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Harold Wilson

James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, PC, FRS, FSS (11 March 1916 – 24 May 1995) was a British statesman and Labour politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom twice, from October 1964 to June 1970 and again from March 1974 to April 1976. He was the Leader of the Labour Party from 1963 to 1976, and was a Member of Parliament (MP) from 1945 to 1983. Wilson is the only Labour leader to have formed administrations following four general elections.

The Lord Wilson of Rievaulx
Wilson in 1962
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
4 March 1974 – 5 April 1976
MonarchElizabeth II
Preceded byEdward Heath
Succeeded byJames Callaghan
In office
16 October 1964 – 19 June 1970
MonarchElizabeth II
First Secretary
Preceded byAlec Douglas-Home
Succeeded byEdward Heath
Leader of the Labour Party
In office
14 February 1963 – 5 April 1976
Deputy
Preceded byHugh Gaitskell
Succeeded byJames Callaghan
Leader of the Opposition
In office
19 June 1970 – 4 March 1974
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterEdward Heath
Preceded byEdward Heath
Succeeded byEdward Heath
In office
14 February 1963 – 16 October 1964
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime Minister
Preceded byGeorge Brown
Succeeded byAlec Douglas-Home
Ministerial offices
President of the Board of Trade
In office
29 September 1947 – 23 April 1951
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byStafford Cripps
Succeeded byHartley Shawcross
Secretary for Overseas Trade
In office
10 July 1947 – 29 September 1947
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byHilary Marquand
Succeeded byArthur Bottomley
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Works
In office
26 July 1945 – 10 July 1947
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Minister
Preceded byReginald Manningham-Buller
Succeeded byEvan Durbin
Shadow Foreign Secretary
In office
2 November 1961 – 14 February 1963
Leader
  • Hugh Gaitskell
  • George Brown
Preceded byDenis Healey
Succeeded byPatrick Gordon Walker
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
14 December 1955 – 2 November 1961
LeaderHugh Gaitskell
Preceded byHugh Gaitskell
Succeeded byJames Callaghan
Parliamentary offices
Member of the House of Lords
Life peerage
16 September 1983 – 24 May 1995
Member of Parliament
for Huyton
In office
23 February 1950 – 13 May 1983
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Member of Parliament
for Ormskirk
In office
5 July 1945 – 3 February 1950
Preceded byStephen King-Hall
Succeeded byRonald Cross
Personal details
Born
James Harold Wilson

(1916-03-11)11 March 1916
Huddersfield, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died24 May 1995(1995-05-24) (aged 79)
London, England
Resting placeSt Mary's Old Church, St Mary's, Isles of Scilly, England
Political partyLabour
Spouse
(m. 1940)
Children2, including Robin
Alma materJesus College, Oxford
Occupation
  • Politician
  • author
  • lecturer
ProfessionCivil servant
Signature

Born in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, to a politically active middle-class family, Wilson won a scholarship to attend Royds Hall Grammar School and went on to study philosophy, politics and economics at Jesus College, Oxford. He was later an economic history lecturer at New College, Oxford, and a research fellow at University College, Oxford. Elected to Parliament in 1945 for the seat of Ormskirk in Lancashire, Wilson was immediately appointed to the Attlee government as a Parliamentary Secretary; he became Secretary for Overseas Trade in 1947, and was elevated to the Cabinet shortly thereafter as President of the Board of Trade. In 1950, he moved to represent the nearby seat of Huyton. Following Labour's defeat at the 1955 election, Wilson joined the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Chancellor, and was moved to the role of Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1961. When Labour Leader Hugh Gaitskell died suddenly in January 1963, Wilson won the subsequent leadership election to replace him, becoming Leader of the Opposition.

Wilson led Labour to a narrow victory at the 1964 election. His first period as prime minister saw a period of low unemployment and relative economic prosperity, although this would later become hindered by significant problems with Britain's external balance of payments. The Wilson government oversaw significant societal changes in the United Kingdom, abolishing both capital punishment and theatre censorship, partially decriminalising male homosexuality in England and Wales, relaxing the divorce laws, limiting immigration, and liberalising birth control and abortion law. In the midst of this programme Wilson called a snap election in 1966, which Labour won with a much increased majority. Wilson's government armed Nigeria during the Biafran War. In 1969, he sent British troops to Northern Ireland.

After losing the 1970 election to Edward Heath's Conservatives, Wilson chose to remain in the Labour leadership, and spent four years back in the role of Leader of the Opposition before leading Labour through the February 1974 election, which resulted in a hung parliament. Although the Conservatives had won more votes than Labour, Heath's talks with the Liberal Party failed, and Wilson was appointed prime minister for a second time, now as leader of a minority government; Wilson called a snap election in October 1974, which gave Labour a small majority. During his second term as prime minister, Wilson oversaw the referendum that confirmed the UK's membership of the European Communities. In March 1976 he suddenly announced his resignation as prime minister, and was succeeded by James Callaghan. Wilson remained in the House of Commons until retiring in 1983, when he was elevated to the House of Lords as Lord Wilson of Rievaulx.

Historians evaluate Wilson in terms of leading the Labour Party through difficult political issues with considerable skill. Wilson's reputation was low when he left office and was still poor in 2016.[1] Key issues he faced included the role of public ownership, membership of the European Communities, and how to avoid committing British troops to the Vietnam War.[2] Wilson's approach to socialism was regarded by some in the Labour Party as too moderate, by others as too left-wing. A member of Labour's left wing faction, he joked about leading a Cabinet made up mostly of social democrats, comparing himself to a Bolshevik revolutionary presiding over a Tsarist cabinet, but there was little to divide him ideologically from the majority of his cabinet.[3] His stated ambitions of substantially improving Britain's long-term economic performance, applying technology more democratically, and reducing inequality went to some extent unfulfilled.[4]

Early life edit

Wilson was born at Warneford Road, Cowlersley, in the western suburbs of the mill town of Huddersfield, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, on 11 March 1916. He came from a political family: his father James Herbert Wilson (1882–1971) was a works chemist who had been active in the Liberal Party, going as far as to be Winston Churchill's deputy election agent in a 1908 by-election, but later joined the Labour Party. His mother Ethel (née Seddon; 1882–1957) was a schoolteacher before her marriage; in 1901 her brother Harold Seddon settled in Western Australia and became a local political leader. When Wilson was eight, he visited London and a much-reproduced photograph was taken of him standing on the doorstep of 10 Downing Street. At the age of ten, he went with his family to Australia, where he became fascinated with the pomp and glamour of politics. On the way home, he told his mother, "I am going to be prime minister."[5]

Education edit

Wilson won a scholarship to attend Royds Hall Grammar School, his local grammar school (now a comprehensive school) in Huddersfield in Yorkshire.[6] His father, working as an industrial chemist, was made redundant in December 1930, and it took him nearly two years to find work; he moved to Spital, on the Wirral Peninsula, to do so. Wilson continued his education in the Sixth Form at the Wirral Grammar School for Boys, where he became Head Boy.

 
Garter banner of Harold Wilson in the chapel at Jesus College, Oxford, where he studied PPE

Wilson did well at school and, although he missed getting a scholarship, he obtained an exhibition; this, when topped up by a county grant, enabled him to study at Jesus College, Oxford, from 1934. At Oxford, Wilson was moderately active in politics as a member of the Liberal Party but was strongly influenced by G. D. H. Cole. His politics tutor, R. B. McCallum, considered Wilson to be the best student he ever had.[7] He graduated in PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics) with "an outstanding first class Bachelor of Arts degree, with alphas on every paper" in the final examinations, and a series of major academic awards.[8] Biographer Roy Jenkins wrote:

Academically his results put him among prime ministers in the category of Peel, Gladstone, Asquith, and no one else. But...he lacked originality. What he was superb at was the quick assimilation of knowledge, combined with an ability to keep it ordered in his mind and to present it lucidly in a form welcome to his examiners.[9]

He continued in academia, becoming one of the youngest Oxford dons of the century at the age of 21. He was a lecturer in Economic History at New College from 1937, and a research fellow at University College.

Marriage edit

On New Year's Day 1940, in the chapel of Mansfield College, Oxford, he married Mary Baldwin, who remained his wife until his death. Mary Wilson became a published poet. They had two sons, Robin and Giles (named after Giles Alington); Robin became a professor of Mathematics, and Giles became a teacher and later a train driver.[10] In their twenties, his sons were under a kidnap threat from the IRA because of their father's prominence.[11]

War service edit

On the outbreak of the Second World War, Wilson volunteered for military service, but was classed as a specialist and moved into the civil service instead. For much of this time, he was a research assistant to William Beveridge, the Master of University College, working on the issues of unemployment and the trade cycle. Wilson later became a statistician and economist for the coal industry. He was Director of Economics and Statistics at the Ministry of Fuel and Power in 1943–44 and was made an OBE for his services.[12]

He was to remain passionately interested in statistics, becoming a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society in 1943.[13] As President of the Board of Trade, he was the driving force behind the Statistics of Trade Act 1947, which is still the authority governing most economic statistics in Great Britain. He was instrumental as prime minister in appointing Claus Moser as head of the Central Statistical Office, and was president of the Royal Statistical Society between 1972 and 1973.

Member of Parliament (1945–1947) edit

As the war drew to an end, he searched for a seat to contest at the impending general election. He was selected for the constituency of Ormskirk, then held by Stephen King-Hall. Wilson agreed to be adopted as the candidate immediately rather than delay until the election was called, and was therefore compelled to resign from his position in the Civil Service. He served as Praelector in Economics at University College between his resignation and his election to the House of Commons. He also used this time to write A New Deal for Coal, which used his wartime experience to argue for the nationalisation of the coal mines on the grounds of the improved efficiency he predicted would ensue.

In the 1945 general election, Wilson won his seat in the Labour landslide. To his surprise, he was immediately appointed to the government by Prime Minister Clement Attlee as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Works. Two years later, he became Secretary for Overseas Trade, in which capacity he made several official trips to the Soviet Union to negotiate supply contracts.

The boundaries of his Ormskirk constituency were significantly altered before the general election of 1950. He stood instead for the new seat of Huyton near Liverpool, and was narrowly elected; he served there for 33 years until 1983.[14]

Cabinet minister, 1947–1951 edit

Bonfire of controls edit

Wilson was appointed President of the Board of Trade on 29 September 1947, becoming, at the age of 31, the youngest member of a British Cabinet in the 20th century. Initially Wilson favoured a more interventionist policy, seeking requirements for government officials to be seated on private boards of directors, further price controls, and nationalizations of private industries which opposed government policy. However, he abandoned these plans after his colleagues disagreed.[15] He made it a priority to reduce wartime rationing, which he referred to as a "bonfire of controls".[16] Wilson decided that the massive number of wartime controls was slowing the conversion to peacetime prosperity and he was committed to removing them as fast as possible.[17] He ended rationing of potatoes, bread and jam, as well as shoes and some other clothing controls. In November 1948 Wilson announced his Board of Trade had removed the need for over 200,000 licenses and permits. By March 1949 he promised to remove the need for another 900,000, although meat remained in short supply and was still rationed, as was petrol.[18] Henry Irvine argues that Wilson's success with the bonfire controls established his reputation as a modernizing specialist, with both the general public and the political elite. Irving also argues that the selection timing and especially the publicity Wilson devoted to the bonfire represented the emerging skills of a brilliant young politician. While each major bonfire was justified in terms of technical economic advantages, it was selected and publicized widely to reach the largest possible audience so that everybody could understand that their bread and jam became free again.[19]

Three ambitious young men edit

In mid-1949, with Chancellor of the Exchequer Stafford Cripps having gone to Switzerland in an attempt to recover his health, Wilson was one of a group of three young ministers, all of them former economics dons and wartime civil servants, convened to advise Prime Minister Attlee on financial matters. The others were Douglas Jay (Economic Secretary to the Treasury) and Hugh Gaitskell (Minister of Fuel and Power), both of whom soon grew to distrust him. Jay wrote of Wilson's role in the debates over whether or not to devalue sterling that "he changed sides three times within eight days and finished up facing both ways". Wilson was given the task during his Swiss holiday of taking a letter to Cripps informing him of the decision to devalue, to which Cripps had been opposed.[20] Wilson had tarnished his reputation in both political and official circles.[16] Although a successful minister, he was regarded as self-important. He was not seriously considered for the job of Chancellor when Cripps stepped down in October 1950—it was given to Gaitskell—possibly in part because of his cautious role during devaluation.[21][22]

Wilson was becoming known in the Labour Party as a left-winger, and joined Aneurin Bevan and John Freeman in resigning from the government in April 1951 in protest at the introduction of National Health Service (NHS) medical charges to meet the financial demands imposed by the Korean War. At this time, Wilson was not yet regarded as a heavyweight politician: Hugh Dalton referred to him scornfully as "Nye [Bevan]'s dog".[23]

After Labour lost the 1951 election, he became the Chairman of Keep Left, Bevan's political group. At the bitter Morecambe Conference in late 1952, Wilson was one of the Bevanites elected as constituency representatives to Labour's National Executive Committee (NEC), whilst senior right-wingers such as Dalton and Herbert Morrison were voted off.[24]

In Opposition (1951-1964) edit

Shadow Cabinet, 1954–1963 edit

 
Wilson in 1962

Wilson had never made much secret that his support of the left-wing Aneurin Bevan was opportunistic. In early 1954, Bevan resigned from the Shadow Cabinet (elected by Labour MPs when the party was in opposition) over Labour's support for the setting-up of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO). Wilson, who had been runner-up in the elections, stepped up to fill the vacant place. He was supported in this by Richard Crossman, but his actions angered Bevan and the other Bevanites.[25]

Wilson's course in intra-party matters in the 1950s and early 1960s left him neither fully accepted nor trusted by the left or the right in the Labour Party. Despite his earlier association with Bevan, in 1955 he backed Hugh Gaitskell, the right-wing candidate in internal Labour Party terms, against Bevan for the party leadership election.[26] Gaitskell appointed him Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1955, and he proved to be very effective.[27] One of his procedural moves caused a substantial delay to the progress of the Government's Finance Bill in 1955, and his speeches as Shadow Chancellor from 1956 were widely praised for their clarity and wit. He coined the term "Gnomes of Zurich" to ridicule Swiss bankers for selling Britain short and pushing the pound sterling down by speculation.[28] He conducted an inquiry into the Labour Party's organisation following its defeat in the 1955 general election; its report compared Labour's organisation to an antiquated "penny farthing" bicycle, and made various recommendations for improvements.[29] Unusually, Wilson combined the job of Chairman of the House of Commons' Public Accounts Committee with that of Shadow Chancellor from 1959, holding that position until 1963.

Gaitskell's leadership was weakened after the Labour Party's 1959 defeat, his controversial attempt to ditch Labour's commitment to nationalisation by scrapping Clause Four, and his defeat at the 1960 Party Conference over a motion supporting unilateral nuclear disarmament. Bevan had died in July 1960, so Wilson established himself as a leader of the Labour left by launching an opportunistic but unsuccessful challenge to Gaitskell's leadership in November 1960. Wilson would later be moved to the position of Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1961, before he challenged for the deputy leadership in 1962 but was defeated by George Brown.

Opposition Leader, 1963–64 edit

Gaitskell died in January 1963, just as the Labour Party had begun to unite and appeared to have a very good chance of winning the next election, with the Macmillan Government running into trouble. Timothy Heppell has explored how Wilson won the Labour Party leadership election. Wilson had alienated the right wing of the party by his angry attempts to defeat Gaitskell in 1960 for the leadership, and George Brown in 1962 for the deputy leadership. These misadventures gave Wilson a reputation for disloyalty and divisiveness. Heppell identifies three factors whereby Wilson overcame these disadvantages. Firstly, he had united the party's left wing behind him and they showed no willingness to compromise. Secondly, the right wing, although more numerous, was deeply split between Brown and James Callaghan. Wilson took the lead on the first ballot and gained momentum on the second. Finally, Brown proved a poor campaigner, emphasizing divisive factors rather than his own credentials, allowing Wilson to emerge, surprisingly, as the unity candidate, thus becoming the Leader of the Labour Party and the Leader of the Opposition.[30]

At the party's 1963 annual conference, Wilson made his best-remembered speech, on the implications of scientific and technological change. He argued that "the Britain that is going to be forged in the white heat of this revolution will be no place for restrictive practices or for outdated measures on either side of industry". This speech did much to set Wilson's reputation as a technocrat not tied to the prevailing class system.[31]

Labour's 1964 election campaign was aided by the Profumo affair, a ministerial sex scandal that had mortally wounded Harold Macmillan and hurt the Conservatives. Wilson made capital without getting involved in the less salubrious aspects. (Asked for a statement on the scandal, he reportedly said "No comment ... in glorious Technicolor!").[32] Sir Alec Douglas-Home was an aristocrat who had given up his peerage to sit in the House of Commons and become prime minister upon Macmillan's resignation. To Wilson's comment that he was out of touch with ordinary people since he was the 14th Earl of Home, Home retorted, "I suppose Mr. Wilson is the fourteenth Mr. Wilson".[33]

Prime minister (1964–1970) edit

Appointment edit

Labour won the 1964 general election with a narrow majority of four seats, and Wilson became prime minister, the youngest person to hold that office since Lord Rosebery 70 years earlier. During 1965, by-election losses reduced the government's majority to a single seat; but in March 1966 Wilson took the gamble of calling another general election. The gamble paid off, because this time Labour achieved a 96-seat majority[34] over the Conservatives, who the previous year had made Edward Heath their leader.

