out of office, Bevan soon exacerbated the split within the Labour Party between the right and the left which weakened the party in the 1950s.[99] For the next five years, he was the leader of the left wing of the Labour Party, who became known as Bevanites. They criticised the right-wing "Gaitskellites" high defence expenditure (especially for nuclear weapons), called for better relations with the Soviet Union, and opposed the party leader, Clement Attlee, on most issues. According to Richard Crossman, Bevan hated "the in-fighting which you have to do in politics.... He wasn't cut out to be a leader, he was cut out to be a prophet".[100] In April 1954, Bevan resigned from the Parliamentary Labour Party, having been rebuked by Attlee after accusing the Labour leader of surrendering to American pressure over a proposed multi-national defence organisation in Asia and the Pacific.[101] He later said that he had resigned his position to "call attention to the fact that their movement was in grave crisis", and stated his belief that he would be have been party chairman by the following year if he had remained.[102] In July of the same year, Bevan announced his intention to stand for election as the Treasurer of the Labour Party against Hugh Gaitskell. His nomination received a severe blow on the same day it was announced, when two unions that traditionally sided with the left, the National Union of Mineworkers and the Amalgamated Engineering Union, pledged their support for his opponent.[103] Although unsuccessful in his bid, he did celebrate 25 years as the MP for Ebbw Vale.[102]

In March 1955, when Britain was preparing for Operation Grapple, the testing of its first hydrogen bomb, Bevan led a revolt of 57 Labour MPs and abstained on a key vote.[104] The Parliamentary Labour Party voted 141 to 113 to withdraw the whip from him, but it was restored within a month, due to his popularity.[105] After the 1955 general election, Attlee retired as Labour leader. Bevan contested the leadership against both Morrison and Labour right-winger Gaitskell, but it was Gaitskell who emerged victorious with more than half of the ballots.[106] Bevan's remark that "I know the right kind of political Leader for the Labour Party is a kind of desiccated calculating machine" was assumed to refer to Gaitskell, although Bevan denied it (commenting upon Gaitskell's record as Chancellor of the Exchequer as having "proved" this). Bevan also failed in a bid to become deputy leader, losing out to Jim Griffiths.[107] He instead stood again for the role of party treasurer and was duly elected, beating George Brown.[108]

Despite Bevan's criticism of the new party leader, Gaitskell decided to appoint him as Shadow Colonial Secretary,[109] and then Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1956. Bevan was as critical of Nasserist Egypt's seizure of the Suez Canal on 26 July 1956 as he was of the subsequent Anglo-French military response. He compared Gamal Abdel Nasser with Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, from One Thousand and One Nights.[110] He was a vocal critic of the Conservative government's actions in the Suez Crisis, noticeably delivering high-profile speeches at a protest rally in Trafalgar Square on 4 November 1956, and criticising the government's actions and arguments in the Commons on 5 December 1956. Bevan accused the government of a "policy of bankruptcy and despair",[111] stating at the Trafalgar rally:

We are stronger than Egypt but there are other countries stronger than us. Are we prepared to accept for ourselves the logic we are applying to Egypt? If nations more powerful than ourselves accept the absence of principle, the anarchistic attitude of Eden and launch bombs on London, what answer have we got, what complaint have we got? If we are going to appeal to force, if force is to be the arbiter to which we appeal, it would at least make common sense to try to make sure beforehand that we have got it, even if you accept that abysmal logic, that decadent point of view.

We are in fact in the position today of having appealed to force in the case of a small nation, where if it is appealed to against us it will result in the destruction of Great Britain, not only as a nation, but as an island containing living men and women. Therefore I say to Anthony, I say to the British government, there is no count at all upon which they can be defended.

They have besmirched the name of Britain. They have made us ashamed of the things of which formerly we were proud. They have offended against every principle of decency and there is only one way in which they can even begin to restore their tarnished reputation and that is to get out! Get out! Get out![111]

Bevan dismayed many of his supporters when he suddenly reversed his opposition to nuclear weapons.[112] Speaking at the 1957 Labour Party conference, he decried unilateral nuclear disarmament, saying "It would send a British Foreign Secretary naked into the conference-chamber". This statement is often misconstrued: Bevan argued that unilateralism would result in Britain's loss of allies, and one interpretation of his metaphor is that nakedness would come from the lack of allies, not the lack of weapons.[113] According to the journalist Paul Routledge, Donald Bruce, a former MP and Parliamentary Private Secretary and adviser to Bevan, had told him that Bevan's shift on the disarmament issue was the result of discussions with the Soviet government, where they advised him to push for British retention of nuclear weapons so they could possibly be used as a bargaining chip in negotiations with the United States.[114]

In 1957, Bevan, Richard Crossman and the Labour Party's General Secretary Morgan Phillips sued The Spectator magazine for libel, after one of its writers described them as drinking heavily during an Italian Socialist Party conference. The article wrote that the three men:

...puzzled the Italians by their capacity to fill themselves like tanks with whisky and coffee... Although the Italians were never sure the British delegation were sober, they always attributed to them an immense political acumen.

The three won their case, and obtained financial damages of £2,500 each.[115] Crossman later acknowledged that they had perjured themselves to do so.[116]

Bevan was elected unopposed as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party in 1959, succeeding Griffiths.[117] His last speech in the House of Commons, in the debate of 3 November 1959 on the Queen's Speech,[118] referred to the difficulties of persuading the electorate to support a policy which would make them less well-off in the short term, but more prosperous in the long term.

Death

Bevan had said "I would rather be kept alive in the efficient if cold altruism of a large hospital than expire in a gush of warm sympathy in a small one".[119] He checked into the Royal Free Hospital in London on 27 December 1959 to undergo surgery for an ulcer, but malignant stomach cancer was discovered instead in a major operation two days later.[120]

After a lengthy period in hospital, on 14 February 1960 Bevan returned home and announced he would not be returning to politics in the near future, so as to be able to recuperate and plan an extended holiday.[121] In May 1960 Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India, while in England visited Bevan at his home in Asheridge Farm (where Bevan was a keen amateur farmer, keeping cattle and pigs).[122]

Bevan died in his sleep at 4.10pm on 6 July 1960, at the age of 62, at his home, Asheridge Farm, Chesham, Buckinghamshire. His remains were cremated at Gwent Crematorium in Croesyceiliog in a private family ceremony.[123][124] An open-air service was held in his constituency of Ebbw Vale and was presided over by Donald Soper.[125] Jennie Lee explained in a letter to Michael Foot that Bevan had specifically chosen to have a non-religious funeral and not a Christian service, because he was a firm humanist.

'Nye is asleep next door. Later today he will be taken home to Wales. Tomorrow he will be cremated in keeping with his known views. [Nye] was never a hypocrite. No falsity must touch him once he is no longer available to defend his views. He was not a cold-blooded rationalist. He was no calculating machine. He was a great humanist whose religion lay in loving his fellow men and trying to serve them... He knelt reverently in respect to a friend or friend's faith, but he never pretended to be anything other than what he was, a humanist.

— Jennie Lee to Michael Foot, 7 July 1960.[126]

In his 2014 biography, Nick Thomas-Symonds described "an outpouring of national mourning" that followed Bevan's death. The Daily Herald stated that some MPs were seen to be crying in Parliament and described how there was "sorrow at every street corner" in the South Wales Valleys.[12] Harold Macmillan ended his Prime Minister's Questions session in Parliament two days after Bevan's death by paying tribute to the opposition MP, describing him as "a great personality and a great national figure". Macmillan noted that despite being a "controversial figure" during his career, Bevan's death had seen an outpouring of genuine "admiration and affection".[127] Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell also paid tribute to his former shadow cabinet member and ended his speech by labelling Bevan as "one of the great men of our day".[127]

Legacy

 
A portrait of Bevan in the Senedd building

Bevan's most significant legacy is the National Health Service. Bevan foresaw that it would always be the subject of public debate, warning that "This service must always be changing, growing and improving; it must always appear to be inadequate." But seven decades after it was founded, a 2013 opinion poll conducted on behalf of British Future found that the NHS was more popular than at its creation, and more popular than the monarchy, the BBC, and the British Armed Forces.[128]

Bevan was particularly noted for his public speaking, being described by Robin Butler, Baron Butler of Brockwell, as "the greatest parliamentary speaker since Charles James Fox". Winston Churchill, the target of numerous diatribes from Bevan during his career, commented that Bevan was "one of the few members that I will sit still and listen to". Bevan's reputation as a hard-line socialist typically preceded him: Sir William Douglas, who served as Bevan's deputy in the Ministry of Health, had initially stated that he would "never work with a man like that". However, by the end of his tenure, he had declared Bevan as "the best minister we have had".[45] Clement Attlee expressed his support that Bevan should have been the leader of the Labour Party during his lifetime but was held back by his demeanour, stating "he wants to be two things simultaneously, rebel and official leader, and you can't be both".[129]

A bronze statue was commissioned by South Glamorgan County Council and erected in 1987 in the city centre of Cardiff.[130]

 
The main stone of the Aneurin Bevan Memorial Stones at the Sirhowy Valley Walk

The Aneurin Bevan Memorial Stones were erected at the beginning of the Sirhowy Valley Walk with three smaller stones (representing three towns of his constituency Ebbw Vale, Rhymney and Tredegar) surrounding a larger stone representing Bevan.[131] In 2002, Bevan was voted as the 45th greatest Briton of all time by the BBC public opinion poll, 100 Greatest Britons.[132] The following year, Bevan was voted number one in the 100 Welsh Heroes poll, a response to find the public's favourite Welsh people of all time.[133][134] Numerous institutions bear Bevan's name, including the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board, and Ysbyty Aneurin Bevan, a hospital located within his old Ebbw Vale constituency.[135]

In 2015, Welsh actor Michael Sheen gave a speech in which he described Bevan as a mythical creature, stating, "He had cast-iron integrity and a raging passion".[12]

Bibliography

  • Why Not Trust The Tories?, 1944. Published under the pseudonym 'Celticus'. The title was intended ironically.
  • In Place of Fear, 1952. (ISBN 9781163810118)

Excerpts from Bevan's speeches are included in Greg Rosen's book Old Labour to New : the dreams that inspired, the battles that divided (published by Methuen in 2005 (ISBN 978-1-84275-045-2)).