First Cabinet and ministry edit

Soon after his appointment as prime minister, Wilson had only small majority to govern and it not had a sufficient working majority to pass serious legislation, which led to impotency during this Parliament. It was not until 1966 another election was called, leading to another general election. By this time, the Conservatives were led by Edward Heath and given their disastrous policies led to economic instability, lost that election as well. This gave Labour a majority of 96 seats and saw the continuation of the Wilson government for the next four years.

His senior appointees include James Callaghan as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord Gardiner as Lord High Chancellor, Patrick Gordon Walker as Foreign Secretary, Frank Soskice as Home Secretary, George Brown as Secretary of State for Economic Affairs and First Secretary of State respectively. A new government departments and several ministrial positions were established by Wilson when he became prime minister. The Department of Economic Affairs was created in order drive economic planning and undertaking long-term planning and the Department of Health and Social Security for health and social security responsibilities. Two ministrial positions within the Foreign Office for dealing with foreign and commonwealth affairs.

Wilson reshuffled his cabinet numerous times and moved ministers, specially in the Foreign Office several times. Michael Stewart was made Foreign Secretary two times and was preceded by George Brown, whose alcoholism led to his resignation and barring from taking office, Franck Soskice being replaced by Roy Jenkins, Gordon Walker being made Minister without Portfolio to Secretary of State for Education and Science during his first and second terms as prime minister.

Domestic affairs edit

The 1964–1970 Labour government carried out a broad range of reforms during its time in office, in such areas as social security,[35] civil liberties,[36] housing,[37] health,[38] education,[39] and worker's rights.[40]

It is perhaps best remembered for the liberal social reforms introduced or supported by Home Secretary Roy Jenkins. Notable amongst these was the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality and abortion, reform of divorce laws, the abolition of theatre censorship and capital punishment (except for a small number of offences — notably high treason) and various pieces of legislation addressing race relations and racial discrimination.[41]

His government also undertook the easing of means testing for non-contributory welfare benefits, the linking of pensions to earnings, and the provision of industrial-injury benefits. Wilson's government also made significant reforms to education, most notably the expansion of comprehensive education and the creation of the Open University.[41]

Economic policies edit

Wilson's government put faith in economic planning as a way to solve Britain's economic problems. The government's strategy involved setting up a Department of Economic Affairs (DEA) which would draw up a National Plan which was intended to promote growth and investment. Wilson believed that scientific progress was the key to economic and social advancement, as such he famously referred to the "white heat of technology", in reference to the modernisation of British industry. This was to be achieved through a new Ministry of Technology (shortened to "Mintech") which would coordinate research and development and support the swift adoption of new technology by industry, aided by government-funded infrastructure improvements.[41]

In practice, however, events derailed much of the initial optimism. Upon coming to power, the government was informed that they had inherited an exceptionally large deficit of £800 million on Britain's balance of trade. This partly reflected the preceding government's expansive fiscal policy in the run-up to the 1964 election. Immediately the pound came under enormous pressure, and many economists advocated devaluation of the pound in response, but Wilson resisted, reportedly in part out of concern that Labour, which had previously devalued sterling in 1949, would become tagged as "the party of devaluation". Wilson also believed that a devaluation would disproportionately harm low-income Britons with savings and poorer Commonwealth of Nations countries in the sterling area. The government instead opted to deal with the problem by imposing a temporary surcharge on imports, and a series of deflationary measures designed to reduce demand and therefore the inflow of imports.[42] In the latter half of 1967, an attempt was made to prevent the recession in activity from going too far in the form of a stimulus to consumer durable spending through an easing of credit, which in turn prevented a rise in unemployment.[43]

After a costly battle, market pressures forced the government to devalue the pound by 14% from $2.80 to $2.40 in November 1967.[41] Wilson was much criticised for a broadcast soon after in which he assured listeners that the "pound in your pocket" had not lost its value.[44] Economic performance did show some improvement after the devaluation, as economists had predicted. The devaluation, with accompanying austerity measures which ensured resources went into exports rather than domestic consumption, successfully restored the trade balance to surplus by 1969. In retrospect Wilson has been widely criticised for not devaluing earlier, however, he believed there were strong arguments against it, including the fear that it would set off a round of competitive devaluations, and concern about the impact price rises following a devaluation would have on people on low incomes.[41]

The government's decision over its first three years to defend sterling's parity with traditional deflationary measures ran counter to hopes for an expansionist push for growth. The National Plan produced by the DEA in 1965 targeted an annual growth rate of 3.8%, however, under the restrained circumstances the actual average rate of growth between 1964 and 1970 was a far more modest 2.2%. The DEA itself was wound up in 1969. The government's other main initiative Mintech did have some success at switching research and development spending from military to civilian purposes, and of achieving increases in industrial productivity, although persuading industry to adopt new technology proved more difficult than had been hoped.[41] Faith in indicative planning as a pathway to growth,[45] embodied in the DEA and Mintech, was at the time by no means confined to the Labour Party. Wilson built on foundations that had been laid by his Conservative predecessors, in the shape, for example, of the National Economic Development Council (known as "Neddy") and its regional counterparts (the "little Neddies").[41] Government intervention in industry was greatly enhanced, with the National Economic Development Office greatly strengthened and the number of "little Neddies" was increased, from eight in 1964 to twenty-one in 1970. The government's policy of selective economic intervention was later characterised by the establishment of a new super-ministry of technology, a connexion not always publicly grasped, under Tony Benn.[46]

The continued relevance of industrial nationalisation (a centrepiece of the post-War Labour government's programme) had been a key point of contention in Labour's internal struggles of the 1950s and early 1960s. Wilson's predecessor as leader, Hugh Gaitskell, had tried in 1960 to tackle the controversy head-on, with a proposal to expunge Clause Four (the public ownership clause) from the party's constitution, but had been forced to climb down. Wilson took a characteristically more subtle approach: No significant expansion of public ownership took place under Wilson's government, however, he placated the party's left-wing by renationalising the steel industry under the Iron and Steel Act 1967 (which had been denationalised by the Conservatives in the 1950s) creating the British Steel Corporation.[41]

One innovation of the Wilson government was the creation in 1968 of the Girobank, a publicly owned bank which operated via the General Post Office network: As most working-class people in the 1960s did not have bank accounts, this was designed to serve their needs, as such it was billed as the "people's bank".[47] Girobank was a long-term success, surviving until 2003.[48]

Wilson's government presided over a rate of unemployment which was low by historic (and later) standards but did rise during his period in office. Between 1964 and 1966 the average rate of unemployment was 1.6%, while between 1966 and 1970 the average stood at 2.5%.[41] He had entered power at a time when unemployment stood at around 400,000. It still stood at 371,000 by early 1966 after a steady fall during 1965, but by March 1967 it stood at 631,000. It fell again towards the end of the decade, standing at 582,000 by the time of the general election in June 1970.[49]

Despite the economic difficulties faced by Wilson's government, it was able to achieve important advances in several domestic policy areas. As reflected by Wilson in 1971:

It was a government which faced disappointment after disappointment and none greater than the economic restraints in our ability to carry through the social revolution to which we were committed at the speed we would have wished. Yet, despite those restraints and the need to transfer resources from domestic expenditure, private and public, to the needs of our export markets, we carried through an expansion in the social services, health, welfare and housing, unparalleled in our history.[50]

Social issues edit

Several liberalising social reforms were passed through parliament during Wilson's first period in government. These dealt with the death penalty, homosexual acts, abortion, censorship and the voting age. There were new restrictions on immigration.[51] Wilson personally, coming culturally from a provincial non-conformist background, showed no particular enthusiasm for much of this agenda.[52]

Education edit

Education held special significance for a socialist of Wilson's generation, given its role in both opening up opportunities for children from working-class backgrounds and enabling Britain to seize the potential benefits of scientific advances. Under the first Wilson government, for the first time in British history, more money was allocated to education than to defence.[53] Wilson continued the rapid creation of new universities, in line with the recommendations of the Robbins Report, a bipartisan policy already in train when Labour took power.

Wilson promoted the concept of an Open University, to give adults who had missed out on tertiary education a second chance through part-time study and distance learning. His political commitment included assigning implementation responsibility to Baroness Lee, the widow of Aneurin Bevan.[54] By 1981, 45,000 students had received degrees through the Open University.[54] Money was also channelled into local-authority run colleges of education.[46]

Wilson's record on secondary education is, by contrast, highly controversial. Pressure grew for the abolition of the selective principle underlying the "eleven-plus", and replacement with Comprehensive schools which would serve the full range of children (see the article 'grammar schools debate'). Comprehensive education became Labour Party policy. From 1966 to 1970, the proportion of children in comprehensive schools increased from about 10% to over 30%.[55]

Labour pressed local authorities to convert grammar schools into comprehensives. Conversion continued on a large scale during the subsequent Conservative Heath administration, although the Secretary of State, Margaret Thatcher, ended the compulsion of local governments to convert.

A major controversy that arose during Wilson's first government was the decision that the government could not fulfil its long-held promise to raise the school leaving age to 16, because of the investment required in infrastructure, such as extra classrooms and teachers.

Overall, public expenditure on education rose as a proportion of GNP from 4.8% in 1964 to 5.9% in 1968, and the number of teachers in training increased by more than a third between 1964 and 1967.[56] The percentage of students staying on at school after the age of sixteen increased similarly, and the student population increased by over 10% each year. Pupil-teacher ratios were also steadily reduced. As a result of the first Wilson government's educational policies, opportunities for working-class children were improved, while overall access to education in 1970 was broader than in 1964.[57] As summarised by Brian Lapping,

"The years 1964–70 were largely taken up with creating extra places in universities, polytechnics, technical colleges, colleges of education: preparing for the day when a new Act would make it the right of a student, on leaving school, to have a place in an institution of further education."[46]

In 1966, Wilson was created the first Chancellor of the newly created University of Bradford, a position he held until 1985.

Housing edit

Housing was a major policy area under the first Wilson government. During Wilson's time in office from 1964 to 1970, more new houses were built than in the last six years of the previous Conservative government. The proportion of council housing rose from 42% to 50% of the total,[58] while the number of council homes built increased steadily, from 119,000 in 1964 to 133,000 in 1965 and 142,000 in 1966. Allowing for demolitions, 1.3 million new homes were built between 1965 and 1970,[54] To encourage homeownership, the government introduced the Option Mortgage Scheme (1968), which made low-income housebuyers eligible for subsidies (equivalent to tax relief on mortgage interest payments).[59] This scheme had the effect of reducing housing costs for buyers on low incomes[60] and enabling more people to become owner-occupiers.[61] In addition, house owners were exempted from capital gains tax. Together with the Option Mortgage Scheme, this measure stimulated the private housing market.[62] Wilson in a 1967 speech said: ''..the grime and muddle and decay of our Victorian heritage is being replaced. The new city centres with their university precincts, their light, clean and well-spaced civic buildings, will not merely brighten the physical environment of our people, they will change the very quality of urban life in Britain.''[63]

Significant emphasis was also placed on town planning, with new conservation areas introduced and a new generation of new towns built, notably Milton Keynes. The New Towns Acts of 1965 and 1968 together gave the government the authority (through its ministries) to designate any area of land as a site for a new town.[64]

Urban renewal edit

Many subsidies were allocated to local authorities faced with acute areas of severe poverty (or other social problems).[46] The Housing Act 1969 provided local authorities with the duty of working out what to do about 'unsatisfactory areas'. Local authorities could declare 'general improvement areas' in which they would be able to buy up land and houses and spend environmental improvement grants. On the same basis, taking geographical areas of need, a package was developed by the government which resembled a miniature poverty programme.[65] In July 1967, the government decided to pour money into what the Plowden Committee defined as Educational Priority Areas, poverty-stricken areas where children were environmentally deprived. Some poor inner-city areas were subsequently granted EPA status (despite concerns that Local Education Authorities would be unable to finance Educational Priority Areas).[66] From 1968 to 1970, 150 new schools were built under the educational priority programme.[43]

Social Services and welfare edit

 
Wilson on a visit to a retirement home in Washington, Tyne and Wear

According to Tony Atkinson, social security received much more attention from the first Wilson government than it did during the previous thirteen years of Conservative government.[43] Following its victory in the 1964 general election, Wilson's government began to increase social benefits. Prescription charges for medicines were abolished immediately, while pensions were raised to a record 21% of average male industrial wages. In 1966, the system of National Assistance (a social assistance scheme for the poor) was overhauled and renamed Supplementary Benefit. The means test was replaced with a statement of income, and benefit rates for pensioners (the great majority of claimants) were increased, granting them a real gain in income. Before the 1966 election, the widow's pension was tripled. Due to austerity measures following an economic crisis, prescription charges were re-introduced in 1968 as an alternative to cutting the hospital building programme, although those sections of the population who were most in need (including supplementary benefit claimants, the long-term sick, children, and pensioners) were exempted from charges.[67]

The widow's earning rule was also abolished,[54] while a range of new social benefits was introduced. An Act was passed which replaced National Assistance with Supplementary Benefits. The new Act laid down that people who satisfied its conditions were entitled to these noncontributory benefits. Unlike the National Assistance scheme, which operated like state charity for the worst-off, the new Supplementary Benefits scheme was a right of every citizen who found himself or herself in severe difficulties. Those persons over the retirement age with no means who were considered to be unable to live on the basic pension (which provided less than what the government deemed as necessary for subsistence) became entitled to a "long-term" allowance of an extra few shillings a week. Some simplification of the procedure for claiming benefits was also introduced.[46] From 1966, an exceptionally severe disablement allowance was added, "for those claimants receiving constant attendance allowance which was paid to those with the higher or intermediate rates of constant attendance allowance and who were exceptionally severely disabled."[68] Redundancy payments were introduced in 1965 to lessen the impact of unemployment, and earnings-related benefits for maternity,[69] unemployment, sickness, industrial injuries and widowhood were introduced in 1966, followed by the replacement of flat-rate family allowances with an earnings-related scheme in 1968.[65] From July 1966 onwards, the temporary allowance for widow of severely disabled pensioners was extended from 13 to 26 weeks.[70]

Increases were made in pensions and other benefits during Wilson's first year in office that were the largest ever real term increases carried out up until that point.[71] Social security benefits were markedly increased during Wilson's first two years in office, as characterised by a budget passed in the final quarter of 1964 which raised the standard benefit rates for old age, sickness and invalidity by 18.5%.[72] In 1965, the government increased the national assistance rate to a higher level relative to earnings, and via annual adjustments, broadly maintained the rate at between 19% and 20% of gross industrial earnings until the start of 1970.[43] In the five years from 1964 up until the last increases made by the First Wilson Government, pensions went up by 23% in real terms, supplementary benefits by 26% in real terms, and sickness and unemployment benefits by 153% in real terms (largely as a result of the introduction of earnings-related benefits in 1967).[73]

Agriculture edit

Under the First Wilson Government, subsidies for farmers were increased.[74][75] Farmers who wished to leave the land or retire became eligible for grants or annuities if their holdings were sold for approved amalgamations, and could receive those benefits whether they wished to remain in their farmhouses or not. A Small Farmers Scheme was also extended, and from 1 December 1965, forty thousand more farmers became eligible for the maximum £1,000 grant. New grants to agriculture also encouraged the voluntary pooling of smallholdings, and in cases where their land was purchased for non-commercial purposes, tenant-farmers could now receive double the previous "disturbance compensation."[76] A Hill Land Improvement Scheme, introduced by the Agriculture Act 1967, provided 50% grants for a wide range of land improvements, along with a supplementary 10% grant on drainage works benefitting hill land.[77] The Agriculture Act 1967 also provided grants to promote farm amalgamation and to compensate outgoers.[78]

Health edit

The proportion of GNP spent on the National Health Service rose from 4.2% in 1964 to about 5% in 1969. This additional expenditure provided for an energetic revival of a policy of building health centres for general practitioners, extra pay for doctors who served in areas particularly short of them, significant growth in hospital staffing, and a significant increase in a hospital building programme. Far more money was spent each year on the NHS than under the 1951–64 Conservative governments, while much more effort was put into modernising and reorganising the health service.[46] Stronger central and regional organisations were established for bulk purchase of hospital supplies, while some efforts were made to reduce inequalities in standards of care. In addition, the government increased the intake to medical schools.[43]

The 1966 Doctor's Charter introduced allowances for rent and ancillary staff, significantly increased the pay scales, and changed the structure of payments to reflect "both qualifications of doctors and the form of their practices, i.e. group practice." These changes not only led to higher morale, but also resulted in the increased use of ancillary staff and nursing attachments, growth in the number of health centres and group practices, and a boost in the modernisation of practices in terms of equipment, appointment systems, and buildings.[64] The charter introduced a new system of payment for GPs, with refunds for surgery, rents, and rates, to ensure that the costs of improving his surgery did not diminish the doctor's income, together with allowances for the greater part of ancillary staff costs. In addition, a Royal Commission on medical education was set up, partly to draw up ideas for training GPs (since these doctors, the largest group of all doctors in the country, had previously not received any special training, "merely being those who, at the end of their pre-doctoral courses, did not go on for further training in any speciality").[46]

In 1967, local authorities were empowered to provide free family planning advice and means-tested contraceptive devices.[67] In addition, medical training was expanded following the Todd Report on medical education in 1968.[64][79] In addition, National Health expenditure rose from 4.2% of GNP in 1964 to 5% in 1969 and spending on hospital construction doubled.[58] The Health Services and Public Health Act 1968 empowered local authorities to maintain workshops for the elderly either directly or via the agency of a voluntary body. A Health Advisory Service was later established to investigate and confront the problems of long-term psychiatric and mentally subnormal hospitals in the wave of numerous scandals.[64] The Clean Air Act 1968 extended powers to combat air pollution.[80] More money was also allocated to hospitals treating the mentally ill.[46] In addition, a Sports Council was set up to improve facilities.[81] Direct government expenditure on sports more than doubled from £0.9 million in 1964/65 to £2 million in 1967/68, while 11 regional Sports Councils had been set up by 1968. In Wales, five new health centres had been opened by 1968, whereas none had been opened from 1951 to 1964, while spending on health and welfare services in the region went up from £55.8 million in 1963/64 to £83.9 million in 1967/68.[76]

Social policies edit

Workers edit

The Industrial Training Act 1964 set up an Industrial Training Board to encourage training for people in work,[80] and within 7 years there were "27 ITBs covering employers with some 15 million workers."[82] From 1964 to 1968, the number of training places had doubled.[76] The Docks and Harbours Act (1966) and the Dock Labour Scheme (1967) reorganised the system of employment in the docks in order to put an end to casual employment.[58] The changes made to the Dock Labour Scheme in 1967 ensured a complete end to casual labour on the docks, effectively giving workers the security of jobs for life.[83] Trade unions also benefited from the passage of the Trade Dispute Act 1965. This restored the legal immunity of trade union officials, thus ensuring that they could no longer be sued for threatening to strike.[66]

The First Wilson Government also encouraged married women to return to teaching and improved Assistance Board Concessionary conditions for those teaching part-time, "by enabling them to qualify for pension rights and by formulating a uniform scale of payment throughout the country." Soon after coming into office, midwives and nurses were given an 11% pay increase,[76] and according to one MP, nurses also benefited from the largest pay rise they had received in a generation.[84] In May 1966, Wilson announced 30% pay rises for doctors and dentists—a move which did not prove popular with unions, as the national pay policy at the time was for rises of between 3% and 3.5%.[85]

Much needed improvements were made in junior hospital doctors' salaries. From 1959 to 1970, while the earnings of manual workers increased by 75%, the salaries of registrars more than doubled while those of house officers more than trebled. Most of these improvements, such as for nurses, came in the pay settlements of 1970. On a limited scale, reports by the National Board for Prices and Incomes encouraged incentive payments schemes to be developed in local government and elsewhere. In February 1969, the government accepted an "above the ceiling" increase for farmworkers, a low-paid group. Some groups of professional workers, such as nurses, teachers, and doctors, gained substantial awards.[43]

Transport edit

The Travel Concessions Act 1964, one of the first Acts passed by the First Wilson Government, provided concessions to all pensioners travelling on buses operated by municipal transport authorities.[86] The Transport Act 1968 established the principle of government grants for transport authorities if uneconomic passenger services were justified on social grounds. A National Freight Corporation was also established to provide integrated rail freight and road services. Public expenditure on roads steadily increased and stricter safety precautions were introduced, such as the breathalyser test for drunken driving,[53] under the 1967 Road Traffic Act.[46] The Transport Act gave a much needed financial boost to British Rail, treating them like they were a company which had become bankrupt but could now, under new management, carry on debt-free. The act also established a national freight corporation and introduced government rail subsidies for passenger transport on the same basis as existing subsidies for roads to enable local authorities to improve public transport in their areas.[46]

The road-building programme was also expanded, with capital expenditure increased to 8% of GDP, "the highest level achieved by any post-war government".[87] Central government expenditure on roads went up from £125 million in 1963/64 to £225 million in 1967/68, while a number of road safety regulations were introduced, covering seat belts, lorry drivers' hours, car and lorry standards, and an experimental 70 mile per hour speed limit. In Scotland, spending on trunk roads went up from £6.8 million in 1963/64 to £15.5 million in 1966/67, while in Wales, spending on Welsh roads went up from £21.2 million in 1963/64 to £31.4 million in 1966/67.[76]

Regional development edit

Encouragement of regional development was given increased attention under the First Wilson Government, to narrow economic disparities between the various regions. A policy was introduced in 1965 whereby any new government organisation should be established outside London and in 1967 the government decided to give preference to development areas. A few government departments were also moved out of London, with the Royal Mint moved to South Wales, the Giro and Inland Revenue to Bootle, and the Motor Tax Office to Swansea.[88] A new Special Development Status was also introduced in 1967 to provide even higher levels of assistance.[54] In 1966, five development areas (covering half the population in the UK) were established, while subsidies were provided for employers recruiting new employees in the Development Areas.[41] A Highlands and Islands Development Board was also set up to "re-invigorate" the north of Scotland.[76]

The Industrial Development Act 1966 changed the name of Development Districts (parts of the country with higher levels of unemployment than the national average and which governments sought to encourage greater investment in) to Development Areas and increased the percentage of the workforce covered by development schemes from 15% to 20%, which mainly affected rural areas in Scotland and Wales. Tax allowances were replaced by grants to extend coverage to include firms which were not making a profit, and in 1967 a Regional Employment Premium was introduced. Whereas the existing schemes tended to favour capital-intensive projects, this aimed for the first time at increasing employment in depressed areas. Set at 30s per employee per week and guaranteed for seven years, the Regional Employment Premium subsidised all manufacturing industry (though not services) in Development Areas, amounting to an average subsidy of 7% of labour costs.[54][89]

Regional unemployment differentials were narrowed, and spending on regional infrastructure was significantly increased. Between 1965–66 and 1969–70, yearly expenditure on new construction (including power stations, roads, schools, hospitals and housing) rose by 41% in the United Kingdom as a whole. Subsidies were also provided for various industries (such as shipbuilding in Clydeside), which helped to prevent many job losses. It is estimated that, between 1964 and 1970, 45,000 government jobs were created outside London, 21,000 of which were located in the Development Areas.[88] The Local Employment Act, passed in March 1970, embodied the government's proposals for assistance to 54 "intermediate" employment exchange areas not classified as full "development" areas.[90]

Funds allocated to regional assistance more than doubled, from £40 million in 1964/65 to £82 million in 1969/70, and from 1964 to 1970, the number of factories completed was 50% higher than from 1960 to 1964, which helped to reduce unemployment in development areas. In 1970, the unemployment rate in development areas was 1.67 times the national average, compared to 2.21 times in 1964. Although national rates of unemployment were higher in 1970 than in the early 1960s, unemployment rates in the development areas were lower and had not increased for three years.[54] Altogether, the impact of the first Wilson government's regional development policies was such that, according to one historian, the period 1963 to 1970 represented "the most prolonged, most intensive, and most successful attack ever launched on regional problems in Britain."[41]

International development edit

A new Ministry of Overseas Development was established, with its greatest success at the time being the introduction of interest-free loans for the poorest countries.[54] The Minister of Overseas Development, Barbara Castle, set a standard in interest relief on loans to developing nations which resulted in changes to the loan policies of many donor countries, "a significant shift in the conduct of rich white nations to poor brown ones." Loans were introduced to developing countries on terms that were more favourable to them than those given by governments of all other developed countries at that time. In addition, Castle was instrumental in setting up an Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex to devise ways of tackling global socio-economic inequalities. Overseas aid suffered from the austerity measures introduced by the first Wilson government in its last few years in office, with British aid as a percentage of GNP falling from 0.53% in 1964 to 0.39% in 1969.[46]

Taxation edit

Wilson's government made a variety of changes to the tax system. Largely under the influence of the Hungarian-born economists Nicholas Kaldor and Thomas Balogh, an idiosyncratic Selective Employment Tax (SET) was introduced that was designed to tax employment in the service sectors while subsidising employment in manufacturing. (The rationale proposed by its economist authors derived largely from claims about potential economies of scale and technological progress, but Wilson in his memoirs stressed the tax's revenue-raising potential.) The SET did not long survive the return of a Conservative government. Of longer-term significance, capital gains tax (CGT) was introduced across the UK on 6 April 1965.[91] Across his two periods in office, Wilson presided over significant increases in the overall tax burden in the UK. In 1974, three weeks after forming a new government, Wilson's new chancellor Denis Healey partially reversed the 1971 reduction in the top rate of tax from 90% to 75%, increasing it to 83% in his first budget, which came into law in April 1974. This applied to incomes over £20,000 (equivalent to £221,741 in 2021),[92] and combined with a 15% surcharge on 'unearned' income (investments and dividends) could add up to a 98% marginal rate of personal income tax. In 1974, as many as 750,000 people were liable to pay the top rate of income tax.[93]

Various changes were also made to the tax system which benefited workers on low and middle incomes. Married couples with low incomes benefited from the increases in the single personal allowance and marriage allowance. In 1965, the regressive allowance for national insurance contributions was abolished and the single personal allowance, marriage allowance and wife's earned income relief were increased. These allowances were further increased in the tax years 1969–70 and 1970–71. Increases in the age exemption and dependant relative's income limits benefited the low-income elderly.[43] In 1967, new tax concessions were introduced for widows.[94]

Increases were made in some of the minor allowances in the 1969 Finance Act, notably the additional personal allowance, the age exemption and age relief and the dependent relative limit. Apart from the age relief, further adjustments in these concessions were implemented in 1970.[43]

1968 saw the introduction of aggregation of the investment income of unmarried minors with the income of their parents. According to Michael Meacher, this change put an end to a previous inequity whereby two families, in otherwise identical circumstances, paid differing amounts of tax "simply because in one case the child possessed property transferred to it by a grandparent, while in the other case the grandparent's identical property was inherited by the parent."[43]

In the 1969 budget, income tax was abolished for about 1 million of the lowest-paid and reduced for a further 600,000 people,[75] while in the government's last budget (introduced in 1970), two million small taxpayers were exempted from paying any income tax altogether.[95]

Liberal reforms edit

A wide range of liberal measures were introduced during Wilson's time in office. The Matrimonial Proceedings and Property Act 1970 made provision for the welfare of children whose parents were about to divorce or be judicially separated, with courts (for instance) granted wide powers to order financial provision for children in the form of maintenance payments made by either parent.[64] This legislation allowed courts to order provision for either spouse and recognised the contribution to the joint home made during marriage.[80] That same year, spouses were given an equal share of household assets following divorce via the Matrimonial Property Act. The Race Relations Act 1968 was also extended in 1968 and in 1970 the Equal Pay Act 1970 was passed.[67] Another important reform, the Welsh Language Act 1967, granted 'equal validity' to the declining Welsh language and encouraged its revival. Government expenditure was also increased on both sport and the arts.[58] The Mines and Quarries (Tips) Act 1969, passed in response to the Aberfan disaster, made provision for preventing disused tips from endangering members of the public.[96] In 1967, corporal punishment in borstals and prisons was abolished.[97] 7 regional associations were established to develop the arts, and government expenditure on cultural activities rose from £7.7 million in 1964/64 to £15.3 million in 1968/69. A Criminal Injuries Compensation Board was also set up, which had paid out over £2 million to victims of criminal violence by 1968.[76]

The Commons Registration Act 1965 provided for the registration of all common land and village greens, whilst under the Countryside Act 1968, local authorities could provide facilities "for enjoyment of such lands to which the public has access".[64] The Family Provision Act 1966 amended a series of pre-existing estate laws mainly related to persons who died intestate. The legislation increased the amount that could be paid to surviving spouses if a will had not been left, and also expanded upon the jurisdiction of county courts, which were given the jurisdiction of high courts under certain circumstances when handling matters of estate. The rights of adopted children were also improved with certain wording changed in the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act 1938 to bestow upon them the same rights as natural-born children. In 1968, the Nurseries and Child-Minders Regulation Act 1948 was updated to include more categories of childminders.[98] A year later, the Family Law Reform Act 1969 was passed, which allowed people born outside marriage to inherit on the intestacy of either parent.[99] In 1967, homosexuality was partially decriminalised (in England & Wales only) by the passage of the Sexual Offences Act.[46] The Public Records Act 1967 also introduced a thirty-year rule for access to public records, replacing a previous fifty-year rule.[100]

Industrial relations edit

Wilson made periodic attempts to mitigate inflation, largely through wage-price controls—better known in Britain as "prices and incomes policy".[41] (As with indicative planning, such controls—though now generally out of favour—were widely adopted at that time by governments of different ideological complexions, including the Nixon administration in the United States.) Partly as a result of this reliance, the government tended to find itself repeatedly injected into major industrial disputes, with late-night "beer and sandwiches at Number Ten" an almost routine culmination to such episodes. Among the most damaging of the numerous strikes during Wilson's periods in office was a six-week stoppage by the National Union of Seamen, beginning shortly after Wilson's re-election in 1966, and conducted, he claimed, by "politically motivated men".

With public frustration over strikes mounting, Wilson's government in 1969 proposed a series of changes to the legal basis for industrial relations (labour law), which were outlined in a White Paper "In Place of Strife" put forward by the Employment Secretary Barbara Castle. Following a confrontation with the Trades Union Congress, which strongly opposed the proposals, and internal dissent from Home Secretary James Callaghan, the government substantially backed-down from its intentions. The Heath government (1970–1974) introduced the Industrial Relations Act 1971 with many of the same ideas, but this was largely repealed by the post-1974 Labour government. Some elements of these changes were subsequently to be enacted (in modified form) during the premiership of Margaret Thatcher.[41]

Record on income distribution edit

Despite the economic difficulties faced by the first Wilson government, it succeeded in maintaining low levels of unemployment and inflation during its time in office. Unemployment was kept below 2.7%, and inflation for much of the 1960s remained below 4%. Living standards generally improved, while public spending on housing, social security, transport, research, education and health went up by an average of more than 6% between 1964 and 1970.[101] The average household grew steadily richer, with the number of cars in the United Kingdom rising from one to every 6.4 persons to one for every five persons in 1968, representing a net increase of three million cars on the road. The rise in the standard of living was also characterised by increased ownership of various consumer durables from 1964 to 1969, as demonstrated by television sets (from 88% to 90%), refrigerators (from 39% to 59%), and washing machines (from 54% to 64%).[46]

By 1970, income in Britain was more equally distributed than in 1964, mainly because of increases in cash benefits, including family allowances.[102]

According to the historian, Dominic Sandbrook:

In its commitment to social services and public welfare, the Wilson government put together a record unmatched by any subsequent administration, and the mid-sixties are justifiably seen as the 'golden age' of the welfare state.[101]

As noted by Ben Pimlott, the gap between those on lowest incomes and the rest of the population "had been significantly reduced" under Wilson's first government.[103] The first Wilson government thus saw the distribution of income became more equal,[57] while reductions in poverty took place.[104] These achievements were mainly brought about by several increases in social welfare benefits,[105] such as supplementary benefit, pensions and family allowances, the latter of which were doubled between 1964 and 1970 (although most of the increase in family allowances did not come about until 1968). A new system of rate rebates was introduced, which benefited one million households by the end of the 1960s.[54] Increases in national insurance benefits in 1965, 1967, 1968 and 1969 ensured that those dependent on state benefits saw their disposable incomes rise faster than manual wage earners, while income differentials between lower-income and higher-income workers were marginally narrowed. Greater progressivity was introduced in the tax system, with greater emphasis on direct (income-based) as opposed to indirect (typically expenditure-based) taxation as a means of raising revenue, with the amount raised by the former increasing twice as much as that of the latter.[106] Also, despite an increase in unemployment, the poor improved their share of the national income while that of the rich was slightly reduced.[107] Despite various cutbacks after 1966, expenditure on services such as education and health was still much higher as a proportion of national wealth than in 1964. In addition, by raising taxes to pay their reforms, the government paid careful attention to the principle of redistribution, with disposable incomes rising for the lowest paid while falling amongst the wealthiest during its time in office.[108]

Between 1964 and 1968, benefits in kind were significantly progressive, in that over the period those in the lower half of the income scale benefited more than those in the upper half. On average those receiving state benefits benefited more in terms of increases in real disposable income than the average manual worker or salaried employee between 1964 and 1969.[88] From 1964 to 1969, low-wage earners did substantially better than other sections of the population. In 1969, a married couple with two children were 11.5% per cent richer in real terms, while for a couple with three children, the corresponding increase was 14.5%, and for a family with four children, 16.5%.[109] From 1965 to 1968, the income of single pensioner households as a percentage of other one adult households rose from 48.9% to 52.5%. For two pensioner households, the equivalent increase was from 46.8% to 48.2%.[43] In addition, mainly as a result of big increases in cash benefits, unemployed persons and large families gained more in terms of real disposable income than the rest of the population during Wilson's time in office.[57]