Bevan's key speeches in the legislative arena are to be found in:

  • Peter J. Laugharne (ed.), Aneurin Bevan – A Parliamentary Odyssey: Volume I, Speeches at Westminster 1929–1944, Manutius Press, 1996.
  • Peter J. Laugharne (ed.), Aneurin Bevan – A Parliamentary Odyssey: Volume II, Speeches at Westminster 1945–1960, Manutius Press, 2000.
  • Peter J. Laugharne (ed.), Aneurin Bevan – A Parliamentary Odyssey: Volumes I and II, Speeches at Westminster 1929–1960, Manutius Press, 2004.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Foot 1966, pp. 11–13
  2. ^ "History of Socialism: Aneurin Bevan". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  3. ^ Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 16
  4. ^ Foot 1966, p. 14
  5. ^ a b Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 24
  6. ^ Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 19
  7. ^ Foot 1966, pp. 27–28
  8. ^ "Nye Bevan Festival" (PDF). GMB. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  9. ^ a b c "Enduring legacy of Aneurin Bevan". BBC News. 6 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  10. ^ a b Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 25
  11. ^ a b Foot 1966, pp. 30–32
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Marquand, David (19 March 2015). "Aneurin Bevan, stormy petrel of the Labour left". New Statesman. Retrieved 3 August 2019. (registration required)
  13. ^ Morgan 1981, pp. 196–7.
  14. ^ a b "Aneurin Bevan: The greatest Welsh hero". Tredegar Development Trust. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  15. ^ Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 32
  16. ^ Foot, vol. 1, ch. 3.
  17. ^ "Dying father inspired Nye Bevan's NHS dream". WalesOnline. Media Wales. 23 September 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  18. ^ "Aneurin Bevan (1897–1960)". BBC Wales. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
  19. ^ Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 52
  20. ^ a b Foot 1966, pp. 80–82
  21. ^ Carradice, Phil (5 July 2010). "The death of Nye Bevan". BBC Wales. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  22. ^ a b c "About Nye". nyebevan.org.uk. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  23. ^ Foot 1966, pp. 95–98
  24. ^ Philpot, Robert (24 October 2017). "Britain's near-brush with Fascism: The politician who rooted for Hitler". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
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  28. ^ Foot 1966, p. 113
  29. ^ Cooper, Neil (31 October 2018). "Play tells the inspiring story of political couple Aneurin Bevan and Jennie Lee". The Herald. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  30. ^ Heaney, Paul (14 November 2017). "How Jennie Lee helped Aneurin Bevan shape political change". BBC News. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
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  38. ^ a b Campbell 1987, p. 77.
  39. ^ Foot 1966, p. 267.
  40. ^ a b Campbell 1987, p. 80.
  41. ^ Campbell 1987, p. 82.
  42. ^ a b Campbell 1987, p. 85.
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  61. ^ Allan Michie, God Save the Queen, p. 159 (1952).
  62. ^ a b "NHS 70: Aneurin Bevan Day celebrations in Tredegar". BBC News. 1 July 2018. Retrieved 30 July 2019.
  63. ^ Bevan argues that the percentage of tax from personal incomes rose from 9% in 1938 to 15% in 1949. But the lowest paid a tax rate of 1%, up from 0.2% in 1938, the middle income brackets paid 14% to 26%, up from 10% to 18% in 1938, the higher earners paid 42%, up from 29%, and the top earners 77%, up from 58% in 1938. In Place of Fear, p. 146. If you earned over £800,000 per annum in 2005 money terms (£10,000 in 1948), you paid 76.7% income tax.
  64. ^ "Trafford General: Where It All Began". BBC. 3 July 2008. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
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  67. ^ Charles Webster (1991). "Note on "Stuffing their Mouth with Gold"". Aneurin Bevan on the National Health Service. By Bevan, Aneurin. Charles Webster (ed.). Oxford: University of Oxford Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine. pp. 219–220. ISBN 0906844096.
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  69. ^ Glynn, Sarah (2009). Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World. Pluto Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-7453-2858-4.
  70. ^ a b "Housing Bill (Hansard, 16 March 1949)". api.parliament.uk. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
  71. ^ The Bevan Foundation. "Why Nye?". Bevan Foundation. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
  72. ^ Matt Beech and Simon Lee (eds), Ten Years of New Labour, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
  73. ^ "Housing bill". Hansard. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  74. ^ "Utmost Vigour for Housing". The Times. 25 August 1945. p. 2. Retrieved 27 July 2019 – via The Times Digital Archive.
  75. ^ a b Holmes, Chris. "Housing, Equality and Choice" (PDF). Institute for Public Policy Research. pp. 19–32. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  76. ^ "Welsh Politicians". The National Library of Wales. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  77. ^ "Housing Labour Short for "Some Months"". The Times. 10 December 1945. p. 2. Retrieved 27 July 2019 – via The Times Digital Archive.
  78. ^ "Housing owned by the people for the people – Nye would have approved". WalesOnline. Media Wales. 21 December 2009. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
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  80. ^ Hanley, Lynsey (23 June 2017). "Housing Inequality Kills". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
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  82. ^ Thomas-Symonds 2014, p. 5
  83. ^ John Campbell, Nye Bevan: a biography (1987), p. 229
  84. ^ "Aneurin Bevan – Labour's Lost Leader". BBC News. 1 July 1998. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
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  86. ^ Morgan, Kenneth (1985). Labour in Power, 1945–51. Oxford University Press. p. 300. ISBN 9780192851505.
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  89. ^ Aneurin Bevan, Minister of Labour (23 April 1951). "Mr Aneurin Bevan (Statement)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 34–43.
  90. ^ Leapman, Michael (21 December 2014). "Major John Freeman: Soldier who became an MP, diplomat and broadcaster best known for his series of interviews, Face to Face". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
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  92. ^ Kenneth O. Morgan, Labour in Power (1985) p. 57
  93. ^ Krug 1961.
  94. ^ "In Place of Fear A Free Health Service 1952". Socialist Health Association. 13 March 1952. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  95. ^ Crosland 1956, p. 52.
  96. ^ Kynaston 2009, p. 82.
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  98. ^ Paul Addison (2013). Churchill on the Home Front, 1900–1955. Faber & Faber. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780571296408.
  99. ^ Thorpe 1997, p. 133-135.
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  101. ^ "Mr. Bevan for Back Bench". The Times. 15 April 1954. p. 8. Retrieved 29 July 2019 – via The Times Digital Archive.
  102. ^ a b "Mr. Bevan's 25 Years as Ebbw Vale M.P.". The Times. 29 November 1954. p. 5. Retrieved 29 July 2019 – via The Times Digital Archive.
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  110. ^ Callaghan, John, British Labour Party and International Relations Socialism and War, p. 233.
  111. ^ a b "Aneurin Bevan 1956". New Statesman. 4 February 2010. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  112. ^ Peter Dorey (2004). The Labour Governments 1964–1970. Taylor & Francis. p. 12. ISBN 9780203327227.
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  116. ^ Roy Jenkins wrote of his former colleagues (in "Aneurin Bevan" in Portraits and Miniatures, 2011) that they "sailed to victory on the unfortunate combination of Lord Chief Justice Goddard's prejudice against the anti-hanging and generally libertarian Spectator of those days and the perjury of the plaintiffs, subsequently exposed in Crossman's endlessly revealing diaries." Geoffrey Wheatcroft wrote (in The Guardian, 18 March 2000, "Lies and Libel"): "Fifteen years later, Crossman boasted (in my presence) that they had indeed all been toping heavily, and that at least one of them had been blind drunk." Dominic Lawson wrote (in The Independent, "Chris Huhne's downfall is another example of the amazing risks a politician will take". 4 February 2013): "Crossman's posthumously published diaries revealed that the story was accurate; and in 1978, Brian Inglis on What the Papers Say revealed that Crossman had told him a few days after the case that they had committed perjury". Mihir Bose (in "Britain's Libel Laws: Malice Aforethought", History Today, 5 May 2013) quotes Bevan's biographer, John Campbell, to the effect that the case had destroyed the career of the young journalist involved, Jenny Nicholson.
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References

  • Foot, Michael (1962). Aneurin Bevan: A Biography Volume One: 1897-1945. Vol. 1. Macgibbon & Kee.
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. (1981). Rebirth of a Nation. Wales 1889–1980. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-821760-9.
  • Thomas-Symonds, Nicklaus (2014). Nye: The Political Life of Aneurin Bevan. IB Tauris. ISBN 9781780762098.
  • Wrigley, Chris (2002). Winston Churchill: A Biographical Companion. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-87436-990-8.