As noted by Paul Whiteley, pensions, sickness, unemployment, and supplementary benefits went up more in real terms under the First Wilson Government than under the preceding Conservative administration:

"To compare the Conservative period of office with the Labour period, we can use the changes in benefits per year as a rough estimate of comparative performance. For the Conservatives and Labour respectively increases in supplementary benefits per year were 3.5 and 5.2 percentage points, for sickness and unemployment benefits 5.8 and 30.6 percentage points, for pensions 3.8 and 4.6, and for family allowances −1.2 and −2.6. Thus the poor, the retired, the sick and the unemployed did better in real terms under Labour than they did under Conservatives, and families did worse."[73]

Between 1964 and 1968, cash benefits rose as a percentage of income for all households but more so for poorer than for wealthier households. As noted by the economist Michael Stewart,

"it seems indisputable that the high priority the Labour Government gave to expenditure on education and the health service had a favourable effect on income distribution."[88]

For a family with two children in the income range £676 to £816 per annum, cash benefits rose from 4% of income in 1964 to 22% in 1968, compared with a change from 1% to 2% for a similar family in the income range £2,122 to £2,566 over the same period. For benefits in kind the changes over the same period for similar families were from 21% to 29% for lower-income families and from 9% to 10% for higher-income families. When taking into account all benefits, taxes and Government expenditures on social services, the first Wilson government succeeded in bringing about a reduction in income inequality. As noted by the historian Kenneth O. Morgan,

"In the long term, therefore, fortified by increases in supplementary and other benefits under the Crossman regime in 1968–70, the welfare state had made some impact, almost by inadvertence, on social inequality and the maldistribution of real income".[110]

Public expenditure as a percentage of GDP rose significantly under the 1964–1970 Labour government, from 34% in 1964–65 to nearly 38% of GDP by 1969–70, whilst expenditure on social services rose from 16% of national income in 1964 to 23% by 1970.[54] These measures had a major impact on the living standards of low-income Britons, with disposable incomes rising faster for low-income groups than for high-income groups during the 1960s. When measuring disposable income after taxation but including benefits, the total disposable income of those on the highest incomes fell by 33%, whilst the total disposable income of those on the lowest incomes rose by 104%.[54] As noted by one historian, "the net effect of Labour's financial policies was indeed to make the rich poorer and the poor richer".[111]

Foreign affairs edit

United States edit

 
Wilson with US President Lyndon B. Johnson at the White House in 1966

Wilson believed in a strong "Special Relationship" with the United States and wanted to highlight his dealings with the White House to strengthen his prestige as a statesman. President Lyndon B. Johnson disliked Wilson and ignored any "special" relationship. The Vietnam War was a sore point.[112] Johnson needed and asked for help to maintain American prestige. Wilson offered lukewarm verbal support and no military aid. Wilson's policy angered the left-wing of his Labour Party, who opposed the Vietnam War.[113] Wilson and Johnson also differed sharply on British economic weakness and its declining status as a world power. Historian Jonathan Colman concludes it made for the most unsatisfactory "special" relationship in the 20th century.[114] The only point of total agreement was that both Johnson and Wilson emphatically supported Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War.[115]

Europe edit

 
Wilson with West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard in 1965

Among the more challenging political dilemmas Wilson faced was the issue of British membership of the European Community, the forerunner of the present European Union. An entry attempt was vetoed in 1963 by French President Charles de Gaulle. The Labour Party in Opposition had been divided on the issue, with Hugh Gaitskell having come out in 1962 in opposition to Britain joining the European Community.[116] After initial hesitation, Wilson's Government in May 1967 lodged the UK's second application to join the European Community. It was vetoed by de Gaulle in November 1967.[117] After De Gaulle lost power, Conservative prime minister Edward Heath negotiated Britain's admission to the EC in 1973.

Wilson in opposition showed political ingenuity in devising a position that both sides of the party could agree on, opposing the terms negotiated by Heath but not membership in principle. Labour's 1974 manifesto included a pledge to renegotiate terms for Britain's membership and then hold a referendum on whether to stay in the EC on the new terms. This was a constitutional procedure without precedent in British history.

Following Wilson's return to power, the renegotiations with Britain's fellow EC members were carried out by Wilson himself in tandem with Foreign Secretary James Callaghan, and they toured the capital cities of Europe meeting their European counterparts. The discussions focused primarily on Britain's net budgetary contribution to the EC. As a small agricultural producer heavily dependent on imports, Britain suffered doubly from the dominance of:

(i) agricultural spending in the EC budget,
(ii) agricultural import taxes as a source of EC revenues.

During the renegotiations, other EEC members conceded, as a partial offset, the establishment of a significant European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), from which it was agreed that Britain would be a major net beneficiary.[118]

In the subsequent referendum campaign, rather than the normal British tradition of "collective responsibility", under which the government takes a policy position which all cabinet members are required to support publicly, members of the Government were free to present their views on either side of the question. The electorate voted on 5 June 1975 to continue membership, by a substantial majority.[119]

Asia edit

American military involvement in Vietnam escalated continuously from 1964 to 1968 and President Lyndon B. Johnson brought pressure to bear for at least a token involvement of British military units. Wilson consistently avoided any commitment of British forces, giving as reasons British military commitments to the Malayan Emergency and British co-chairmanship of the 1954 Geneva Conference.[120]

His government offered some rhetorical support for the US position (most prominently in the defence offered by the Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart in a much-publicised "teach-in" or debate on Vietnam). On at least one occasion the British government made an unsuccessful effort to mediate in the conflict, with Wilson discussing peace proposals with Alexei Kosygin, the Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers. On 28 June 1966 Wilson 'dissociated' his Government from American bombing of the cities of Hanoi and Haiphong. In his memoirs, Wilson writes of "selling LBJ a bum steer", a reference to Johnson's Texas roots, which conjured up images of cattle and cowboys in British minds.[121]

Part of the price paid by Wilson after talks with President Johnson in June 1967 for US assistance with the UK economy was his agreement to maintain a military presence East of Suez.[122] In July 1967 Defence Secretary Denis Healey announced that Britain would abandon her mainland bases East of Suez by 1977, although airmobile forces would be retained which could if necessary be deployed in the region. Shortly afterwards, in January 1968, Wilson announced that the proposed timetable for this withdrawal was to be accelerated and that British forces were to be withdrawn from Singapore, Malaysia, and the Persian Gulf by the end of 1971.[123]

Wilson was known for his strongly pro-Israel views.[124] He was a particular friend of Israeli Premier Golda Meir, though her tenure largely coincided with Wilson's 1970–1974 hiatus. Another associate was West German Chancellor Willy Brandt; all three were members of the Socialist International.[125]

Africa edit

The British "retreat from Empire" had made headway by 1964 and was to continue during Wilson's administration. Southern Rhodesia was not granted independence, principally because Wilson refused to grant independence to the white minority government headed by Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith which was not willing to extend unqualified voting rights to the native African population. Smith's defiant response was a Unilateral Declaration of Independence, on 11 November 1965. Wilson's immediate recourse was to the United Nations, and in 1965, the Security Council imposed sanctions, which were to last until official independence in 1979. This involved British warships blockading the port of Beira to try to cause economic collapse in Rhodesia. Wilson was applauded by most nations for taking a firm stand on the issue (and none extended diplomatic recognition to the Smith régime). A number of nations did not join in with sanctions, undermining their efficiency. Certain sections of public opinion started to question their efficacy, and to demand the toppling of the régime by force. Wilson declined to intervene in Rhodesia with military force, believing the British population would not support such action against their "kith and kin". The two leaders met for discussions aboard British warships, Tiger in 1966 and Fearless in 1968. Smith subsequently attacked Wilson in his memoirs, accusing him of delaying tactics during negotiations and alleging duplicity; Wilson responded in kind, questioning Smith's good faith and suggesting that Smith had moved the goal-posts whenever a settlement appeared in sight.[121] The matter was still unresolved at the time of Wilson's resignation in 1976. Wilson had a good relationship with Siaka Stevens of Sierra Leone, the two leaders attempted to work together to find a solution the question of Biafra in Nigeria.[126][127]

Electoral defeat and resignation edit

By 1969, the Labour Party was suffering serious electoral reverses, and by the turn of 1970 had lost a total of 16 seats in by-elections since the previous general election.[128]

By 1970, the economy was showing signs of improvement, and by May that year, Labour had overtaken the Conservatives in the opinion polls.[129] Wilson responded to this apparent recovery in his government's popularity by calling a general election, but, to the surprise of most observers, was defeated at the polls by the Conservatives under Heath. Most opinion polls had predicted a Labour win, with a poll six days before the election showing a 12.4% Labour lead. Writing in the aftermath of the election, The Times journalist George Clark wrote that the 1970 contest would be "remembered as the occasion when the people of the United Kingdom hurled the findings of the opinion polls back into the faces of the pollsters and at the voting booths proved them wrong—most of them badly wrong".[130] Heath and the Conservatives had attacked Wilson over the economy. Towards the end of the campaign, bad trade figures for May added weight to Heath's campaign and he claimed that a Labour victory would result in a further devaluation. Wilson considered Heath's claims "irresponsible" and "damaging to the nation".[131] Ultimately, however, the election saw Labour's vote share fall to its lowest since 1935.[132] Several prominent Labour figures lost their seats, notably George Brown who was still Deputy Leader of the Labour Party.[133]

Return to opposition (1970–1974) edit

After the elections and Labour’s subsequent defeat, Wilson survived as leader of the Labour Party in opposition. In August 1973, holidaying on the Isles of Scilly, he tried to board a motorboat from a dinghy and stepped into the sea. He was unable to get into the boat and was left in the cold water for more than half an hour, hanging on to the fenders of the motorboat. He was close to death before he was saved by Paul Wolff, the father of novelist Isabel Wolff. When word of the incident became public the following month, Wilson downplayed its severity; it was taken up by the press and resulted in some embarrassment. His press secretary, Joe Haines, tried to deflect some of the comment by blaming Wilson's dog Paddy for the problem.[134]

Economic conditions during the 1970s were becoming more difficult for Britain and many other western economies as a result of the Nixon shock and the 1973 oil crisis, and the Heath government in its turn was buffeted by economic adversity and industrial unrest (notably including confrontation with the coalminers which led to the Three-Day Week) towards the end of 1973, and on 7 February 1974 (with the crisis still ongoing) Heath called a snap election for 28 February.[135]

Prime minister (1974–1976) edit

 
Harold Wilson with U.S President Gerald Ford in 1975, during his second term as prime minister.

Labour won more seats (though fewer votes) than the Conservative Party in the general election in February 1974, which resulted in a hung parliament. As Heath was unable to persuade the Liberals to form a coalition, Wilson returned to 10 Downing Street on 4 March 1974 as prime minister of a minority Labour Government. He gained a three-seat majority in another election later that year, on 10 October 1974.

1975 European referendum edit

One of the key issues addressed during his second period in office was the referendum on British membership of the European Community (EC) which took place in June 1975: Labour had pledged in its February 1974 manifesto to renegotiate the terms of British accession to the EC, and then to consult the public in a referendum on whether Britain should stay in on the new terms. Although the government recommended a vote in favour of continued membership, the cabinet was split on the issue, and Ministers were allowed to campaign on different sides of the question. The referendum resulted in a near two-to-one majority in favour of Britain remaining in the EC.[136]

Domestic economic affairs edit

The Second Wilson Government made a major commitment to the expansion of the British welfare state, with increased spending on education, health, and housing rents.[87] To pay for it, it imposed controls and raised taxes on the rich. It partially reversed the 1971 reduction in the top rate of tax from 90% to 75%, increasing it to 83% in the first budget from new chancellor Denis Healey, which came into law in April 1974. Also implemented was an investment income surcharge which raised the top rate on investment income to 98%, the highest level since the Second World War.

Despite its achievements in social policy, Wilson's government came under scrutiny in 1975 for the rise in the unemployment rate, with the total number of Britons out of work passing one million by that April.[137]

Wilson's second government came into office at a troubled time for the British economy, due to a global recession and stagflation, in large part this was due to the 1973 oil crisis, and also the preceding government's inflationary attempts to boost growth.[138] In order to deal with inflation (which peaked at 26% in 1975) the government negotiated a 'social contract' with the Trades Union Congress to implement a voluntary incomes policy, in which pay rises were held down to limits set by the government. This policy operated with reasonable success for the next few years, and inflation fell to single figures by 1978.[136] By 1976 the recession had ended and economic recovery began,[138] by 1978/79 living standards recovered to the level they had been in 1973/74.[139] The Labour governments of the 1970s did, however, manage to protect the living standards of many people from the worst effects of the recession and high inflation, with pensions increasing by 20% in real terms between 1974 and 1979, while measures such as rent and price controls and food and transport subsidies mitigated the adverse impact on the living standards of many more people.[140]

The government's industrial policy was greatly influenced by the economist Stuart Holland and the Secretary of State for Industry Tony Benn. The centrepiece of the policy was the National Enterprise Board (NEB) which was established in 1975 and was intended to channel public investment into industry, in return for taking a holding of equity in private companies. The NEB was intended to extend public ownership of the economy as well as investing in the regeneration of industry, although it had some successes in that aim, in practice one of its main activities became that of propping up failing companies such as British Leyland. The government also continued its policy of encouraging regional development by increasing Regional Employment Premiums, which had first been established in 1967.[136][141]

Northern Ireland edit

Wilson's earlier government had witnessed the outbreak of The Troubles in Northern Ireland. In response to a request from the Government of Northern Ireland, Wilson agreed to deploy the British Army in August 1969 to restore the peace.

While out of office in late 1971, Wilson had formulated a 16-point, 15-year programme that was designed to pave the way for the unification of Ireland. The proposal was not adopted by the then Heath government.[142]

In May 1974, when back in office as leader of a minority government, Wilson condemned the Unionist-controlled Ulster Workers Council Strike as a "sectarian strike", which was "being done for sectarian purposes having no relation to this century but only to the seventeenth century". He refused to pressure a reluctant British Army to face down the Ulster loyalist paramilitaries who were intimidating utility workers. In a televised speech later, he referred to the loyalist strikers and their supporters as "spongers" who expected Britain to pay for their lifestyles. The strike was eventually successful in breaking the power-sharing Northern Ireland executive.

On 11 September 2008, BBC Radio 4's Document programme claimed to have unearthed a secret plan—codenamed Doomsday—which proposed to cut all of the United Kingdom's constitutional ties with Northern Ireland and transform the province into an independent dominion. Document went on to claim that the Doomsday plan was devised mainly by Wilson and was kept a closely guarded secret. The plan then allegedly lost momentum, due in part, it was claimed, to warnings made by both the then Foreign Secretary, James Callaghan, and the then Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs Garret FitzGerald who admitted the 12,000-strong Irish Army would be unable to deal with the ensuing civil war.[143] Later, Callaghan himself spoke and wrote despondently about the prospect for a British-derived solution to the Northern Ireland issue, supporting a similar plan to push Northern Ireland towards independent status.[144]

In 1975, Wilson secretly offered Libya's dictator Muammar Gaddafi £14 million to stop arming the Provisional Irish Republican Army, but Gaddafi demanded a far greater sum of money.[145][146] This offer did not become publicly known until 2009.

Resignation edit

When Wilson entered office for the second time, he had privately admitted that he had lost his enthusiasm for the role, telling a close adviser in 1974 that "I have been around this racetrack so often that I cannot generate any more enthusiasm for jumping any more hurdles."[136] On 16 March 1976, Wilson announced his resignation as prime minister (taking effect on 5 April). He claimed that he had always planned on resigning at the age of 60 and that he was physically and mentally exhausted. As early as the late 1960s he had been telling intimates, like his doctor Sir Joseph Stone (later Lord Stone of Hendon), that he did not intend to serve more than eight or nine years as prime minister. Roy Jenkins has suggested that Wilson may have been motivated partly by the distaste for politics felt by his loyal and long-suffering wife, Mary.[16] His doctor had detected problems which would later be diagnosed as colon cancer, and Wilson had begun drinking brandy during the day to cope with stress.[2] In addition, by 1976 he might already have been aware of the first stages of early-onset Alzheimer's disease, which was to cause both his formerly excellent memory and his powers of concentration to fail dramatically.[147]

Wilson's Resignation Honours included many businessmen and celebrities, along with his political supporters. His choice of appointments caused lasting damage to his reputation, worsened by the suggestion that the first draft of the list had been written by his political secretary Marcia Williams on lavender notepaper (it became known as the "Lavender List"). Roy Jenkins noted that Wilson's retirement "was disfigured by his, at best, eccentric resignation honours list, which gave peerages or knighthoods to some adventurous business gentlemen, several of whom were close neither to him nor to the Labour Party."[16] Some of those whom Wilson honoured included Lord Kagan, the inventor of Gannex (Wilson's preferred raincoat), who was eventually imprisoned for fraud, and Sir Eric Miller, who later committed suicide while under police investigation for corruption.

The Labour Party held an election to replace Wilson as leader of the Party (and therefore prime minister). Six candidates stood in the first ballot; in order of votes they were: Michael Foot, James Callaghan, Roy Jenkins, Tony Benn, Denis Healey and Anthony Crosland. In the third ballot, on 5 April, Callaghan defeated Foot in a parliamentary vote of 176 to 137, thus becoming Wilson's successor as prime minister and leader of the Labour Party, and he continued to serve as prime minister until May 1979.

As Wilson wished to remain an MP after leaving office, he was not immediately given the peerage customarily offered to retired prime ministers, but instead was created a Knight Companion of the Garter. He fought one last election in 1979 in which he was returned as a backbench MP for Huyton. Following his departure from the House of Commons before the 1983 general election, after 38 years of service, he was granted a life peerage as Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, of Kirklees in the County of West Yorkshire,[148][149] after Rievaulx Abbey, in the north of his native Yorkshire; the Kirklees refers to his home address of Huddersfield, and is not part of his title.

Post-premiership (1976–1995) edit

Retirement edit

 
Wilson in 1986

He was appointed in 1976 to chair the Committee to Review the Functioning of Financial Institutions (the Wilson Committee) which reported in June 1980.[150]

Shortly after resigning as prime minister, Wilson was signed by David Frost to host a series of interview/chat show programmes. The pilot episode proved to be a flop as Wilson appeared uncomfortable with the informality of the format. Wilson also hosted two editions of the BBC chat show Friday Night, Saturday Morning. He famously floundered in the role, and in 2000, Channel 4 chose one of his appearances as one of the 100 Moments of TV Hell.

A lifelong Gilbert and Sullivan fan, in 1975, Wilson joined the Board of Trustees of the D'Oyly Carte Trust at the invitation of Sir Hugh Wontner, who was then the Lord Mayor of London.[151] At Christmas 1978, Wilson appeared on the Morecambe and Wise Christmas Special. Eric Morecambe's habit of appearing not to recognise the guest stars was repaid by Wilson, who referred to him throughout as 'Morry-camby' (the mispronunciation of Morecambe's name made by Ed Sullivan when the pair appeared on his famous American television show). Wilson appeared on the show again in 1980.

Wilson was not especially active in the House of Lords, although he did initiate a debate on unemployment in May 1984.[152] His last speech was in a debate on marine pilotage in 1986, when he commented as an elder brother of Trinity House.[153] In the same year he played himself as prime minister in an Anglia Television drama, Inside Story.[154]

Death edit

 
Harold Wilson's grave

Wilson continued regularly attending the House of Lords until just over a year before his death; the last sitting he attended was on 27 April 1994. He had a picture taken with other Labour Lords on 15 June 1994, just under a year before his death.[155][156] He died from colon cancer and Alzheimer's disease on 24 May 1995, aged 79.[157] His death came five months before that of his predecessor Alec Douglas-Home.

Wilson's memorial service was held in Westminster Abbey on 13 July 1995. It was attended by the Prince of Wales, former prime ministers Edward Heath, James Callaghan, and Margaret Thatcher, incumbent Prime Minister John Major and also Tony Blair, then Leader of the Opposition and later prime minister. Wilson was buried at St Mary's Old Church, St Mary's, Isles of Scilly, on 6 June.[16] His epitaph is Tempus Imperator Rerum (Time the Commander of Things).[158]

Legacy edit

Political style edit

Wilson regarded himself as a "man of the people" and did much to promote this image, contrasting himself with the stereotypical aristocratic conservatives and other statesmen who had preceded him, as an example of social mobility. He largely retained his Yorkshire accent. Other features of this persona included his working man's Gannex raincoat, his pipe (the British Pipesmokers' Council voted him Pipe Smoker of the Year in 1965 and Pipeman of the Decade in 1976, though in private he preferred cigars), his love of simple cooking and fondness for popular British relish HP Sauce, and his support for his home town's football team, Huddersfield Town.[159] His first general election victory relied heavily on associating these down-to-earth attributes with a sense that the UK urgently needed to modernise after "thirteen years of Tory mis-rule".[160]

Wilson exhibited his populist touch in June 1965 when he had the Beatles honoured with the award of MBE (such awards are officially bestowed by the monarch but are nominated by the prime minister of the day). The award was popular with young people and contributed to a sense that the prime minister was "in touch" with the younger generation. There were some protests by conservatives and elderly members of the military who were earlier recipients of the award, but such protesters were in the minority. Critics claimed that Wilson acted to solicit votes for the next general election (which took place less than a year later), but defenders noted that, since the minimum voting age at that time was 21, this was hardly likely to impact many of the Beatles' fans who at that time were predominantly teenagers. It cemented Wilson's image as a modernistic leader and linked him to the burgeoning pride in the 'New Britain' typified by the Beatles.[161] The Beatles mentioned Wilson rather negatively, naming both him and his opponent Edward Heath in George Harrison's song "Taxman", the opener to 1966's Revolver—recorded and released after the MBEs.[162]

In 1967, Wilson had a different interaction with a musical ensemble. He sued the pop group the Move for libel after the band's manager Tony Secunda published a promotional postcard for the single "Flowers in the Rain", featuring a caricature depicting Wilson in bed with his female assistant, Marcia Williams. Gossip had hinted at an improper relationship, though these rumours were never substantiated. Wilson won the case, and all royalties from the song (composed by Move leader Roy Wood) were assigned in perpetuity to a charity of Wilson's choosing.[163]

Wilson coined the term 'Selsdon Man' to refer to the free market policies of the Conservative leader Edward Heath, developed at a policy retreat held at the Selsdon Park Hotel in early 1970. This phrase, intended to evoke the 'primitive throwback' qualities of anthropological discoveries such as Piltdown Man and Swanscombe Man, was part of a British political tradition of referring to political trends by suffixing 'man'.[164] Other memorable phrases attributed to Wilson include "the white heat of the [technological] revolution", and "a week is a long time in politics", meaning that political fortunes can change extremely rapidly.[165] In his broadcast after the 1967 devaluation of the pound, Wilson said: "This does not mean that the pound here in Britain—in your pocket or purse—is worth any less" and the phrase "the pound in your pocket" subsequently took on a life of its own.[166]

Reputation edit

Despite his successes, Wilson's reputation took a long time to start a recovery from the low ebb reached immediately following his second premiership. The reinvention of the Labour Party would take the better part of two decades at the hands of Neil Kinnock, John Smith and, electorally and most conclusively, Tony Blair. Disillusion with Britain's weak economic performance and troubled industrial relations, combined with active spadework by figures such as Sir Keith Joseph, had helped to make a radical market programme politically feasible for Margaret Thatcher (which was, in turn, to influence the subsequent Labour leadership, especially under Blair). An opinion poll in September 2011 found that Wilson came in third place when respondents were asked to name the best post-war Labour Party leader. He was beaten only by John Smith and Tony Blair.[167]

According to Glen O'Hara in 2006:[168]

Much of the disillusionment with Harold Wilson as Labour's leader and prime minister was due to his perceived failure on the economic front. He pledged not to devalue sterling, but did exactly that in 1967; he promised to keep unemployment low, but had by 1970 accepted a higher rate of joblessness than the Conservatives had managed. Some of the elements in Labour's programme – the emphasis on steadier growth, for instance – were probably misguided. These problems and defeats have, however, obscured some of the real achievements of the period. Science and education spending grew very quickly; industrial investment rose; government was increasingly well informed and better advised about the performance of the economy. In an increasingly unstable and rapidly changing economic environment, this government's economic record is here shown to be, if not hugely impressive, then at least relatively creditable.

Possible plots and conspiracy theories edit

In 1963, Soviet defector Anatoliy Golitsyn is said to have secretly claimed that Wilson was a KGB agent.[169] The majority of intelligence officers did not believe that Golitsyn was credible in this and various other claims, but a significant number did (most prominently James Jesus Angleton, Deputy Director of Operations for Counter-Intelligence at the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency) and factional strife broke out between the two groups. Former MI5 officer Peter Wright claimed in his memoirs, Spycatcher, that 30 MI5 agents then collaborated in an attempt to undermine Wilson. He retracted that claim, saying there was only one man.[170]

In March 1987, James Miller, a former agent, claimed that the Ulster Workers Council Strike of 1974 had been promoted by MI5 to help destabilise Wilson's government.[171] In July 1987, Labour MP Ken Livingstone used his maiden speech to raise the 1975 allegations of a former Army Press officer in Northern Ireland, Colin Wallace, who also alleged a plot to destabilise Wilson. Chris Mullin MP, speaking on 23 November 1988, argued that sources other than Peter Wright supported claims of a long-standing attempt by MI5 to undermine Wilson's government.[172]

On the BBC television programme The Plot Against Harold Wilson, broadcast on 16 March 2006 on BBC2, it was claimed there were threats of a coup d'état against the Wilson government, which were corroborated by leading figures of the time on both the left and the right. Wilson told two BBC journalists, Barrie Penrose and Roger Courtiour, who recorded the meetings on a cassette tape recorder, that he feared he was being undermined by MI5. The first time was in the late 1960s after the Wilson Government devalued the pound sterling but the threat faded after Conservative leader Edward Heath won the election of 1970. However, after the 1972 British miners' strike Heath decided to hold an election to renew his mandate to govern in February 1974 but lost narrowly to Wilson. There was again talk of a military coup, with rumours of Lord Mountbatten as head of an interim administration after Wilson had been deposed.[173] In 1974, the British Army occupied Heathrow Airport on the grounds of training for possible IRA terrorist action at the airport. Although the military stated that this was a planned military exercise, 10 Downing Street was not informed in advance, and Wilson himself interpreted it as a show of strength, or warning, being made by the army.[174]

Historian Christopher Andrew's official history of MI5, The Defence of the Realm: The Authorized History of MI5, included a chapter (section E part 4) specifically alluding to a conspiracy instead of a plot against Wilson in the 1970s:

The characterisation of Harold Wilson as paranoid does not take account of the political context of the time, which was characterised by a paranoid political style generally which applied to both left and right (including MI5 itself). The suspicion of Wilson and others towards the unlawful activities of the security services and other right-wing figures resulted from concrete domestic and international developments discussed in more detail below. Andrew is correct to be sceptical, and there remains limited evidence of a 'plot' if a plot is defined as a tightly organised high-level conspiracy with a detailed plan. However, there is evidence of a conspiracy: a loosely connected series of unlawful manoeuvres against an elected government by a group of like-minded figures.[175]

The Director-General of the Security Service assured Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and she told the House of Commons on 6 May 1987:

He has found no evidence of any truth in the allegations. He has given me his personal assurance that the stories are false. In particular, he has advised me that all the Security Service officers who have been interviewed have categorically denied that they were involved in, or were aware of, any activities or plans to undermine or discredit Lord Wilson and his Government when he was prime minister.[176][177]

In 2009, The Defence of the Realm held that while MI5 kept a file on Wilson from 1945 when he became an MP—because communist civil servants claimed that he had similar political sympathies—there was no bugging of his home or office, and no conspiracy against him.[178] In 2010 newspaper reports made detailed allegations that the Cabinet Office had required that the section on bugging of 10 Downing Street be omitted from the history for "wider public interest reasons". In 1963, on Macmillan's orders following the Profumo affair, MI5 bugged the Cabinet room, the waiting room, and the prime minister's study until the devices were removed in 1977 on Callaghan's orders. From the records, it is unclear if Wilson or Heath knew of the bugging, and no recorded conversations were retained by MI5 so possibly the bugs were never activated.[179] Professor Andrew had previously recorded in the preface of the history that "One significant excision as a result of these [Cabinet Office] requirements (in the chapter on The Wilson Plot) is, I believe, hard to justify", giving credence to these new allegations.[180]

As a result of his concerns about the danger to British parliamentary democracy from these activities, Wilson issued instructions that no agency should ever bug the telephones of any members of Parliament, a policy (still in place) which came to be known as the Wilson Doctrine.

Honours edit

Statues and other tributes edit

 
Statue in St George's Square, Huddersfield

A portrait of Harold Wilson, painted by the Scottish portrait artist Cowan Dobson, hangs today at University College, Oxford.[183] Two statues of Harold Wilson stand in prominent places. The first, unveiled by the then prime minister Tony Blair in July 1999, stands outside Huddersfield railway station in St George's Square, Huddersfield. Costing £70,000, the statue, designed by sculptor Ian Walters, is based on photographs taken in 1964 and depicts Wilson in walking pose at the start of his first term as prime minister. His widow, Mary requested that the eight-foot-tall monument not show Wilson holding his famous pipe as she feared it would make the representation a caricature.[184]

A block of high-rise flats owned by Kirklees Metropolitan District Council in Huddersfield is named after Wilson.

In September 2006, Tony Blair unveiled a second bronze statue of Wilson in the latter's former constituency of Huyton, near Liverpool. The statue was created by Liverpool sculptor, Tom Murphy, and Blair paid tribute to Wilson's legacy at the unveiling, including the Open University. He added: "He also brought in a whole new culture, a whole new country. He made the country very, very different".[185]

Also in 2006, a street on a new housing development in Tividale, West Midlands, was named Wilson Drive in honour of Wilson. Along with neighbouring new development Callaghan Drive (named after James Callaghan), it formed part of a large housing estate developed since the 1960s where all streets were named after former prime ministers or senior parliamentary figures.[citation needed]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Harold Wilson
 
Coronet
An Baron's Coronet
Crest
In front of a mount of rock thereon a lighthouse a spade in bend proper debruised by a quill pen in bend sinister Argent.
Escutcheon
Argent an ancient galley proper pennons flying to the dexter Gules, on a chief Gules a stag's head cabossed Or between two water bougets Argent.
Supporters
Dexter: a winged lion Purpure charged on the wing with three roses Argent barbed Or seeded Vert; Sinister: a griffin Or charged on the wing with three roses Gules barbed Or.
Motto
TEMPUS RERUM IMPERATOR

Scholastic honours edit

Chancellor, visitor, governor, and fellowships
Location Date School Position
  England 1977 University of Huddersfield Honorary Fellow[186]
  England 1966–1985 University of Bradford Chancellor[187]
Honorary degrees
Location Date School Degree
  England 1964 Lancaster University Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[188][189][190]
  England 1965 University of Liverpool Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[191]
  England 1966 University of Sussex Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[192]
  England 1966 University of Nottingham Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[193]
  England 1967 University of Essex Doctorate[194]
  England 18 May 1974 Open University Doctor of the University (D.Univ)[195][196]
  Israel 1976 Bar-Ilan University Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D)[197]

Cultural depictions edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Andrew S. Crines and Kevin Hickson, eds., Harold Wilson: The Unprincipled Prime Minister?: A Reappraisal of Harold Wilson (Biteback Publishing, 2016) p. 311.
  2. ^ a b Goodman, Geoffrey (1 July 2005). "Harold Wilson obituary". The Guardian. London. from the original on 14 June 2018. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  3. ^ Ben Pimlott, Harold Wilson (1992) p 264
  4. ^ Ben Pimlott, Harold Wilson (1992), pp. 604–605, 648, 656, 670–677, 689.
  5. ^ Ben Pimlott, Harold Wilson (1992), pp. 3–20, quote p. 20.
  6. ^ Major, John (24 May 1995). "Mr Major's Commons Tribute to Harold Wilson – 24 May 1995". The Rt. Hon. Sir John Major KG CH. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
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  8. ^ Ben Pimlott, Harold Wilson, (1993), p. 59.
  9. ^ Jenkins (2009).
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  11. ^ Usborne, Simon (19 September 2006). "And you thought your family politics were bad... what's it like to be the child of a politician?". The Independent. London. from the original on 5 January 2020. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
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  21. ^ Dell 1997, p. 137.
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  25. ^ Campbell 1987, p. 289.
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Further reading edit

Bibliography edit

  • Wilson, Harold. A Personal Record: The Labour Government, 1964–1970 (1971).
  • Wilson, Harold. The Labour Government 1964–1970: A Personal Record (1979)

Biographical edit

Domestic policy and politics edit

  • Blick, Andrew. "Harold Wilson, Labour and the machinery of government". Contemporary British History 20#3 (2006): 343–362.
  • Butler, David, and Anthony King. The British General Election of 1964 (1965)
  • Butler, David, and M. Pinto-Duschinsky. The British General Election of 1970 (1971).
  • Butler, David, and Dennis Kavanagh. The British General Election of February 1974 (1974).
  • Butler, David, and Dennis Kavanagh. The British General Election of October 1974 (1975).
  • Campbell, John (1987). Nye Bevan and the Mirage of British Socialism. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-78998-7.
  • Childs, David. Britain since 1945: A Political History (7th ed. 2012), pp. 117–161, 179–196. excerpt
  • Coopey, Richard, and Steven Fielding. The Wilson Governments, 1964–1970 (1993).
  • Davies, Andrew. To build a new Jerusalem: the British Labour movement from the 1880s to the 1990s (1992), pp. 209–231.
  • Dell, Edmund. The Chancellors: A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer, 1945–90 (HarperCollins, 1997) (covers economic policy under the Attlee and Wilson governments)
  • Donoughue, Bernard. Prime Minister: the conduct of policy under Harold Wilson and James Callaghan (1987), highly favourable report by insider.
  • Dorey, Pete. "'Well, Harold Insists on Having It!'—The Political Struggle to Establish The Open University, 1965–67." Contemporary British History 29#2 (2015): 241–272.
  • Fielding, Steven, ed. The Labour governments, 1964–70, volume 1: Labour and cultural change (Manchester UP, 2003).
  • Heppell, Timothy. "The Labour Party leadership election of 1963: Explaining the unexpected election of Harold Wilson." Contemporary British History 24.2 (2010): 151–171. online
  • Holmes, Martin. The labour government, 1974–79: political aims and economic reality (Macmillan, 1985).
  • King, Anthony. The British General Election of 1966 (1966).
  • Lapping, Brian. The Labour Government, 1964–70 (Penguin books, 1970).
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. The People's Peace: British History 1945–1989 (1990), pp. 239–313.
  • O'Hara, Glen. From dreams to disillusionment: economic and social planning in 1960s Britain (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007) online PhD version
  • Ponting, Clive. Breach of promise: Labour in power, 1964–1970 (Penguin, 1989).
  • Pugh, Martin. Speak for Britain!: A New History of the Labour Party (2010), pp. 319–352.
  • Rogers, Chris. "From Social Contract to 'Social Contrick': The Depoliticisation of Economic Policy‐Making under Harold Wilson, 1974–751." British Journal of Politics & International Relations 11#4 (2009): 634–651. online
  • Sked, Alan and Chris Cook. Post-War Britain: A Political History (4th ed. 1993), pp. 200–253, 292–311.