Further reading

  • Fairlie, Henry. "Oratory in Political Life," History Today (Jan 1960) 10#1 pp 3–13. covers Bevan
  • Jenkins, Mark (1979). Bevanism – Labour's High Tide. The Cold War and the Democratic Mass Movement. ISBN 9780851243221.
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. (1984). Labour People: leaders and lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock. Oxford University Press. pp. 204–19. ISBN 9780571259618.
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. (2002). Labour Forces: From Ernie Bevin to Gordon Brown. pp. 81–103. ISBN 9780857714152.

External links

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Aneurin Bevan
  • Works by Aneurin Bevan at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)   (large file)
  • Aneurin Bevan and the foundation of the NHS: Socialist Health Association website
  • "Great speeches: Aneurin Bevan", The Guardian, featuring full audio of Bevan's speech at the 4 November 1956 Trafalgar Square rally against British action in Suez.
  • Newspaper clippings about Aneurin Bevan in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW (unindexed)
  • Aneurin Bevan at British Pathe
  • Images of Bevan at the National Portrait Gallery
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Ebbw Vale

19291960
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Health
1945–1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Labour and National Service
1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by Shadow Foreign Secretary
1956–1959
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of the Labour Party
1956–1960
Succeeded by
Preceded by Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
1959–1960
Succeeded by
Media offices
Preceded by Editor of Tribune
1941–1945
Served alongside: Jon Kimche
Succeeded by

aneurin, bevan, confused, with, ernest, bevin, local, health, board, headquartered, caerleon, wales, university, health, board, aneurin, bevan, welsh, aˈnəɨ, rɪn, november, 1897, july, 1960, welsh, labour, party, politician, noted, tenure, minister, health, cl. Not to be confused with Ernest Bevin For the local health board headquartered in Caerleon Wales see Aneurin Bevan University Health Board Aneurin Nye Bevan PC e ˈ n aɪ r ɪ n ˈ b ɛ v en Welsh aˈneɨ rɪn 15 November 1897 6 July 1960 was a Welsh Labour Party politician noted for tenure as Minister of Health in Clement Attlee s government in which he spearheaded the creation of the British National Health Service He is also known for his wider contribution to the founding of the British welfare state He was first elected as MP for Ebbw Vale in 1929 and used his Parliamentary platform to make a number of influential criticisms of Winston Churchill and his Conservative government during the Second World War Before entering Parliament Bevan was involved in miner s union politics and was a leading figure in the 1926 general strike Bevan is widely regarded as one of the most influential left wing politicians in British history The Right HonourableAneurin BevanBevan in 1943Deputy Leader of the Labour PartyIn office 4 May 1959 6 July 1960LeaderHugh GaitskellPreceded byJim GriffithsSucceeded byGeorge BrownShadow Foreign SecretaryIn office 22 July 1956 4 May 1959LeaderHugh GaitskellPreceded byAlf RobensSucceeded byDenis HealeyMinister of Labour and National ServiceIn office 17 January 1951 23 April 1951MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byGeorge IsaacsSucceeded byAlf RobensMinister of HealthIn office 3 August 1945 17 January 1951MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byHenry WillinkSucceeded byHilary MarquandMember of Parliamentfor Ebbw ValeIn office 31 May 1929 6 July 1960Preceded byEvan DaviesSucceeded byMichael FootPersonal detailsBorn 1897 11 15 15 November 1897Tredegar Monmouthshire WalesDied6 July 1960 1960 07 06 aged 62 Chesham Buckinghamshire EnglandPolitical partyLabourSpouseJennie Lee m 1934 wbr Alma materCentral Labour College LondonRaised in Monmouthshire by a Welsh working class family he was the son of a coal miner and left school at 14 Bevan first worked as a miner during his teens where he became involved in local miner s union politics He was elected head of his Miners Lodge when aged 19 where he frequently railed against management He joined the Labour Party and attended Central Labour College in London On his return to South Wales he struggled to find work remaining unemployed for nearly three years before gaining employment as a union official which led to him becoming a leading figure in the 1926 general strike In 1928 Bevan won a seat on Monmouthshire County Council and was elected as the MP for Ebbw Vale the following year In Parliament he became a vocal critic of numerous other politicians from all parties particularly Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George After the war Bevan was chosen as the Minister of Health in Clement Attlee s new Labour government becoming the youngest member of the cabinet at 47 with his remit also including housing Inspired by the Tredegar Medical Aid Society in his hometown in South Wales Bevan led the campaign for a National Health Service to provide medical care free at point of need across the UK regardless of wealth Despite resistance from opposition parties and the British Medical Association the National Health Service Act 1946 was passed and launched in 1948 nationalising more than 2 500 hospitals within the United Kingdom Bevan was named Minister of Labour in 1951 but resigned after two months in office when the Attlee government proposed the introduction of prescription charges for dental and vision care and decided to transfer funds from the National Insurance Fund to pay for rearmament His influence waned after his departure although a left wing group not under his control within the party became known as Bevanites Attlee and Labour were ousted from power in a snap election held six months after Bevan s resignation but Attlee continued on as Labour Party Leader When Attlee retired from the leadership in 1955 Bevan unsuccessfully contested the party leadership with Hugh Gaitskell but was appointed Shadow Colonial Secretary and later Shadow Foreign Secretary In 1959 he was elected Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and held the post for a year until his death from stomach cancer at the age of 62 Bevan s death in 1960 led to an outpouring of national mourning In 2004 more than 44 years after his death he was voted first in a list of 100 Welsh Heroes having been credited for his contribution to the founding of the welfare state in the UK Contents 1 Early life 2 Working life as a miner 3 Parliament 3 1 MP for Ebbw Vale 3 2 Opposition to the war time government 4 Government 4 1 Minister of Health 1945 1951 4 2 Housing reform 4 3 Minister of Labour and National Service 1951 5 Opposition 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life EditAneurin Bevan was born on 15 November 1897 at 32 Charles Street in Tredegar Monmouthshire a working class mining town where an estimated 90 per cent of the town s inhabitants relied on the local mines for employment 1 The town was situated in the South Wales Valleys and was on the northern edge of the South Wales coalfield He was the son of coal miner David Bevan and Phoebe nee Prothero a seamstress David Bevan was born in Tredegar but his family had originally hailed from Carmarthenshire and he followed his own father into the mines starting work at 5 30am each day and returning home late in the evening He was adept at construction and added several modern features when the family moved to 7 Charles Street installing the first gas stove in the street an inside toilet and running hot water 1 Both Bevan s parents were Nonconformists his father was a Baptist and his mother a Methodist although he became an atheist Bevan had been a supporter of the Liberal Party in his youth but was converted to socialism by the writings of Robert Blatchford in The Clarion and joined the Independent Labour Party It was around this time that he first reject ed his chapel upbringing and became an atheist 2 He was a member of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion and wrote his own poems one of which won an inter chapel eisteddfod Aneurin s mother was also from Tredegar but had English roots her grandfather was from Hereford Bevan s maternal grandfather John was a blacksmith who had moved to Tredegar from Hay on Wye to work in the Bedwellty mines 1 3 The couple had ten children altogether six boys and four girls although four died in infancy and one died at the age of eight 4 Aneurin Bevan attended Sirhowy Elementary School where he achieved little He developed a severe stammer as a child and according to his younger sister Myfanwy became a lonely chap due to the need to shy away from the attention it brought him 5 His father died by pneumoconiosis a lung condition caused by long term inhalation of coal dust but no compensation was paid to him as it was not classed as an industrial disease under the Workman s Compensation Act Working life as a miner EditAt the age of 13 in his last months of schooling he worked as a butcher s boy at a local store 6 He worked at the butcher s for several months before leaving school instead working in the local Ty Trist Colliery There he earned around ten shillings per week with most going to his parents to help support the family He began attending fortnightly meetings of the local Plebs League where he studied among other things Marxism 5 Bevan also joined the Tredegar branch of the South Wales Miners Federation and became a trade union activist he was head of his local Miners Lodge at 19 years of age He was called up for service during the First World War and was briefly arrested when his sister Blodwen burnt his conscription papers and he failed to report for duty Bevan appeared in court but was cleared when he produced confirmation that he suffered from nystagmus 7 Bevan became a well known local orator and was seen by his employers the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company as a troublemaker The manager of the colliery found an excuse to get him dismissed With the support of the Miners Federation the case was judged as one of victimisation and the company was forced to re employ him 8 9 He and his brother Billy did eventually leave Ty Tryst and worked at the Bedwellty pit but were forced to move again after a disagreement with the site s deputy manager over Bevan reporting information to the miner s inspector The pair went to work at Whitworth Colliery but fell foul of management when Bevan refused to use cheaper second hand timber as he deemed it unsafe He was later fired for refusing to unload and successfully challenged the motion but was moved to Pochin generally considered a punishment due to the poor site conditions 10 1919 saw the foundation of the Tredegar Labour Party and Bevan was selected as one of four Labour delegates to contest the West Ward in the Tredegar Urban District election Although he was defeated he gained attention from his peers and he won a scholarship to the Central Labour College in London sponsored by the South Wales Miners Federation There he spent two years studying economics politics and history He read Marxism at the college and was a brief follower of Noah Ablett 11 12 developing his left wing political outlook Reciting long passages by William Morris with the help of an elocution tutor Bevan gradually began to overcome the stammer that he had since childhood 11 Bevan remained at the college until 1921 attending at a time when a number of his contemporaries from South Wales including Jim Griffiths were also students at the college Some historians have questioned how influential the college was on his political development He was not apparently one of the most diligent students and found it difficult to follow an organised routine including arising early for breakfast 13 The Tredegar Query Club by friends including Aneurin Bevan and Walter Conway Conway is in the middle of the picture Aneurin is second from right on the back row and his brother Billy is second right on front row 14 Bevan was one of the founding members of the Query Club with his brother Billy and Walter Conway Conway was a local miner who had been elected to the Bedwellty Board of Guardians and offered Bevan advice on overcoming his stammer stating if you can t say it you don t know it Bevan followed his advice often practising his speeches to his friends to perfect his speech and wording and remarked that Conway s words were the best advice I ever had 10 The Query club started in 1920 or 1921 and they met in Tredegar They would collect money weekly for any member who needed it The club intended to break the hold that the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company had on the town by becoming members of pivotal groups in the community 14 Upon returning home in 1921 he found that the Tredegar Iron and Coal Company refused to re employ him Bevan ended up in a fist fight with a group of miners who refused to strike over his rejection 15 Apart from a six week period as a labourer for Tredegar Council he did not find work until 1924 and his employer the Bedwellty Colliery closed down ten months later Bevan then endured another year of unemployment the family surviving on his sister s wages when his unemployment benefit was stopped due to her income and his father s sick pay In February 1925 his father died of pneumoconiosis an illness caused by the inhalation of coal dust 16 17 In 1926 he found work as a paid union official His wage of 5 a week was paid by the members of the local Miners Lodge His new job arrived in time for him to head the local miners against the colliery companies during the General Strike When the strike started on 3 May 1926 Bevan soon emerged as one of the leaders of the South Wales miners 9 The miners remained on strike for six months Bevan was largely responsible for the distribution of strike pay in Tredegar and the formation of the Council of Action an organisation that helped to raise money and provide food for the miners 18 Parliament EditMP for Ebbw Vale Edit In 1928 Bevan won a seat on Monmouthshire County Council in the Tredegar Central Division He lost the seat in 1931 but regained it in 1932 before deciding against seeking re election in 1934 19 With his success in 1928 he was picked as the Labour Party candidate for Ebbw Vale displacing the sitting MP Evan Davies 20 and easily held the seat at the 1929 General Election Bevan gained more than twice the votes of Liberal candidate William Griffiths receiving 20 000 votes to Griffiths 8 000 9 20 In keeping with his background Bevan described his initial thoughts on the House of Commons as a shrine to the most conservative of all religions ancestor worship 12 In Parliament he became noticed as a harsh critic of those he felt opposed the working man and woman 21 His targets included the