Foreign policy edit

  • Colman, Jonathan. A 'Special Relationship'? Harold Wilson, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Anglo-American Relations 'At the Summit', 1964–68 (2004) online
  • Daddow, Oliver J. Harold Wilson and European integration: Britain's second application to join the EEC (Psychology Press, 2003).
  • Dockrill, Saki. "Forging the Anglo‐American global defence partnership: Harold Wilson, Lyndon Johnson and the Washington summit, December 1964." Journal of Strategic Studies 23#4 (2000): 107–129.
  • Ellis, Sylvia A. "Lyndon Johnson, Harold Wilson and the Vietnam War: A Not So Special Relationship?." in Jonathan Hollowell, ed., Twentieth-Century Anglo-American Relations. (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2001), pp. 180–204.
  • Haeussler, Mathias. "A Pyrrhic Victory: Harold Wilson, Helmut Schmidt, and the British Renegotiation of EC Membership, 1974–5." International History Review 37#4 (2015): 768–789.
  • Hughes, Geraint. Harold Wilson's Cold War: The Labour Government and East-West Politics, 1964–1970 (2009)
  • Parr, Helen. "A question of leadership: July 1966 and Harold Wilson's European decision." Contemporary British History 19.4 (2005): 437–458.
  • Parr, Helen. Britain's Policy Towards the European Community: Harold Wilson and Britain's World Role, 1964–1967 (Routledge, 2005).
  • Vickers, Rhiannon. "Harold Wilson, the British Labour Party, and the War in Vietnam." Journal of Cold War Studies 10.2 (2008): 41–70. online
  • Young, John W. ed. The Labour governments 1964–1970 volume 2: International policy (2008).

Historiography edit

  • Crines, Andrew S., ed. Harold Wilson: The Unprincipled Prime Minister?: A Reappraisal of Harold Wilson (2016). evaluations by scholars and politicians; excerpt
  • O'Hara, Glen; Parr, Helen. "The Fall and Rise of a Reputation" Contemporary British History (2006) 20#3, pp. 295–302
  • Perkins, Anne. "Labour needs to rethink Harold Wilson’s legacy. It still matters" The Guardian, 10 March 2016
  • Pimlott, Ben. Frustrate Their Knavish Tricks: Writings on Biography, History and Politics (1994) pp. 31–36.