Conservative Winston Churchill and the Liberal David Lloyd George as well as Ramsay MacDonald and Margaret Bondfield from his own Labour party he targeted the latter for her unwillingness to increase unemployment benefits 22 23 He had solid support from his constituency being one of the few Labour MPs to be unopposed in the 1931 General Election and this support grew through the 1930s and the period of the Great Depression 22 Soon after Bevan entered Parliament he was briefly attracted to Smethwick Labour MP Oswald Mosley s arguments 24 becoming one of the 17 signatories of the Mosley Memorandum in the context of the MacDonald government s repeated economic crises 25 including the doubling of unemployment levels 26 In January 1931 Bevan wrote a letter to the government on behalf of the Mosley group raising concerns over its failure to deal with unemployment 27 Mosley broke from the Labour Party in early 1931 to form the New Party but Bevan refused to defect and instead announced that he had no intention of leaving the Labour Party By 1932 Mosley s New Party had migrated from the left over to the far right of British politics and was rebranded as the British Union of Fascists Bevan s past association with Mosley would be used against him in subsequent years by his political rivals 28 He married fellow Socialist MP Jennie Lee in 1934 after they met in London Described as more left wing than Nye Lee became a considerable influence on Bevan s political career 29 30 They were early supporters of the socialists in the Spanish Civil War and Bevan visited the country in 1938 31 In 1936 he joined the board of the new socialist newspaper Tribune His agitations for a united socialist front of all parties of the left including the Communist Party of Great Britain led to his brief expulsion from the Labour Party from March to November 1939 along with Stafford Cripps C P Trevelyan and three others Bevan and Cripps had previously been threatened with disciplinary action by the party for sharing a stage with a Communist speaker and all party members were threatened with expulsion if they were associated with the Popular Front 32 33 Bevan and another expelled MP George Strauss appealed against the decision 34 Bevan was readmitted to the party on 20 December 1939 35 after agreeing to refrain from conducting or taking part in campaigns in opposition to the declared policy of the Party 36 37 He strongly criticised the National Government s rearmament plans in the face of the rise of Nazi Germany saying to the Labour conference in autumn 1937 If the immediate international situation is used as an excuse to get us to drop our opposition to the rearmament programme of the Government the next phase must be that we must desist from any industrial or political action that may disturb national unity in the face of Fascist aggression Along that road is endless retreat and at the end of it a voluntary totalitarian State with ourselves erecting the barbed wire around You cannot collaborate you cannot accept the logic of collaboration on a first class issue like rearmament and at the same time evade the implications of collaboration all along the line when the occasion demands it 38 His opposition to the Labour leadership s approach was partly based on his view that the leadership of the Labour Party was not demanding assurances from the Government on its foreign policy as a price for the party s support for re armament as expressed in his speech to the Bournemouth Conference of that year we should say to the country we are prepared to make whatever sacrifices are necessary to give whatever arms are necessary to fight Fascist powers and in order to consolidate world peace 39 The Labour conference voted to drop its opposition to rearmament When Winston Churchill said that the Labour Party should refrain from giving Adolf Hitler the impression that Britain was divided Bevan rejected this as sinister The fear of Hitler is to be used to frighten the workers of Britain into silence In short Hitler is to rule Britain by proxy If we accept the contention that the common enemy is Hitler and not the British capitalist class then certainly Churchill is right But it means abandonment of the class struggle and the subservience of the British workers to their own employers 38 Opposition to the war time government Edit By March 1938 Bevan was writing in Tribune that Churchill s warnings about German intentions for Czechoslovakia were a diapason of majestic harmony compared to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain s thin listless trickle 40 Bevan now called unsuccessfully for a Popular Front against fascism under the leadership of the Labour Party including even anti fascist Tories 40 When the government introduced voluntary national service in December 1938 Bevan argued that Labour should demand the nationalisation of the armaments industry support the democratic government of Spain and sign an Anglo Soviet pact in return for its support When Labour supported the government s scheme with no such conditions Bevan denounced Labour for imploring the people on recruiting platforms to put themselves under the leadership of their opponents 41 The Military Training Act 1939 reintroduced conscription six months later and Bevan joined the rest of the Labour Party in opposing it calling it the complete abandonment of any hope of a successful struggle against the weight of wealth in Great Britain 42 He emphasised that the government had no arguments to persuade young men to fight except merely in another squalid attempt to defend themselves against the redistribution of international swag 42 In August 1939 came the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact a non aggression pact between the Nazi and Soviet governments that shocked democratic governments around the world In Parliament Bevan argued that this was the logical outcome of the government s foreign policy He wanted the war to be not just a fight against fascism but a war for socialism 43 Bevan was relieved that the country had united against Nazi Germany in the fight against fascism to provide a common enemy away from the working class 36 He was a strong critic of Chamberlain arguing that his old rival Winston Churchill should become prime minister 12 During the Second World War he was one of the main leaders of the left in the Commons opposing the wartime Coalition government Bevan opposed the heavy censorship imposed on radio and newspapers and wartime Defence Regulation 18B which gave the Home Secretary the powers to intern citizens Bevan called for the nationalisation of the coal industry and advocated the opening of a Second Front in Western Europe to help the Soviet Union in its fight with Germany In one of his most noted speeches made against Churchill he railed that the prime minister wins debate after debate and loses battle after battle 12 Churchill would later label Bevan a squalid nuisance 44 Churchill was a frequent target of Bevan s who already held a dislike of him following his intervention in the Tonypandy riots and the 1926 United Kingdom general strike which Bevan considered heavy handed Bevan believed that the key to the war was the involvement of Russia and considered Churchill was too focused on the intervention of the United States 45 Bevan also feared that allowing Churchill to continue unopposed and unchallenged in Parliament during the war would leave him almost unbeatable for the Labour Party in future elections 46 Historian Max Hastings described Bevan s role in Parliament during the war as his figures were accurate but his scorn was at odds with the spirit of the moment full of gratitude as was the prime minister 47 His fierce opposition made him unpopular with some portions of the public at the time his wife later described how the couple would frequently receive parcels filled with excrement at their home 48 Bevan was critical of the leadership of the British Army which he felt was class bound and inflexible After General Neil Ritchie s retreat across Cyrenaica early in 1942 and his disastrous defeat by General Erwin Rommel at Gazala Bevan made one of his most memorable speeches in the Commons in support of a motion of censure against the Churchill government The Prime Minister must realise that in this country there is a taunt on everyone s lips that if Rommel had been in the British Army he would still have been a sergeant There is a man in the British Army who flung 150 000 men across the Ebro in Spain Michael Dunbar He is at present a sergeant He was Chief of Staff in Spain he won the Battle of the Ebro and he is a sergeant 49 Dunbar had been recommended for a commission but rejected it himself to remain with his unit 50 Bevan was subject to further disciplinary action in 1944 when he deliberately voted against Labour s stance on new defence regulations 51 He also voiced criticism of trade union leaders which drew complaints from both the Miners Federation and the Trades Union Congress 52 An administrative committee voted 71 to 60 in favour of retaining Bevan as an MP 53 although it was announced that party discipline was to be strengthened in future 54 He believed that the Second World War would give Britain the opportunity to create a new society He often quoted an 1855 passage from Karl Marx that was published in The New York Times in 1865 The redeeming feature of war is that it puts a nation to the test As exposure to the atmosphere reduces all mummies to instant dissolution so war passes supreme judgment upon social systems that have outlived their vitality 55 At the beginning of the 1945 general election campaign Bevan told his audience that his goal was to eliminate any opposition to the Labour programme We have been the dreamers we have been the sufferers now we are the builders We enter this campaign at this general election not merely to get rid of the Tory majority We want the complete political extinction of the Tory Party and twenty five years of Labour Government 56 Government EditThe 1945 general election resulted in a landslide victory for the Labour Party giving it a large enough majority to allow the implementation of the party s manifesto commitments and to introduce a programme of far reaching social reforms that were collectively dubbed the Welfare State 57 58 These reforms were achieved in the face of great financial difficulty following the war The new Prime Minister Clement Attlee appointed Bevan as Minister of Health with a remit that also covered housing Thus the responsibility for instituting a new and comprehensive National Health Service as well as tackling the country s severe post war housing shortage was given to Bevan the youngest member of Attlee s Cabinet in his first ministerial position at the age of 47 22 Although described in The Times as an outstanding back bench critic and one of Labour s most brilliant members in debate his appointment was regarded as a relative surprise given his previous disciplinary issues 59 Bevan had clashed frequently with Attlee during his time as an MP believing that the Labour leader failed to apply enough pressure on the Tory government during the war He had also seen disputes with some of Attlee s closest allies Ernest Bevin and Herbert Morrison who were appointed Foreign Secretary and Leader of the House respectively However Attlee commented that Bevan was starting with me with a clean sheet following his appointment 60 Bevan tested this newfound solidarity early on by arriving to a royal banquet at St James s Palace wearing a navy lounge suit 60 He earned a rebuke from Attlee but Bevan contended that his Welsh mining constituency did not send him to Parliament to dress up and he declined to wear formal attire at further Buckingham Palace functions 61 Minister of Health 1945 1951 Edit Bevan talking to a patient at Park Hospital Manchester the day the NHS came into being The free National Health Service was paid for directly through public money Bevan had been inspired by the Tredegar Medical Aid Society in his hometown where residents would pay a subscription that would fund access for all of the town s inhabitants to have free access to medical services such as nursing or dental care 62 This system proved so popular that 20 000 people supported the organisation during the 1930s In 1947 Bevan stated All I am doing is extending to the entire population of Britain the benefits we had in Tredegar for a generation or more We are going to Tredegar ise you 62 Government income was increased for the welfare state expenditure by a large increase in marginal tax rates for wealthy business owners in particular as part of what the Labour government largely saw as the redistribution of the wealth created by the working class from the owners of large scale industry to the workers 63 Having been a member of the Cottage Hospital Management Committee around 1928 and serving as chairman in 1929 30 Bevan had received an insight into the management of health services by local authorities which proved to be a bedrock of his work in founding the National Health Service 48 The collective principle asserts that no society can legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means Aneurin Bevan In Place of Fear p 100 On the appointed day 5 July 1948 Bevan s National Health Service Act 1946 came into force On the day Bevan attended a ceremony at the Park Hospital Trafford now Trafford General at which he symbolically received the keys to the hospital 64 The scheme was achieved having overcome political opposition from both the Conservative Party and from within his own party Confrontation with the British Medical Association BMA was led by Charles Hill who published a letter in the British Medical Journal describing Bevan as a complete and uncontrolled dictator Members of the BMA had dubbed him the Tito of Tonypandy 48 65 They threatened to derail the National Health Service scheme before it had even begun as medical practitioners continued to withhold their support just months before the launch of the service After eighteen months of ongoing dispute between the Ministry of Health and the BMA Bevan finally managed to win over the support of the vast majority of the medical profession by offering a couple of minor concessions including allowing consultants to keep their own private practices and continuing to allow doctors to be paid in capitation fees rather than salaries 66 but without compromising the fundamental principles of his National Health Service proposals At a dinner in late 1955 or early 1956 to celebrate the publication of the Guillebaud Report into NHS costs Bevan remarked to Julian Tudor Hart ultimately I had to stuff their mouths with gold about his handling of the consultants This is often quoted as I stuffed their mouths with gold 67 65 Some 2 688 voluntary and municipal hospitals in England and Wales were nationalised and came under Bevan s supervisory control as Health Minister Two of the key elements of Bevan s proposals were this nationalisation of the hospital services and the abolition of the sale and purchase of goodwill by general practitioners The former aimed to provide a uniform standard of consultant led care and expertise throughout the country and to replace the patchwork of voluntary and municipal hospitals which existed at that point The latter sale and purchase of goodwill often placed new entrants to the GP profession under large amounts of debt Along with this the Medical Practices Committee was to oversee the distribution of GP practices a proposal which the previous Coalition Minister had withdrawn after opposition from the British Medical Association Bevan said The National Health Service and the Welfare State have come to be used as interchangeable terms and in the mouths of some people as terms of reproach Why this is so it is not difficult to understand if you view everything from the angle of a strictly individualistic competitive society A free health service is pure Socialism and as such it is opposed to the hedonism of capitalist society 68 Aneurin Bevan In Place of Fear p 81 Conservative opposition of the National Health Service scheme feared that the sudden access to free health care would be overrun In its early stages this proved true as the service went vastly over budget in its inaugural year and Attlee was forced to make a radio address to the nation in an attempt to limit the strain on the system Bevan countered that the initial overspending was down to years of underinvestment in the British medical system prior to the Second World War by the start of the 1950s the early overspending had come to an end 65 Housing reform Edit Statue of Bevan in Cardiff by Robert Thomas When Bevan was made a minister in 1945 he envisaged the social housing sector as a housing service similar to the National Health Service ensuring that everyone had access to decent and affordable homes with people still having the option to live in owner occupation or the private sector if they so chose with grants made available to owner occupiers and private landlords to bring dwellings up to decent standards 69 70 The removal of the criteria of working class from local authority housing provision was seen as a first step widening access to the council housing that was becoming an ever larger part of the UK housing stock and which made up a majority of new homes built after the war 70 71 The aim was to create new homes and communities with a place for all sections of society We should try to introduce in our modern villages and towns what was always the lovely feature of English and Welsh villages where the doctor the grocer the butcher and the farm labourer all lived in the same street I believe that is essential for the full life of citizen to see the living tapestry of a mixed community 72 Aneurin Bevan Parliament speech 1949 73 Substantial bombing damage with over 700 000 homes needing repair in London alone 74 and the continued existence of pre war slums in many parts of the country made the task of housing reform particularly challenging for Bevan Indeed these factors exacerbated by post war restrictions on the availability of building materials and skilled labour collectively served to limit Bevan s achievements in this area Bevan was also limited due to his desire for new homes to be bigger and of better quality than the ones they were being built to replace based on the recommendations of a 1943 report by the Dudley Committee and a shortage of skilled workers to undertake the work 75 76 77 1946 saw the completion of 55 600 new homes this rose to 139 600 in 1947 and 227 600 in 1948 While this was not an insignificant achievement the 850 000 homes built in the four years immediately after the war ended was the biggest housing programme ever introduced 78 Bevan s rate of house building was seen as less of an achievement than that of his Conservative indirect successor Harold Macmillan who was able to complete some 300 000 new homes a year as Minister for Housing in the 1950s These numbers were reached by lowering the quality standards originally put forward by Bevan with council houses featuring gardens being largely dropped in favour of tower blocks and flats 75 79 Macmillan was also able to concentrate full time on the housing crisis instead of being obliged like Bevan to combine his housing portfolio with that for Health which for Bevan took the higher priority he once stated tongue in cheek that he devoted five minutes a week to housing 80 At a party rally in 1948 during a speech Bevan stated That is why no amount of cajolery and no attempts at ethical or social seduction can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party that inflicted those bitter experiences on me So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin They condemned millions of first class people to semi starvation 81 The comment inspired the creation of the Vermin Club by angry Conservatives who attacked Bevan for years for the metaphor Labour Party deputy leader Herbert Morrison complained that Bevan s attack had backfired for his words did much more to make the Tories work and vote than Conservative Central Office could have done 82 It was later claimed that his words had cost Labour more than two million votes 45 by whom In 1951 with the retirement of Ernest Bevin Bevan was a leading candidate for Foreign Secretary Prime Minister Attlee rejected Bevan in favour of Herbert Morrison because he distrusted Bevan s personality In his biography of Bevan John Campbell wrote Bevan s impetuous temperament undiplomatic tone and reputation as an extreme left winger combined to make the Foreign Office seem the last place a prudent Prime Minister would think of putting him at any time His vermin speech still resonated imagination shuddered at a repetition of that on the international stage 83 Minister of Labour and National Service 1951 Edit Bevan was instead appointed Minister of Labour in January 1951 in place of George Isaacs The move was seen by some as a sideways or backwards step although a potential rearmament program was expected to make the post of future importance 84 85 During his tenure he helped to secure a deal for railwaymen which provided them with a significant pay increase 86 However three months after his appointment Hugh Gaitskell introduced a proposal of prescription charges for dental care and spectacles created to save a potential 25m to meet the financial demands imposed by the Korean War An infuriated Bevan stated that he would never be a member of a government that imposed charges on the National Health Service 87 The Labour MP David Marquand has stated that the savings were introduced by Gaitskell simply to impose his will upon Bevan who he saw as a political rival 12 Bevan resigned from his position two weeks later stating both the proposed changes and the increase in military expenditure that necessitated the need for such proposals 88 89 Two other ministers John Freeman and Harold Wilson resigned at the same time 90 Bevan received unanimous support for his actions from his local Labour constituency leaders 91 Later the same year the Labour Party were defeated at the general election After Bevan left the Health ministry in 1951 he could never regain his level of success and feuded with fellow Labour leaders using his strong political base as a weapon Historian Kenneth O Morgan says Bevan alone kept the flag of left wing socialism aloft throughout which gave him a matchless authority amongst the constituency parties and in party conference 92 Opposition Edit Aneurin Bevan speaking in Corwen in 1952 Bevan s last decade saw his political position weaken year by year as he failed to find a winning issue that would make use of his skills 93 In 1952 Bevan published In Place of Fear 94 the most widely read socialist book of the period according to a highly critical right wing Labour MP Anthony Crosland 95 According to The Times Literary Supplement the book was a dithyramb with meanderings into the many side tracks of Mr Bevan s private and public experience 96 In the opening page of the book Bevan begins A young miner in a South Wales colliery my concern was with the one practical question Where does power lie in this particular state of Great Britain and how can it be attained by the workers 97 In March 1952 a poorly prepared Bevan came off the worse in an evening Commons debate on health with Conservative backbencher Iain Macleod whose performance led Churchill to appoint him as Minister of Health some six weeks after the debate 98 Out of office Bevan soon exacerbated the split within the Labour Party between the right and the left which weakened the party in the 1950s 99 For the next five years he was the leader of the left wing of the Labour Party who became known as Bevanites They criticised the right wing Gaitskellites high defence expenditure especially for nuclear weapons called for better relations with the Soviet Union and opposed the party leader Clement Attlee on most issues According to Richard Crossman Bevan hated the in fighting which you have to do in politics He wasn t cut out to be a leader he was cut out to be a prophet 100 In April 1954 Bevan resigned from the Parliamentary Labour Party having been rebuked by Attlee after accusing the Labour leader of surrendering to American pressure over a proposed multi national defence organisation in Asia and the Pacific 101 He later said that he had resigned his position to call attention to the fact that their movement was in grave crisis and stated his belief that he would be have been party chairman by the following year if he had remained 102 In July of the same year Bevan announced his intention to stand for election as the Treasurer of the Labour Party against Hugh Gaitskell His nomination received a severe blow on the same day it was announced when two unions that traditionally sided with the left the National Union of Mineworkers and the Amalgamated Engineering Union pledged their support for his opponent 103 Although unsuccessful in his bid he did celebrate 25 years as the MP for Ebbw Vale 102 In March 1955 when Britain was preparing for Operation Grapple the testing of its first hydrogen bomb Bevan led a revolt of 57 Labour MPs and abstained on a key vote 104 The Parliamentary Labour Party voted 141 to 113 to withdraw the whip from him but it was restored within a month due to his popularity 105 After the 1955 general election Attlee retired as Labour leader Bevan contested the leadership against both Morrison and Labour right winger Gaitskell but it was Gaitskell who emerged victorious with more than half of the ballots 106 Bevan s remark that I know the right kind of political Leader for the Labour Party is a kind of desiccated calculating machine was assumed to refer to Gaitskell although Bevan denied it commenting upon Gaitskell s record as Chancellor of the Exchequer as having proved this Bevan also failed in a bid to become deputy leader losing out to Jim Griffiths 107 He instead stood again for the role of party treasurer and was duly elected beating George Brown 108 Despite Bevan s criticism of the new party leader Gaitskell decided to appoint him as Shadow Colonial Secretary 109 and then Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1956 Bevan was as