External links edit

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Ormskirk

19451950
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New constituency Member of Parliament for Huyton
19501983
Constituency abolished
Political offices
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1945–1947
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1947
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Preceded by President of the Board of Trade
1947–1951
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Preceded by Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
1955–1961
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1961–1963
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Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1963–1964
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Preceded by Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1964–1970
Succeeded by
First Lord of the Treasury
1964–1970
New office Minister for the Civil Service
1968–1970
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1970–1974
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1974–1976
Succeeded by
First Lord of the Treasury
1974–1976
Minister for the Civil Service
1974–1976
Party political offices
Preceded by Chair of the Fabian Society
1954–1955
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Preceded by Chair of the Labour Party
1961–1962
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1963–1976
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1966–1985
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1972–1973
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harold, wilson, other, people, named, disambiguation, james, baron, wilson, rievaulx, march, 1916, 1995, british, statesman, labour, politician, served, prime, minister, united, kingdom, twice, from, october, 1964, june, 1970, again, from, march, 1974, april, . For other people named Harold Wilson see Harold Wilson disambiguation James Harold Wilson Baron Wilson of Rievaulx KG OBE PC FRS FSS 11 March 1916 24 May 1995 was a British statesman and Labour politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom twice from October 1964 to June 1970 and again from March 1974 to April 1976 He was the Leader of the Labour Party from 1963 to 1976 and was a Member of Parliament MP from 1945 to 1983 Wilson is the only Labour leader to have formed administrations following four general elections The Right HonourableThe Lord Wilson of RievaulxKG OBE PC FRS FSSWilson in 1962Prime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 4 March 1974 5 April 1976MonarchElizabeth IIPreceded byEdward HeathSucceeded byJames CallaghanIn office 16 October 1964 19 June 1970MonarchElizabeth IIFirst SecretaryGeorge BrownMichael StewartBarbara CastlePreceded byAlec Douglas HomeSucceeded byEdward HeathLeader of the Labour PartyIn office 14 February 1963 5 April 1976DeputyGeorge BrownRoy JenkinsEdward ShortPreceded byHugh GaitskellSucceeded byJames CallaghanLeader of the OppositionIn office 19 June 1970 4 March 1974MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterEdward HeathPreceded byEdward HeathSucceeded byEdward HeathIn office 14 February 1963 16 October 1964MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold MacmillanAlec Douglas HomePreceded byGeorge BrownSucceeded byAlec Douglas HomeMinisterial officesPresident of the Board of TradeIn office 29 September 1947 23 April 1951Prime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byStafford CrippsSucceeded byHartley ShawcrossSecretary for Overseas TradeIn office 10 July 1947 29 September 1947Prime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byHilary MarquandSucceeded byArthur BottomleyParliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of WorksIn office 26 July 1945 10 July 1947Prime MinisterClement AttleeMinisterGeorge TomlinsonCharles KeyPreceded byReginald Manningham BullerSucceeded byEvan DurbinShadow cabinet officesShadow Foreign SecretaryIn office 2 November 1961 14 February 1963LeaderHugh GaitskellGeorge BrownPreceded byDenis HealeySucceeded byPatrick Gordon WalkerShadow Chancellor of the ExchequerIn office 14 December 1955 2 November 1961LeaderHugh GaitskellPreceded byHugh GaitskellSucceeded byJames CallaghanParliamentary officesMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalLife peerage 16 September 1983 24 May 1995Member of Parliamentfor HuytonIn office 23 February 1950 13 May 1983Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolishedMember of Parliamentfor OrmskirkIn office 5 July 1945 3 February 1950Preceded byStephen King HallSucceeded byRonald CrossPersonal detailsBornJames Harold Wilson 1916 03 11 11 March 1916Huddersfield West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied24 May 1995 1995 05 24 aged 79 London EnglandResting placeSt Mary s Old Church St Mary s Isles of Scilly EnglandPolitical partyLabourSpouseMary Baldwin m 1940 wbr Children2 including RobinAlma materJesus College OxfordOccupationPoliticianauthorlecturerProfessionCivil servantSignatureBorn in Huddersfield Yorkshire to a politically active middle class family Wilson won a scholarship to attend Royds Hall Grammar School and went on to study philosophy politics and economics at Jesus College Oxford He was later an economic history lecturer at New College Oxford and a research fellow at University College Oxford Elected to Parliament in 1945 for the seat of Ormskirk in Lancashire Wilson was immediately appointed to the Attlee government as a Parliamentary Secretary he became Secretary for Overseas Trade in 1947 and was elevated to the Cabinet shortly thereafter as President of the Board of Trade In 1950 he moved to represent the nearby seat of Huyton Following Labour s defeat at the 1955 election Wilson joined the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Chancellor and was moved to the role of Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1961 When Labour Leader Hugh Gaitskell died suddenly in January 1963 Wilson won the subsequent leadership election to replace him becoming Leader of the Opposition Wilson led Labour to a narrow victory at the 1964 election His first period as prime minister saw a period of low unemployment and relative economic prosperity although this would later become hindered by significant problems with Britain s external balance of payments The Wilson government oversaw significant societal changes in the United Kingdom abolishing both capital punishment and theatre censorship partially decriminalising male homosexuality in England and Wales relaxing the divorce laws limiting immigration and liberalising birth control and abortion law In the midst of this programme Wilson called a snap election in 1966 which Labour won with a much increased majority Wilson s government armed Nigeria during the Biafran War In 1969 he sent British troops to Northern Ireland After losing the 1970 election to Edward Heath s Conservatives Wilson chose to remain in the Labour leadership and spent four years back in the role of Leader of the Opposition before leading Labour through the February 1974 election which resulted in a hung parliament Although the Conservatives had won more votes than Labour Heath s talks with the Liberal Party failed and Wilson was appointed prime minister for a second time now as leader of a minority government Wilson called a snap election in October 1974 which gave Labour a small majority During his second term as prime minister Wilson oversaw the referendum that confirmed the UK s membership of the European Communities In March 1976 he suddenly announced his resignation as prime minister and was succeeded by James Callaghan Wilson remained in the House of Commons until retiring in 1983 when he was elevated to the House of Lords as Lord Wilson of Rievaulx Historians evaluate Wilson in terms of leading the Labour Party through difficult political issues with considerable skill Wilson s reputation was low when he left office and was still poor in 2016 1 Key issues he faced included the role of public ownership membership of the European Communities and how to avoid committing British troops to the Vietnam War 2 Wilson s approach to socialism was regarded by some in the Labour Party as too moderate by others as too left wing A member of Labour s left wing faction he joked about leading a Cabinet made up mostly of social democrats comparing himself to a Bolshevik revolutionary presiding over a Tsarist cabinet but there was little to divide him ideologically from the majority of his cabinet 3 His stated ambitions of substantially improving Britain s long term economic performance applying technology more democratically and reducing inequality went to some extent unfulfilled 4 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education 1 2 Marriage 1 3 War service 2 Member of Parliament 1945 1947 3 Cabinet minister 1947 1951 3 1 Bonfire of controls 3 2 Three ambitious young men 4 In Opposition 1951 1964 4 1 Shadow Cabinet 1954 1963 4 2 Opposition Leader 1963 64 5 Prime minister 1964 1970 5 1 Appointment 5 2 First Cabinet and ministry 5 3 Domestic affairs 5 3 1 Economic policies 5 3 2 Social issues 5 3 3 Education 5 3 4 Housing 5 3 5 Urban renewal 5 3 6 Social Services and welfare 5 3 7 Agriculture 5 3 8 Health 5 4 Social policies 5 4 1 Workers 5 4 2 Transport 5 4 3 Regional development 5 4 4 International development 5 4 5 Taxation 5 4 6 Liberal reforms 5 4 7 Industrial relations 5 4 8 Record on income distribution 5 5 Foreign affairs 5 5 1 United States 5 5 2 Europe 5 5 3 Asia 5 5 4 Africa 5 6 Electoral defeat and resignation 6 Return to opposition 1970 1974 7 Prime minister 1974 1976 7 1 1975 European referendum 7 2 Domestic economic affairs 7 3 Northern Ireland 7 4 Resignation 8 Post premiership 1976 1995 8 1 Retirement 8 2 Death 9 Legacy 9 1 Political style 9 2 Reputation 10 Possible plots and conspiracy theories 11 Honours 11 1 Statues and other tributes 12 Arms 13 Scholastic honours 14 Cultural depictions 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 17 1 Bibliography 17 2 Biographical 17 3 Domestic policy and politics 17 4 Foreign policy 17 5 Historiography 18 External linksEarly life editWilson was born at Warneford Road Cowlersley in the western suburbs of the mill town of Huddersfield in the West Riding of Yorkshire England on 11 March 1916 He came from a political family his father James Herbert Wilson 1882 1971 was a works chemist who had been active in the Liberal Party going as far as to be Winston Churchill s deputy election agent in a 1908 by election but later joined the Labour Party His mother Ethel nee Seddon 1882 1957 was a schoolteacher before her marriage in 1901 her brother Harold Seddon settled in Western Australia and became a local political leader When Wilson was eight he visited London and a much reproduced photograph was taken of him standing on the doorstep of 10 Downing Street At the age of ten he went with his family to Australia where he became fascinated with the pomp and glamour of politics On the way home he told his mother I am going to be prime minister 5 Education edit Wilson won a scholarship to attend Royds Hall Grammar School his local grammar school now a comprehensive school in Huddersfield in Yorkshire 6 His father working as an industrial chemist was made redundant in December 1930 and it took him nearly two years to find work he moved to Spital on the Wirral Peninsula to do so Wilson continued his education in the Sixth Form at the Wirral Grammar School for Boys where he became Head Boy nbsp Garter banner of Harold Wilson in the chapel at Jesus College Oxford where he studied PPEWilson did well at school and although he missed getting a scholarship he obtained an exhibition this when topped up by a county grant enabled him to study at Jesus College Oxford from 1934 At Oxford Wilson was moderately active in politics as a member of the Liberal Party but was strongly influenced by G D H Cole His politics tutor R B McCallum considered Wilson to be the best student he ever had 7 He graduated in PPE Philosophy Politics and Economics with an outstanding first class Bachelor of Arts degree with alphas on every paper in the final examinations and a series of major academic awards 8 Biographer Roy Jenkins wrote Academically his results put him among prime ministers in the category of Peel Gladstone Asquith and no one else But he lacked originality What he was superb at was the quick assimilation of knowledge combined with an ability to keep it ordered in his mind and to present it lucidly in a form welcome to his examiners 9 He continued in academia becoming one of the youngest Oxford dons of the century at the age of 21 He was a lecturer in Economic History at New College from 1937 and a research fellow at University College Marriage edit On New Year s Day 1940 in the chapel of Mansfield College Oxford he married Mary Baldwin who remained his wife until his death Mary Wilson became a published poet They had two sons Robin and Giles named after Giles Alington Robin became a professor of Mathematics and Giles became a teacher and later a train driver 10 In their twenties his sons were under a kidnap threat from the IRA because of their father s prominence 11 War service edit On the outbreak of the Second World War Wilson volunteered for military service but was classed as a specialist and moved into the civil service instead For much of this time he was a research assistant to William Beveridge the Master of University College working on the issues of unemployment and the trade cycle Wilson later became a statistician and economist for the coal industry He was Director of Economics and Statistics at the Ministry of Fuel and Power in 1943 44 and was made an OBE for his services 12 He was to remain passionately interested in statistics becoming a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society in 1943 13 As President of the Board of Trade he was the driving force behind the Statistics of Trade Act 1947 which is still the authority governing most economic statistics in Great Britain He was instrumental as prime minister in appointing Claus Moser as head of the Central Statistical Office and was president of the Royal Statistical Society between 1972 and 1973 Member of Parliament 1945 1947 editAs the war drew to an end he searched for a seat to contest at the impending general election He was selected for the constituency of Ormskirk then held by Stephen King Hall Wilson agreed to be adopted as the candidate immediately rather than delay until the election was called and was therefore compelled to resign from his position in the Civil Service He served as Praelector in Economics at University College between his resignation and his election to the House of Commons He also used this time to write A New Deal for Coal which used his wartime experience to argue for the nationalisation of the coal mines on the grounds of the improved efficiency he predicted would ensue In the 1945 general election Wilson won his seat in the Labour landslide To his surprise he was immediately appointed to the government by Prime Minister Clement Attlee as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Works Two years later he became Secretary for Overseas Trade in which capacity he made several official trips to the Soviet Union to negotiate supply contracts The boundaries of his Ormskirk constituency were significantly altered before the general election of 1950 He stood instead for the new seat of Huyton near Liverpool and was narrowly elected he served there for 33 years until 1983 14 Cabinet minister 1947 1951 editBonfire of controls edit Wilson was appointed President of the Board of Trade on 29 September 1947 becoming at the age of 31 the youngest member of a British Cabinet in the 20th century Initially Wilson favoured a more interventionist policy seeking requirements for government officials to be seated on private boards of directors further price controls and nationalizations of private industries which opposed government policy However he abandoned these plans after his colleagues disagreed 15 He made it a priority to reduce wartime rationing which he referred to as a bonfire of controls 16 Wilson decided that the massive number of wartime controls was slowing the conversion to peacetime prosperity and he was committed to removing them as fast as possible 17 He ended rationing of potatoes bread and jam as well as shoes and some other clothing controls In November 1948 Wilson announced his Board of Trade had removed the need for over 200 000 licenses and permits By March 1949 he promised to remove the need for another 900 000 although meat remained in short supply and was still rationed as was petrol 18 Henry Irvine argues that Wilson s success with the bonfire controls established his reputation as a modernizing specialist with both the general public and the political elite Irving also argues that the selection timing and especially the publicity Wilson devoted to the bonfire represented the emerging skills of a brilliant young politician While each major bonfire was justified in terms of technical economic advantages it was selected and publicized widely to reach the largest possible audience so that everybody could understand that their bread and jam became free again 19 Three ambitious young men edit In mid 1949 with Chancellor of the Exchequer Stafford Cripps having gone to Switzerland in an attempt to recover his health Wilson was one of a group of three young ministers all of them former economics dons and wartime civil servants convened to advise Prime Minister Attlee on financial matters The others were Douglas Jay Economic Secretary to the Treasury and Hugh Gaitskell Minister of Fuel and Power both of whom soon grew to distrust him Jay wrote of Wilson s role in the debates over whether or not to devalue sterling that he changed sides three times within eight days and finished up facing both ways Wilson was given the task during his Swiss holiday of taking a letter to Cripps informing him of the decision to devalue to which Cripps had been opposed 20 Wilson had tarnished his reputation in both political and official circles 16 Although a successful minister he was regarded as self important He was not seriously considered for the job of Chancellor when Cripps stepped down in October 1950 it was given to Gaitskell possibly in part because of his cautious role during devaluation 21 22 Wilson was becoming known in the Labour Party as a left winger and joined Aneurin Bevan and John Freeman in resigning from the government in April 1951 in protest at the introduction of National Health Service NHS medical charges to meet the financial demands imposed by the Korean War At this time Wilson was not yet regarded as a heavyweight politician Hugh Dalton referred to him scornfully as Nye Bevan s dog 23 After Labour lost the 1951 election he became the Chairman of Keep Left Bevan s political group At the bitter Morecambe Conference in late 1952 Wilson was one of the Bevanites elected as constituency representatives to Labour s National Executive Committee NEC whilst senior right wingers such as Dalton and Herbert Morrison were voted off 24 In Opposition 1951 1964 editShadow Cabinet 1954 1963 edit nbsp Wilson in 1962Wilson had never made much secret that his support of the left wing Aneurin Bevan was opportunistic In early 1954 Bevan resigned from the Shadow Cabinet elected by Labour MPs when the party was in opposition over Labour s support for the setting up of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization SEATO Wilson who had been runner up in the elections stepped up to fill the vacant place He was supported in this by Richard Crossman but his actions angered Bevan and the other Bevanites 25 Wilson s course in intra party matters in the 1950s and early 1960s left him neither fully accepted nor trusted by the left or the right in the Labour Party Despite his earlier association with Bevan in 1955 he backed Hugh Gaitskell the right wing candidate in internal Labour Party terms against Bevan for the party leadership election 26 Gaitskell appointed him Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1955 and he proved to be very effective 27 One of his procedural moves caused a substantial delay to the progress of the Government s Finance Bill in 1955 and his speeches as Shadow Chancellor from 1956 were widely praised for their clarity and wit He coined the term Gnomes of Zurich to ridicule Swiss bankers for selling Britain short and pushing the pound sterling down by speculation 28 He conducted an inquiry into the Labour Party s organisation following its defeat in the 1955 general election its report compared Labour s organisation to an antiquated penny farthing bicycle and made various recommendations for improvements 29 Unusually Wilson combined the job of Chairman of the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee with that of Shadow Chancellor from 1959 holding that position until 1963 Gaitskell s leadership was weakened after the Labour Party s 1959 defeat his controversial attempt to ditch Labour s commitment to nationalisation by scrapping Clause Four and his defeat at the 1960 Party Conference over a motion supporting unilateral nuclear disarmament Bevan had died in July 1960 so Wilson established himself as a leader of the Labour left by launching an opportunistic but unsuccessful challenge to Gaitskell s leadership in November 1960 Wilson would later be moved to the position of Shadow Foreign Secretary in 1961 before he challenged for the deputy leadership in 1962 but was defeated by George Brown Opposition Leader 1963 64 edit Further information First Shadow Cabinet of Harold Wilson Gaitskell died in January 1963 just as the Labour Party had begun to unite and appeared to have a very good chance of winning the next election with the Macmillan Government running into trouble Timothy Heppell has explored how Wilson won the Labour Party leadership election Wilson had alienated the right wing of the party by his angry attempts to defeat Gaitskell in 1960 for the leadership and George Brown in 1962 for the deputy leadership These misadventures gave Wilson a reputation for disloyalty and divisiveness Heppell identifies three factors whereby Wilson overcame these disadvantages Firstly he had united the party s left wing behind him and they showed no willingness to compromise Secondly the right wing although more numerous was deeply split between Brown and James Callaghan Wilson took the lead on the first ballot and gained momentum on the second Finally Brown proved a poor campaigner emphasizing divisive factors rather than his own credentials allowing Wilson to emerge surprisingly as the unity candidate thus becoming the Leader of the Labour Party and the Leader of the Opposition 30 At the party s 1963 annual conference Wilson made his best remembered speech on the implications of scientific and technological change He argued that the Britain that is going to be forged in the white heat of this revolution will be no place for restrictive practices or for outdated measures on either side of industry This speech did much to set Wilson s reputation as a technocrat not tied to the prevailing class system 31 Labour s 1964 election campaign was aided by the Profumo affair a ministerial sex scandal that had mortally wounded Harold Macmillan and hurt the Conservatives Wilson made capital without getting involved in the less salubrious aspects Asked for a statement on the scandal he reportedly said No comment in glorious Technicolor 32 Sir Alec Douglas Home was an aristocrat who had given up his peerage to sit in the House of Commons and become prime minister upon Macmillan s resignation To Wilson s comment that he was out of touch with ordinary people since he was the 14th Earl of Home Home retorted I suppose Mr Wilson is the fourteenth Mr Wilson 33 Prime minister 1964 1970 editAppointment edit Further information Labour government 1964 1970 Labour won the 1964 general election with a narrow majority of four seats and Wilson became prime minister the youngest person to hold that office since Lord Rosebery 70 years earlier During 1965 by election losses reduced the government s majority to a single seat but in March 1966 Wilson took the gamble of calling another general election The gamble paid off because this time Labour achieved a 96 seat majority 34 over the Conservatives who the previous year had made Edward Heath their leader First Cabinet and ministry edit Soon after his appointment as prime minister Wilson had only small majority to govern and it not had a sufficient working majority to pass serious legislation which led to impotency during this Parliament It was not until 1966 another election was called leading to another general election By this time the Conservatives were led by Edward Heath and given their disastrous policies led to economic instability lost that election as well This gave Labour a majority of 96 seats and saw the continuation of the Wilson government for the next four years His senior appointees include James Callaghan as Chancellor of the Exchequer Lord Gardiner as Lord High Chancellor Patrick Gordon Walker as Foreign Secretary Frank Soskice as Home Secretary George Brown as Secretary of State for Economic Affairs and First Secretary of State respectively A new government departments and several ministrial positions were established by Wilson when he became prime minister The Department of Economic Affairs was created in order drive economic planning and undertaking long term planning and the Department of Health and Social Security for health and social security responsibilities Two ministrial positions within the Foreign Office for dealing with foreign and commonwealth affairs Wilson reshuffled his cabinet numerous times and moved ministers specially in the Foreign Office several times Michael Stewart was made Foreign Secretary two times and was preceded by George Brown whose alcoholism led to his resignation and barring from taking office Franck Soskice being replaced by Roy Jenkins Gordon Walker being made Minister without Portfolio to Secretary of State for Education and Science during his first and second terms as prime minister Domestic affairs edit The 1964 1970 Labour government carried out a broad range of reforms during its time in office in such areas as social security 35 civil liberties 36 housing 37 health 38 education 39 and worker s rights 40 It is perhaps best remembered for the liberal social reforms introduced or supported by Home Secretary Roy Jenkins Notable amongst these was the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality and abortion reform of divorce laws the abolition of theatre censorship and capital punishment except for a small number of offences notably high treason and various pieces of legislation addressing race relations and racial discrimination 41 His government also undertook the easing of means testing for non contributory welfare benefits the linking of pensions to earnings and the provision of industrial injury benefits Wilson s government also made significant reforms to education most notably the expansion of comprehensive education and the creation of the Open University 41 Economic policies edit Wilson s government put faith in economic planning as a way to solve Britain s economic problems The government s strategy involved setting up a Department of Economic Affairs DEA which would draw up a National Plan which was intended to promote growth and investment Wilson believed that scientific progress was the key to economic and social advancement as such he famously referred to the white heat of technology in reference to the modernisation of British industry This was to be achieved through a new Ministry of Technology shortened to Mintech which would coordinate research and development and support the swift adoption of new technology by industry aided by government funded infrastructure improvements 41 In practice however events derailed much of the initial optimism Upon coming to power the government was informed that they had inherited an exceptionally large deficit of 800 million on Britain s balance of trade This partly reflected the preceding government s expansive fiscal policy in the run up to the 1964 election Immediately the pound came under enormous pressure and many economists advocated devaluation of the pound in response but Wilson resisted reportedly in part out of concern that Labour which had previously devalued sterling in 1949 would become tagged as the party of devaluation Wilson also believed that a devaluation would disproportionately harm low income Britons with savings and poorer Commonwealth of Nations countries in the sterling area The government instead opted to deal with the problem by imposing a temporary surcharge on imports and a series of deflationary measures designed to reduce demand and therefore the inflow of imports 42 In the latter half of 1967 an attempt was made to prevent the recession in activity from going too far in the form of a stimulus to consumer durable spending through an easing of credit which in turn prevented a rise in unemployment 43 After a costly battle market pressures forced the government to devalue the pound by 14 from 2 80 to 2 40 in November 1967 41 Wilson was much criticised for a broadcast soon after in which he assured listeners that the pound in your pocket had not lost its value 44 Economic performance did show some improvement after the devaluation as economists had predicted The devaluation with accompanying austerity measures which ensured resources went into exports rather than domestic consumption successfully restored the trade balance to surplus by 1969 In retrospect Wilson has been widely criticised for not devaluing earlier however he believed there were strong arguments against it including the fear that it would set off a round of competitive devaluations and concern about the impact price rises following a devaluation would have on people on low incomes 41 The government s decision over its first three years to defend sterling s parity with traditional deflationary measures ran counter to hopes for an expansionist push for growth The National Plan produced by the DEA in 1965 targeted an annual growth rate of 3 8 however under the restrained circumstances the actual average rate of growth between 1964 and 1970 was a far more modest 2 2 The DEA itself was wound up in 1969 The government s other main initiative Mintech did have some success at switching research and development spending from military to civilian purposes and of achieving increases in industrial productivity although persuading industry to adopt new technology proved more difficult than had been hoped 41 Faith in indicative planning as a pathway to growth 45 embodied in the DEA and Mintech was at the time by no means confined to the Labour Party Wilson built on foundations that had been laid by his Conservative predecessors in the shape for example