critical of Nasserist Egypt s seizure of the Suez Canal on 26 July 1956 as he was of the subsequent Anglo French military response He compared Gamal Abdel Nasser with Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves from One Thousand and One Nights 110 He was a vocal critic of the Conservative government s actions in the Suez Crisis noticeably delivering high profile speeches at a protest rally in Trafalgar Square on 4 November 1956 and criticising the government s actions and arguments in the Commons on 5 December 1956 Bevan accused the government of a policy of bankruptcy and despair 111 stating at the Trafalgar rally We are stronger than Egypt but there are other countries stronger than us Are we prepared to accept for ourselves the logic we are applying to Egypt If nations more powerful than ourselves accept the absence of principle the anarchistic attitude of Eden and launch bombs on London what answer have we got what complaint have we got If we are going to appeal to force if force is to be the arbiter to which we appeal it would at least make common sense to try to make sure beforehand that we have got it even if you accept that abysmal logic that decadent point of view We are in fact in the position today of having appealed to force in the case of a small nation where if it is appealed to against us it will result in the destruction of Great Britain not only as a nation but as an island containing living men and women Therefore I say to Anthony I say to the British government there is no count at all upon which they can be defended They have besmirched the name of Britain They have made us ashamed of the things of which formerly we were proud They have offended against every principle of decency and there is only one way in which they can even begin to restore their tarnished reputation and that is to get out Get out Get out 111 Bevan dismayed many of his supporters when he suddenly reversed his opposition to nuclear weapons 112 Speaking at the 1957 Labour Party conference he decried unilateral nuclear disarmament saying It would send a British Foreign Secretary naked into the conference chamber This statement is often misconstrued Bevan argued that unilateralism would result in Britain s loss of allies and one interpretation of his metaphor is that nakedness would come from the lack of allies not the lack of weapons 113 According to the journalist Paul Routledge Donald Bruce a former MP and Parliamentary Private Secretary and adviser to Bevan had told him that Bevan s shift on the disarmament issue was the result of discussions with the Soviet government where they advised him to push for British retention of nuclear weapons so they could possibly be used as a bargaining chip in negotiations with the United States 114 In 1957 Bevan Richard Crossman and the Labour Party s General Secretary Morgan Phillips sued The Spectator magazine for libel after one of its writers described them as drinking heavily during an Italian Socialist Party conference The article wrote that the three men puzzled the Italians by their capacity to fill themselves like tanks with whisky and coffee Although the Italians were never sure the British delegation were sober they always attributed to them an immense political acumen The three won their case and obtained financial damages of 2 500 each 115 Crossman later acknowledged that they had perjured themselves to do so 116 Bevan was elected unopposed as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party in 1959 succeeding Griffiths 117 His last speech in the House of Commons in the debate of 3 November 1959 on the Queen s Speech 118 referred to the difficulties of persuading the electorate to support a policy which would make them less well off in the short term but more prosperous in the long term Death EditBevan had said I would rather be kept alive in the efficient if cold altruism of a large hospital than expire in a gush of warm sympathy in a small one 119 He checked into the Royal Free Hospital in London on 27 December 1959 to undergo surgery for an ulcer but malignant stomach cancer was discovered instead in a major operation two days later 120 After a lengthy period in hospital on 14 February 1960 Bevan returned home and announced he would not be returning to politics in the near future so as to be able to recuperate and plan an extended holiday 121 In May 1960 Jawaharlal Nehru Prime Minister of India while in England visited Bevan at his home in Asheridge Farm where Bevan was a keen amateur farmer keeping cattle and pigs 122 Bevan died in his sleep at 4 10pm on 6 July 1960 at the age of 62 at his home Asheridge Farm Chesham Buckinghamshire His remains were cremated at Gwent Crematorium in Croesyceiliog in a private family ceremony 123 124 An open air service was held in his constituency of Ebbw Vale and was presided over by Donald Soper 125 Jennie Lee explained in a letter to Michael Foot that Bevan had specifically chosen to have a non religious funeral and not a Christian service because he was a firm humanist Nye is asleep next door Later today he will be taken home to Wales Tomorrow he will be cremated in keeping with his known views Nye was never a hypocrite No falsity must touch him once he is no longer available to defend his views He was not a cold blooded rationalist He was no calculating machine He was a great humanist whose religion lay in loving his fellow men and trying to serve them He knelt reverently in respect to a friend or friend s faith but he never pretended to be anything other than what he was a humanist Jennie Lee to Michael Foot 7 July 1960 126 In his 2014 biography Nick Thomas Symonds described an outpouring of national mourning that followed Bevan s death The Daily Herald stated that some MPs were seen to be crying in Parliament and described how there was sorrow at every street corner in the South Wales Valleys 12 Harold Macmillan ended his Prime Minister s Questions session in Parliament two days after Bevan s death by paying tribute to the opposition MP describing him as a great personality and a great national figure Macmillan noted that despite being a controversial figure during his career Bevan s death had seen an outpouring of genuine admiration and affection 127 Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell also paid tribute to his former shadow cabinet member and ended his speech by labelling Bevan as one of the great men of our day 127 Legacy Edit A portrait of Bevan in the Senedd building Bevan s most significant legacy is the National Health Service Bevan foresaw that it would always be the subject of public debate warning that This service must always be changing growing and improving it must always appear to be inadequate But seven decades after it was founded a 2013 opinion poll conducted on behalf of British Future found that the NHS was more popular than at its creation and more popular than the monarchy the BBC and the British Armed Forces 128 Bevan was particularly noted for his public speaking being described by Robin Butler Baron Butler of Brockwell as the greatest parliamentary speaker since Charles James Fox Winston Churchill the target of numerous diatribes from Bevan during his career commented that Bevan was one of the few members that I will sit still and listen to Bevan s reputation as a hard line socialist typically preceded him Sir William Douglas who served as Bevan s deputy in the Ministry of Health had initially stated that he would never work with a man like that However by the end of his tenure he had declared Bevan as the best minister we have had 45 Clement Attlee expressed his support that Bevan should have been the leader of the Labour Party during his lifetime but was held back by his demeanour stating he wants to be two things simultaneously rebel and official leader and you can t be both 129 A bronze statue was commissioned by South Glamorgan County Council and erected in 1987 in the city centre of Cardiff 130 The main stone of the Aneurin Bevan Memorial Stones at the Sirhowy Valley Walk The Aneurin Bevan Memorial Stones were erected at the beginning of the Sirhowy Valley Walk with three smaller stones representing three towns of his constituency Ebbw Vale Rhymney and Tredegar surrounding a larger stone representing Bevan 131 In 2002 Bevan was voted as the 45th greatest Briton of all time by the BBC public opinion poll 100 Greatest Britons 132 The following year Bevan was voted number one in the 100 Welsh Heroes poll a response to find the public s favourite Welsh people of all time 133 134 Numerous institutions bear Bevan s name including the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board and Ysbyty Aneurin Bevan a hospital located within his old Ebbw Vale constituency 135 In 2015 Welsh actor Michael Sheen gave a speech in which he described Bevan as a mythical creature stating He had cast iron integrity and a raging passion 12 Bibliography EditWhy Not Trust The Tories 1944 Published under the pseudonym Celticus The title was intended ironically In Place of Fear 1952 ISBN 9781163810118 Excerpts from Bevan s speeches are included in Greg Rosen s book Old Labour to New the dreams that inspired the battles that divided published by Methuen in 2005 ISBN 978 1 84275 045 2 Bevan s key speeches in the legislative arena are to be found in Peter J Laugharne ed Aneurin Bevan A Parliamentary Odyssey Volume I Speeches at Westminster 1929 1944 Manutius Press 1996 Peter J Laugharne ed Aneurin Bevan A Parliamentary Odyssey Volume II Speeches at Westminster 1945 1960 Manutius Press 2000 Peter J Laugharne ed Aneurin Bevan A Parliamentary Odyssey Volumes I and II Speeches at Westminster 1929 1960 Manutius Press 2004 See also EditBevanism Political history of the United Kingdom 1945 present Attlee ministryNotes Edit a b c Foot 1966 pp 11 13 History of Socialism Aneurin Bevan Spartacus Educational Retrieved 6 July 2018 Thomas Symonds 2014 p 16 Foot 1966 p 14 a b Thomas Symonds 2014 p 24 Thomas Symonds 2014 p 19 Foot 1966 pp 27 28 Nye Bevan Festival PDF GMB Retrieved 24 October 2019 a b c Enduring legacy of Aneurin Bevan BBC News 6 July 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b Thomas Symonds 2014 p 25 a b Foot 1966 pp 30 32 a b c d e f g Marquand David 19 March 2015 Aneurin Bevan stormy petrel of the Labour left New Statesman Retrieved 3 August 2019 registration required Morgan 1981 pp 196 7 a b Aneurin Bevan The greatest Welsh hero Tredegar Development Trust Retrieved 26 October 2019 Thomas Symonds 2014 p 32 Foot vol 1 ch 3 Dying father inspired Nye Bevan s NHS dream WalesOnline Media Wales 23 September 2008 Retrieved 2 August 2019 Aneurin Bevan 1897 1960 BBC Wales Retrieved 24 July 2019 Thomas Symonds 2014 p 52 a b Foot 1966 pp 80 82 Carradice Phil 5 July 2010 The death of Nye Bevan BBC Wales Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b c About Nye nyebevan org uk Retrieved 28 July 2019 Foot 1966 pp 95 98 Philpot Robert 24 October 2017 Britain s near brush with Fascism The politician who rooted for Hitler The Times of Israel Retrieved 27 July 2019 Oswald Mosley oswaldmosley com Retrieved 26 October 2019 History of James Ramsey MacDonald gov uk Retrieved 25 April 2015 Unemployment The Times 22 January 1931 p 4 Retrieved 25 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Foot 1966 p 113 Cooper Neil 31 October 2018 Play tells the inspiring story of political couple Aneurin Bevan and Jennie Lee The Herald Retrieved 26 October 2019 Heaney Paul 14 November 2017 How Jennie Lee helped Aneurin Bevan shape political change BBC News Retrieved 27 July 2019 Smith Dai 2004 Bevan Aneurin Nye 1897 1960 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30740 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Subscription or UK public library membership required Campbell 1987 p 83 Popular Front Denounced The Times 6 March 1939 p 9 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Expulsions from the Labour Party The Times 4 April 1939 p 18 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive News in Brief The Times 21 December 1939 p 5 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive a b Thomas Symonds 2014 p 94 Labour Party and Kettering The Times 29 February 1940 p 5 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive a b Campbell 1987 p 77 Foot 1966 p 267 a b Campbell 1987 p 80 Campbell 1987 p 82 a b Campbell 1987 p 85 Campbell 1987 pp 85 86 Wrigley 2002 p 60 a b c Butler Robin 11 April 1982 Rab Beguiled by Bevan The Observer Retrieved 2 August 2019 via Newspapers com Thomas Symonds 2014 p 96 Thomas Symonds 2014 p 95 a b c Thomas Symonds Nick 3 July 2018 70 years of the NHS How Aneurin Bevan created our beloved health service The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2019 Central Direction of the War Hansard 2 July 1942 Retrieved 29 October 2019 Baxell Richard 2012 Unlikely Warriors The British in the Spanish Civil War and the Struggle Against Fascism Aurum Press ISBN 9781845136970 Mr Bevan and the Labour Party The Times 3 May 1944 p 4 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Another Censure of Mr Bevan The Times 9 June 1944 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Labour Party and Mr Bevan The Times 11 May 1944 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Stronger Discipline in Labour Party The Times 29 June 1944 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Marx Karl 1856 The Eastern Question p 594 ISBN 1138993220 Kynaston 2008 p 64 Let Us Face the Future A Declaration of Labour Policy for the Consideration of the Nation Labour Party Archived from the original on 20 July 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2018 via Richard Kimber s Political Science Resources The Welfare State and its impact BBC Retrieved 27 October 2019 The New Government The Times 4 August 1945 p 4 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive a b Foot vol 2 ch 1 p 25 Allan Michie God Save the Queen p 159 1952 a b NHS 70 Aneurin Bevan Day celebrations in Tredegar BBC News 1 July 2018 Retrieved 30 July 2019 Bevan argues that the percentage of tax from personal incomes rose from 9 in 1938 to 15 in 1949 But the lowest paid a tax rate of 1 up from 0 2 in 1938 the middle income brackets paid 14 to 26 up from 10 to 18 in 1938 the higher earners paid 42 up from 29 and the top earners 77 up from 58 in 1938 In Place of Fear p 146 If you earned over 800 000 per annum in 2005 money terms 10 000 in 1948 you paid 76 7 income tax Trafford General Where It All Began BBC 3 July 2008 Retrieved 24 February 2019 a b c McSmith Andy 28 June 2008 The Birth of the NHS The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2019 Thorpe Andrew 1997 A History of the British Labour Party London Macmillan Education UK pp 122 123 doi 10 1007 978 1 349 25305 0 ISBN 978 0 333 56081 5 Charles Webster 1991 Note on Stuffing their Mouth with Gold Aneurin Bevan on the National Health Service By Bevan Aneurin Charles Webster ed Oxford University of Oxford Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine pp 219 220 ISBN 0906844096 Aneurin Bevan Bevan Aneurin 13 March 1952 In Place of Fear p 81 Retrieved 27 October 2019 Glynn Sarah 2009 Where the Other Half Lives Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World Pluto Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 7453 2858 4 a b Housing Bill Hansard 16 March 1949 api parliament uk Retrieved 18 December 2019 The Bevan Foundation Why Nye Bevan Foundation Retrieved 18 December 2019 Matt Beech and Simon Lee eds Ten Years of New Labour Palgrave Macmillan 2008 Housing bill Hansard Retrieved 27 October 2019 Utmost Vigour for Housing The Times 25 August 1945 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive a b Holmes Chris Housing Equality and Choice PDF Institute for Public Policy Research pp 19 32 Retrieved 28 July 2019 Welsh Politicians The National Library of Wales Retrieved 28 July 2019 Housing Labour Short for Some Months The Times 10 December 1945 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Housing owned by the people for the people Nye would have approved WalesOnline Media Wales 21 December 2009 Retrieved 27 October 2019 Aneurin Bevan The Times 10 April 1993 p 5 S2 Retrieved 30 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Hanley Lynsey 23 June 2017 Housing Inequality Kills The Guardian Retrieved 27 July 2019 Bevan s speech to the Manchester Labour rally The Daily Telegraph The Manchester Guardian and The Times 4 July 1948 Retrieved 20 August 2018 via Socialist Health Association Thomas Symonds 2014 p 5 John Campbell Nye Bevan a biography 1987 p 229 Aneurin Bevan Labour s Lost Leader BBC News 1 July 1998 Retrieved 29 July 2019 Mr Bevan as Minister of Labour The Times 18 January 1951 p 5 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Morgan Kenneth 1985 Labour in Power 1945 51 Oxford University Press p 300 ISBN 9780192851505 Dissentian but no Resignations The Times 12 April 1951 p 6 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Mr Bevan Resigns The Times 23 April 1951 p 5 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Aneurin Bevan Minister of Labour 23 April 1951 Mr Aneurin Bevan Statement Parliamentary Debates Hansard United Kingdom House of Commons col 34 43 Leapman Michael 21 December 2014 Major John Freeman Soldier who became an MP diplomat and broadcaster best known for his series of interviews Face to Face The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 27 October 2019 Ebbw Vale Backs Mr Bevan The Times 30 April 1951 p 4 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Kenneth O Morgan Labour in Power 1985 p 57 Krug 1961 In Place of Fear A Free Health Service 1952 Socialist Health Association 13 March 1952 Retrieved 21 December 2013 Crosland 1956 p 52 Kynaston 2009 p 82 Bevan Aneurin 1952 In Place of Fear Simon and Schuster p 1 Archived from the original on 28 July 2019 Retrieved 28 July 2019 ISBN missing Paul Addison 2013 Churchill on the Home Front 1900 1955 Faber amp Faber pp 1 2 ISBN 9780571296408 Thorpe 1997 p 133 135 Kynaston 2009 p 81 Mr Bevan for Back Bench The Times 15 April 1954 p 8 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive a b Mr Bevan s 25 Years as Ebbw Vale M P The Times 29 November 1954 p 5 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Treasureship of the Labour Party The Times 8 July 1954 p 8 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Tribune Defence of Mr Bevan The Times 11 March 1955 p 4 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Time Digital Archive Mr Bevan Not Expelled The Times 21 April 1955 p 3 Retrieved 27 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Mr Gaitskell Elected Labour Leader The Times 15 December 1955 p 10 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Mr J Griffiths s Majority of 30 The Times 3 February 1956 p 8 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Mr Bevan s Triumph in Party Ballot The Times 3 October 1956 p 10 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Opposition Front Bench Duties The Times 15 February 1956 p 8 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Callaghan John British Labour Party and International Relations Socialism and War p 233 a b Aneurin Bevan 1956 New Statesman 4 February 2010 Retrieved 22 August 2011 Peter Dorey 2004 The Labour Governments 1964 1970 Taylor amp Francis p 12 ISBN 9780203327227 John Callaghan 2004 The Labour Party and Foreign Policy A History Taylor amp Francis p 225 ISBN 9780203647127 Routledge Paul 30 May 2005 Nye Bevan s sensational secret New Statesman Archived from the original on 5 July 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2008 Mr Bevan and Others Awarded 2 500 Each The Times 23 November 1957 p 6 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Roy Jenkins wrote of his former colleagues in Aneurin Bevan in Portraits and Miniatures 2011 that they sailed to victory on the unfortunate combination of Lord Chief Justice Goddard s prejudice against the anti hanging and generally libertarian Spectator of those days and the perjury of the plaintiffs subsequently exposed in Crossman s endlessly revealing diaries Geoffrey Wheatcroft wrote in The Guardian 18 March 2000 Lies and Libel Fifteen years later Crossman boasted in my presence that they had indeed all been toping heavily and that at least one of them had been blind drunk Dominic Lawson wrote in The Independent Chris Huhne s downfall is another example of the amazing risks a politician will take 4 February 2013 Crossman s posthumously published diaries revealed that the story was accurate and in 1978 Brian Inglis on What the Papers Say revealed that Crossman had told him a few days after the case that they had committed perjury Mihir Bose in Britain s Libel Laws Malice Aforethought History Today 5 May 2013 quotes Bevan s biographer John Campbell to the effect that the case had destroyed the career of the young journalist involved Jenny Nicholson Labour Leaders Elected The Times 24 October 1959 p 6 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Debate on the Address Hansard Theyworkforyou com 612 House of Commons Debate Columns 860 985 3 November 1959 Retrieved 13 December 2009 Rex Pope Alan Prat Bernard Hoyle 2003 Social Welfare in Britain 1885 1985 Routledge p 138 ISBN 9781135785420 Rubinstein David 2006 The labour party and British Society 1880 2005 Sussex Academic Press p 118 ISBN 1 84519 056 4 Mr Bevan Plans Prolonged Holiday The Times 29 March 1960 p 7 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Did you know NHS founder Aneurin Bevan lived in Bucks Bucks Free Press Retrieved 18 April 2021 Mr Bevan Dies Peacefully in his Sleep The Times 7 July 1960 p 12 Retrieved 29 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Mr Bevan s Body Taken Home The Times 8 July 1960 p 12 Retrieved 30 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Farewell From People of the Valleys The Times 16 July 1960 p 14 Retrieved 30 July 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Beckett Claire Beckett Francis 2004 Bevan p 129 a b House of Commons The Times 8 July 1960 p 6 Retrieved 3 August 2019 via The Times Digital Archive Kutwala Sunder 14 January 2013 The NHS even more cherished than the monarchy and the army New Statesman Retrieved 6 October 2019 Harris Kenneth 13 September 1987 Too Long Too Angry The New York Times Retrieved 2 August 2019 Aneurin Bevan 1897 1960 Art UK Retrieved 14 September 2022 Aneurin Bevan Memorial Stones Blaenau Gwent County Borough Council Retrieved 1 August 2019 100 great British heroes BBC News 1 August 2019 BBC Enduring legacy of Aneurin Bevan bbc co uk 21 August 2002 Aneurin Bevan 100 Welsh Heroes 100 Arwyr Cymru 100welshheroes com Archived from the original on 14 September 2015 Hospital named after Aneurin Bevan opens in Ebbw Vale BBC News 13 October 2010 Retrieved 1 August 2019 References EditCampbell John 1987 Nye Bevan and the Mirage of British Socialism London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 78998 7 Crosland Anthony 1956 The Future of Socialism Cape ISBN 9780224018883 Foot Michael 1966 Aneurin Bevan A Biography Vol 1 Tribune Publications ISBN 9780689105876 Krug Mark M 1961 Aneurin Bevan Cautious Rebel New York Yoseloff Kynaston David 2008 2007 Austerity Britain 1945 51 Tales of a New Jerusalem Vol 1 London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 9923 4 2009 Family Britain 1951 57 Tales of a New Jerusalem Vol 2 London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 8385 1 Foot Michael 1962 Aneurin Bevan A Biography Volume One 1897 1945 Vol 1 Macgibbon amp Kee Morgan Kenneth O 1981 Rebirth of a Nation Wales 1889 1980 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 821760 9 Thomas Symonds Nicklaus 2014 Nye The Political Life of Aneurin Bevan IB Tauris ISBN 9781780762098 Thorpe Andrew 1997 A History of the British Labour Party London Macmillan Education UK doi 10 1007 978 1 349 25305 0 ISBN 978 0 333 56081 5 Wrigley Chris 2002 Winston Churchill A Biographical Companion Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 87436 990 8 Further reading EditLee Jennie 1980 My Life with Nye London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 01785 5 Campbell John 1987 Demythologising Nye Bevan History Today 37 4 13 18 ISSN 0018 2753 Fairlie Henry Oratory in Political Life History Today Jan 1960 10 1 pp 3 13 covers Bevan Jenkins Mark 1979 Bevanism Labour s High Tide The Cold War and the Democratic Mass Movement ISBN 9780851243221 Morgan Kenneth O 1984 Labour People leaders and lieutenants Hardie to Kinnock Oxford University Press pp 204 19 ISBN 9780571259618 Morgan Kenneth O 2002 Labour Forces From Ernie Bevin to Gordon Brown pp 81 103 ISBN 9780857714152 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Aneurin Bevan Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aneurin Bevan Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Aneurin Bevan Works by Aneurin Bevan at LibriVox public domain audiobooks large file Aneurin Bevan and the foundation of the NHS Socialist Health Association website Great speeches Aneurin Bevan The Guardian featuring full audio of Bevan s speech at the 4 November 1956 Trafalgar Square rally against British action in Suez Newspaper clippings about Aneurin Bevan in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW unindexed Aneurin Bevan at British Pathe Images of Bevan at the National Portrait GalleryParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byEvan Davies Member of Parliamentfor Ebbw Vale1929 1960 Succeeded byMichael FootPolitical officesPreceded byHenry Willink Minister of Health1945 1951 Succeeded byHilary MarquandPreceded byGeorge Isaacs Minister of Labour and National Service1951 Succeeded byAlf RobensPreceded byAlf Robens Shadow Foreign Secretary1956 1959 Succeeded byDenis HealeyParty political officesPreceded byHugh Gaitskell Treasurer of the Labour Party1956 1960 Succeeded byHarry NicholasPreceded byJim Griffiths Deputy Leader of the Labour Party1959 1960 Succeeded byGeorge BrownMedia officesPreceded byRaymond Postgate Editor of Tribune1941 1945 Served alongside Jon Kimche Succeeded byEvelyn AndersonFrederic Mullally Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aneurin Bevan amp oldid 1119526371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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