of the National Economic Development Council known as Neddy and its regional counterparts the little Neddies 41 Government intervention in industry was greatly enhanced with the National Economic Development Office greatly strengthened and the number of little Neddies was increased from eight in 1964 to twenty one in 1970 The government s policy of selective economic intervention was later characterised by the establishment of a new super ministry of technology a connexion not always publicly grasped under Tony Benn 46 The continued relevance of industrial nationalisation a centrepiece of the post War Labour government s programme had been a key point of contention in Labour s internal struggles of the 1950s and early 1960s Wilson s predecessor as leader Hugh Gaitskell had tried in 1960 to tackle the controversy head on with a proposal to expunge Clause Four the public ownership clause from the party s constitution but had been forced to climb down Wilson took a characteristically more subtle approach No significant expansion of public ownership took place under Wilson s government however he placated the party s left wing by renationalising the steel industry under the Iron and Steel Act 1967 which had been denationalised by the Conservatives in the 1950s creating the British Steel Corporation 41 One innovation of the Wilson government was the creation in 1968 of the Girobank a publicly owned bank which operated via the General Post Office network As most working class people in the 1960s did not have bank accounts this was designed to serve their needs as such it was billed as the people s bank 47 Girobank was a long term success surviving until 2003 48 Wilson s government presided over a rate of unemployment which was low by historic and later standards but did rise during his period in office Between 1964 and 1966 the average rate of unemployment was 1 6 while between 1966 and 1970 the average stood at 2 5 41 He had entered power at a time when unemployment stood at around 400 000 It still stood at 371 000 by early 1966 after a steady fall during 1965 but by March 1967 it stood at 631 000 It fell again towards the end of the decade standing at 582 000 by the time of the general election in June 1970 49 Despite the economic difficulties faced by Wilson s government it was able to achieve important advances in several domestic policy areas As reflected by Wilson in 1971 It was a government which faced disappointment after disappointment and none greater than the economic restraints in our ability to carry through the social revolution to which we were committed at the speed we would have wished Yet despite those restraints and the need to transfer resources from domestic expenditure private and public to the needs of our export markets we carried through an expansion in the social services health welfare and housing unparalleled in our history 50 Social issues edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Social issues Several liberalising social reforms were passed through parliament during Wilson s first period in government These dealt with the death penalty homosexual acts abortion censorship and the voting age There were new restrictions on immigration 51 Wilson personally coming culturally from a provincial non conformist background showed no particular enthusiasm for much of this agenda 52 Education edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Education Education held special significance for a socialist of Wilson s generation given its role in both opening up opportunities for children from working class backgrounds and enabling Britain to seize the potential benefits of scientific advances Under the first Wilson government for the first time in British history more money was allocated to education than to defence 53 Wilson continued the rapid creation of new universities in line with the recommendations of the Robbins Report a bipartisan policy already in train when Labour took power Wilson promoted the concept of an Open University to give adults who had missed out on tertiary education a second chance through part time study and distance learning His political commitment included assigning implementation responsibility to Baroness Lee the widow of Aneurin Bevan 54 By 1981 45 000 students had received degrees through the Open University 54 Money was also channelled into local authority run colleges of education 46 Wilson s record on secondary education is by contrast highly controversial Pressure grew for the abolition of the selective principle underlying the eleven plus and replacement with Comprehensive schools which would serve the full range of children see the article grammar schools debate Comprehensive education became Labour Party policy From 1966 to 1970 the proportion of children in comprehensive schools increased from about 10 to over 30 55 Labour pressed local authorities to convert grammar schools into comprehensives Conversion continued on a large scale during the subsequent Conservative Heath administration although the Secretary of State Margaret Thatcher ended the compulsion of local governments to convert A major controversy that arose during Wilson s first government was the decision that the government could not fulfil its long held promise to raise the school leaving age to 16 because of the investment required in infrastructure such as extra classrooms and teachers Overall public expenditure on education rose as a proportion of GNP from 4 8 in 1964 to 5 9 in 1968 and the number of teachers in training increased by more than a third between 1964 and 1967 56 The percentage of students staying on at school after the age of sixteen increased similarly and the student population increased by over 10 each year Pupil teacher ratios were also steadily reduced As a result of the first Wilson government s educational policies opportunities for working class children were improved while overall access to education in 1970 was broader than in 1964 57 As summarised by Brian Lapping The years 1964 70 were largely taken up with creating extra places in universities polytechnics technical colleges colleges of education preparing for the day when a new Act would make it the right of a student on leaving school to have a place in an institution of further education 46 In 1966 Wilson was created the first Chancellor of the newly created University of Bradford a position he held until 1985 Housing edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Housing Housing was a major policy area under the first Wilson government During Wilson s time in office from 1964 to 1970 more new houses were built than in the last six years of the previous Conservative government The proportion of council housing rose from 42 to 50 of the total 58 while the number of council homes built increased steadily from 119 000 in 1964 to 133 000 in 1965 and 142 000 in 1966 Allowing for demolitions 1 3 million new homes were built between 1965 and 1970 54 To encourage homeownership the government introduced the Option Mortgage Scheme 1968 which made low income housebuyers eligible for subsidies equivalent to tax relief on mortgage interest payments 59 This scheme had the effect of reducing housing costs for buyers on low incomes 60 and enabling more people to become owner occupiers 61 In addition house owners were exempted from capital gains tax Together with the Option Mortgage Scheme this measure stimulated the private housing market 62 Wilson in a 1967 speech said the grime and muddle and decay of our Victorian heritage is being replaced The new city centres with their university precincts their light clean and well spaced civic buildings will not merely brighten the physical environment of our people they will change the very quality of urban life in Britain 63 Significant emphasis was also placed on town planning with new conservation areas introduced and a new generation of new towns built notably Milton Keynes The New Towns Acts of 1965 and 1968 together gave the government the authority through its ministries to designate any area of land as a site for a new town 64 Urban renewal edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Urban renewal Many subsidies were allocated to local authorities faced with acute areas of severe poverty or other social problems 46 The Housing Act 1969 provided local authorities with the duty of working out what to do about unsatisfactory areas Local authorities could declare general improvement areas in which they would be able to buy up land and houses and spend environmental improvement grants On the same basis taking geographical areas of need a package was developed by the government which resembled a miniature poverty programme 65 In July 1967 the government decided to pour money into what the Plowden Committee defined as Educational Priority Areas poverty stricken areas where children were environmentally deprived Some poor inner city areas were subsequently granted EPA status despite concerns that Local Education Authorities would be unable to finance Educational Priority Areas 66 From 1968 to 1970 150 new schools were built under the educational priority programme 43 Social Services and welfare edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Social Services and welfare nbsp Wilson on a visit to a retirement home in Washington Tyne and WearAccording to Tony Atkinson social security received much more attention from the first Wilson government than it did during the previous thirteen years of Conservative government 43 Following its victory in the 1964 general election Wilson s government began to increase social benefits Prescription charges for medicines were abolished immediately while pensions were raised to a record 21 of average male industrial wages In 1966 the system of National Assistance a social assistance scheme for the poor was overhauled and renamed Supplementary Benefit The means test was replaced with a statement of income and benefit rates for pensioners the great majority of claimants were increased granting them a real gain in income Before the 1966 election the widow s pension was tripled Due to austerity measures following an economic crisis prescription charges were re introduced in 1968 as an alternative to cutting the hospital building programme although those sections of the population who were most in need including supplementary benefit claimants the long term sick children and pensioners were exempted from charges 67 The widow s earning rule was also abolished 54 while a range of new social benefits was introduced An Act was passed which replaced National Assistance with Supplementary Benefits The new Act laid down that people who satisfied its conditions were entitled to these noncontributory benefits Unlike the National Assistance scheme which operated like state charity for the worst off the new Supplementary Benefits scheme was a right of every citizen who found himself or herself in severe difficulties Those persons over the retirement age with no means who were considered to be unable to live on the basic pension which provided less than what the government deemed as necessary for subsistence became entitled to a long term allowance of an extra few shillings a week Some simplification of the procedure for claiming benefits was also introduced 46 From 1966 an exceptionally severe disablement allowance was added for those claimants receiving constant attendance allowance which was paid to those with the higher or intermediate rates of constant attendance allowance and who were exceptionally severely disabled 68 Redundancy payments were introduced in 1965 to lessen the impact of unemployment and earnings related benefits for maternity 69 unemployment sickness industrial injuries and widowhood were introduced in 1966 followed by the replacement of flat rate family allowances with an earnings related scheme in 1968 65 From July 1966 onwards the temporary allowance for widow of severely disabled pensioners was extended from 13 to 26 weeks 70 Increases were made in pensions and other benefits during Wilson s first year in office that were the largest ever real term increases carried out up until that point 71 Social security benefits were markedly increased during Wilson s first two years in office as characterised by a budget passed in the final quarter of 1964 which raised the standard benefit rates for old age sickness and invalidity by 18 5 72 In 1965 the government increased the national assistance rate to a higher level relative to earnings and via annual adjustments broadly maintained the rate at between 19 and 20 of gross industrial earnings until the start of 1970 43 In the five years from 1964 up until the last increases made by the First Wilson Government pensions went up by 23 in real terms supplementary benefits by 26 in real terms and sickness and unemployment benefits by 153 in real terms largely as a result of the introduction of earnings related benefits in 1967 73 Agriculture edit Under the First Wilson Government subsidies for farmers were increased 74 75 Farmers who wished to leave the land or retire became eligible for grants or annuities if their holdings were sold for approved amalgamations and could receive those benefits whether they wished to remain in their farmhouses or not A Small Farmers Scheme was also extended and from 1 December 1965 forty thousand more farmers became eligible for the maximum 1 000 grant New grants to agriculture also encouraged the voluntary pooling of smallholdings and in cases where their land was purchased for non commercial purposes tenant farmers could now receive double the previous disturbance compensation 76 A Hill Land Improvement Scheme introduced by the Agriculture Act 1967 provided 50 grants for a wide range of land improvements along with a supplementary 10 grant on drainage works benefitting hill land 77 The Agriculture Act 1967 also provided grants to promote farm amalgamation and to compensate outgoers 78 Health edit The proportion of GNP spent on the National Health Service rose from 4 2 in 1964 to about 5 in 1969 This additional expenditure provided for an energetic revival of a policy of building health centres for general practitioners extra pay for doctors who served in areas particularly short of them significant growth in hospital staffing and a significant increase in a hospital building programme Far more money was spent each year on the NHS than under the 1951 64 Conservative governments while much more effort was put into modernising and reorganising the health service 46 Stronger central and regional organisations were established for bulk purchase of hospital supplies while some efforts were made to reduce inequalities in standards of care In addition the government increased the intake to medical schools 43 The 1966 Doctor s Charter introduced allowances for rent and ancillary staff significantly increased the pay scales and changed the structure of payments to reflect both qualifications of doctors and the form of their practices i e group practice These changes not only led to higher morale but also resulted in the increased use of ancillary staff and nursing attachments growth in the number of health centres and group practices and a boost in the modernisation of practices in terms of equipment appointment systems and buildings 64 The charter introduced a new system of payment for GPs with refunds for surgery rents and rates to ensure that the costs of improving his surgery did not diminish the doctor s income together with allowances for the greater part of ancillary staff costs In addition a Royal Commission on medical education was set up partly to draw up ideas for training GPs since these doctors the largest group of all doctors in the country had previously not received any special training merely being those who at the end of their pre doctoral courses did not go on for further training in any speciality 46 In 1967 local authorities were empowered to provide free family planning advice and means tested contraceptive devices 67 In addition medical training was expanded following the Todd Report on medical education in 1968 64 79 In addition National Health expenditure rose from 4 2 of GNP in 1964 to 5 in 1969 and spending on hospital construction doubled 58 The Health Services and Public Health Act 1968 empowered local authorities to maintain workshops for the elderly either directly or via the agency of a voluntary body A Health Advisory Service was later established to investigate and confront the problems of long term psychiatric and mentally subnormal hospitals in the wave of numerous scandals 64 The Clean Air Act 1968 extended powers to combat air pollution 80 More money was also allocated to hospitals treating the mentally ill 46 In addition a Sports Council was set up to improve facilities 81 Direct government expenditure on sports more than doubled from 0 9 million in 1964 65 to 2 million in 1967 68 while 11 regional Sports Councils had been set up by 1968 In Wales five new health centres had been opened by 1968 whereas none had been opened from 1951 to 1964 while spending on health and welfare services in the region went up from 55 8 million in 1963 64 to 83 9 million in 1967 68 76 Social policies edit Workers edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Workers The Industrial Training Act 1964 set up an Industrial Training Board to encourage training for people in work 80 and within 7 years there were 27 ITBs covering employers with some 15 million workers 82 From 1964 to 1968 the number of training places had doubled 76 The Docks and Harbours Act 1966 and the Dock Labour Scheme 1967 reorganised the system of employment in the docks in order to put an end to casual employment 58 The changes made to the Dock Labour Scheme in 1967 ensured a complete end to casual labour on the docks effectively giving workers the security of jobs for life 83 Trade unions also benefited from the passage of the Trade Dispute Act 1965 This restored the legal immunity of trade union officials thus ensuring that they could no longer be sued for threatening to strike 66 The First Wilson Government also encouraged married women to return to teaching and improved Assistance Board Concessionary conditions for those teaching part time by enabling them to qualify for pension rights and by formulating a uniform scale of payment throughout the country Soon after coming into office midwives and nurses were given an 11 pay increase 76 and according to one MP nurses also benefited from the largest pay rise they had received in a generation 84 In May 1966 Wilson announced 30 pay rises for doctors and dentists a move which did not prove popular with unions as the national pay policy at the time was for rises of between 3 and 3 5 85 Much needed improvements were made in junior hospital doctors salaries From 1959 to 1970 while the earnings of manual workers increased by 75 the salaries of registrars more than doubled while those of house officers more than trebled Most of these improvements such as for nurses came in the pay settlements of 1970 On a limited scale reports by the National Board for Prices and Incomes encouraged incentive payments schemes to be developed in local government and elsewhere In February 1969 the government accepted an above the ceiling increase for farmworkers a low paid group Some groups of professional workers such as nurses teachers and doctors gained substantial awards 43 Transport edit The Travel Concessions Act 1964 one of the first Acts passed by the First Wilson Government provided concessions to all pensioners travelling on buses operated by municipal transport authorities 86 The Transport Act 1968 established the principle of government grants for transport authorities if uneconomic passenger services were justified on social grounds A National Freight Corporation was also established to provide integrated rail freight and road services Public expenditure on roads steadily increased and stricter safety precautions were introduced such as the breathalyser test for drunken driving 53 under the 1967 Road Traffic Act 46 The Transport Act gave a much needed financial boost to British Rail treating them like they were a company which had become bankrupt but could now under new management carry on debt free The act also established a national freight corporation and introduced government rail subsidies for passenger transport on the same basis as existing subsidies for roads to enable local authorities to improve public transport in their areas 46 The road building programme was also expanded with capital expenditure increased to 8 of GDP the highest level achieved by any post war government 87 Central government expenditure on roads went up from 125 million in 1963 64 to 225 million in 1967 68 while a number of road safety regulations were introduced covering seat belts lorry drivers hours car and lorry standards and an experimental 70 mile per hour speed limit In Scotland spending on trunk roads went up from 6 8 million in 1963 64 to 15 5 million in 1966 67 while in Wales spending on Welsh roads went up from 21 2 million in 1963 64 to 31 4 million in 1966 67 76 Regional development edit Encouragement of regional development was given increased attention under the First Wilson Government to narrow economic disparities between the various regions A policy was introduced in 1965 whereby any new government organisation should be established outside London and in 1967 the government decided to give preference to development areas A few government departments were also moved out of London with the Royal Mint moved to South Wales the Giro and Inland Revenue to Bootle and the Motor Tax Office to Swansea 88 A new Special Development Status was also introduced in 1967 to provide even higher levels of assistance 54 In 1966 five development areas covering half the population in the UK were established while subsidies were provided for employers recruiting new employees in the Development Areas 41 A Highlands and Islands Development Board was also set up to re invigorate the north of Scotland 76 The Industrial Development Act 1966 changed the name of Development Districts parts of the country with higher levels of unemployment than the national average and which governments sought to encourage greater investment in to Development Areas and increased the percentage of the workforce covered by development schemes from 15 to 20 which mainly affected rural areas in Scotland and Wales Tax allowances were replaced by grants to extend coverage to include firms which were not making a profit and in 1967 a Regional Employment Premium was introduced Whereas the existing schemes tended to favour capital intensive projects this aimed for the first time at increasing employment in depressed areas Set at 30s per employee per week and guaranteed for seven years the Regional Employment Premium subsidised all manufacturing industry though not services in Development Areas amounting to an average subsidy of 7 of labour costs 54 89 Regional unemployment differentials were narrowed and spending on regional infrastructure was significantly increased Between 1965 66 and 1969 70 yearly expenditure on new construction including power stations roads schools hospitals and housing rose by 41 in the United Kingdom as a whole Subsidies were also provided for various industries such as shipbuilding in Clydeside which helped to prevent many job losses It is estimated that between 1964 and 1970 45 000 government jobs were created outside London 21 000 of which were located in the Development Areas 88 The Local Employment Act passed in March 1970 embodied the government s proposals for assistance to 54 intermediate employment exchange areas not classified as full development areas 90 Funds allocated to regional assistance more than doubled from 40 million in 1964 65 to 82 million in 1969 70 and from 1964 to 1970 the number of factories completed was 50 higher than from 1960 to 1964 which helped to reduce unemployment in development areas In 1970 the unemployment rate in development areas was 1 67 times the national average compared to 2 21 times in 1964 Although national rates of unemployment were higher in 1970 than in the early 1960s unemployment rates in the development areas were lower and had not increased for three years 54 Altogether the impact of the first Wilson government s regional development policies was such that according to one historian the period 1963 to 1970 represented the most prolonged most intensive and most successful attack ever launched on regional problems in Britain 41 International development edit A new Ministry of Overseas Development was established with its greatest success at the time being the introduction of interest free loans for the poorest countries 54 The Minister of Overseas Development Barbara Castle set a standard in interest relief on loans to developing nations which resulted in changes to the loan policies of many donor countries a significant shift in the conduct of rich white nations to poor brown ones Loans were introduced to developing countries on terms that were more favourable to them than those given by governments of all other developed countries at that time In addition Castle was instrumental in setting up an Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex to devise ways of tackling global socio economic inequalities Overseas aid suffered from the austerity measures introduced by the first Wilson government in its last few years in office with British aid as a percentage of GNP falling from 0 53 in 1964 to 0 39 in 1969 46 Taxation edit Wilson s government made a variety of changes to the tax system Largely under the influence of the Hungarian born economists Nicholas Kaldor and Thomas Balogh an idiosyncratic Selective Employment Tax SET was introduced that was designed to tax employment in the service sectors while subsidising employment in manufacturing The rationale proposed by its economist authors derived largely from claims about potential economies of scale and technological progress but Wilson in his memoirs stressed the tax s revenue raising potential The SET did not long survive the return of a Conservative government Of longer term significance capital gains tax CGT was introduced across the UK on 6 April 1965 91 Across his two periods in office Wilson presided over significant increases in the overall tax burden in the UK In 1974 three weeks after forming a new government Wilson s new chancellor Denis Healey partially reversed the 1971 reduction in the top rate of tax from 90 to 75 increasing it to 83 in his first budget which came into law in April 1974 This applied to incomes over 20 000 equivalent to 221 741 in 2021 92 and combined with a 15 surcharge on unearned income investments and dividends could add up to a 98 marginal rate of personal income tax In 1974 as many as 750 000 people were liable to pay the top rate of income tax 93 Various changes were also made to the tax system which benefited workers on low and middle incomes Married couples with low incomes benefited from the increases in the single personal allowance and marriage allowance In 1965 the regressive allowance for national insurance contributions was abolished and the single personal allowance marriage allowance and wife s earned income relief were increased These allowances were further increased in the tax years 1969 70 and 1970 71 Increases in the age exemption and dependant relative s income limits benefited the low income elderly 43 In 1967 new tax concessions were introduced for widows 94 Increases were made in some of the minor allowances in the 1969 Finance Act notably the additional personal allowance the age exemption and age relief and the dependent relative limit Apart from the age relief further adjustments in these concessions were implemented in 1970 43 1968 saw the introduction of aggregation of the investment income of unmarried minors with the income of their parents According to Michael Meacher this change put an end to a previous inequity whereby two families in otherwise identical circumstances paid differing amounts of tax simply because in one case the child possessed property transferred to it by a grandparent while in the other case the grandparent s identical property was inherited by the parent 43 In the 1969 budget income tax was abolished for about 1 million of the lowest paid and reduced for a further 600 000 people 75 while in the government s last budget introduced in 1970 two million small taxpayers were exempted from paying any income tax altogether 95 Liberal reforms edit Main article Labour government 1964 1970 Liberal reforms A wide range of liberal measures were introduced during Wilson s time in office The Matrimonial Proceedings and Property Act 1970 made provision for the welfare of children whose parents were about to divorce or be judicially separated with courts for instance granted wide powers to order financial provision for children in the form of maintenance payments made by either parent 64 This legislation allowed courts to order provision for either spouse and recognised the contribution to the joint home made during marriage 80 That same year spouses were given an equal share of household assets following divorce via the Matrimonial Property Act The Race Relations Act 1968 was also extended in 1968 and in 1970 the Equal Pay Act 1970 was passed 67 Another important reform the Welsh Language Act 1967 granted equal validity to the declining Welsh language and encouraged its revival Government expenditure was also increased on both sport and the arts 58 The Mines and Quarries Tips Act 1969 passed in response to the Aberfan disaster made provision for preventing disused tips from endangering members of the public 96 In 1967 corporal punishment in borstals and prisons was abolished 97 7 regional associations were established to develop the arts and government expenditure on cultural activities rose from 7 7 million in 1964 64 to 15 3 million in 1968 69 A Criminal Injuries Compensation Board was also set up which had paid out over 2 million to victims of criminal violence by 1968 76 The Commons Registration Act 1965 provided for the registration of all common land and village greens whilst under the Countryside Act 1968 local authorities could provide facilities for enjoyment of such lands to which the public has access 64 The Family Provision Act 1966 amended a series of pre existing estate laws mainly related to persons who died intestate The legislation increased the amount that could be paid to surviving spouses if a will had not been left and also expanded upon the jurisdiction of county courts which were given the jurisdiction of high courts under certain circumstances when handling matters of estate The rights of adopted children were also improved with certain wording changed in the Inheritance Family Provision Act 1938 to bestow upon them the same rights as natural born children In 1968 the Nurseries and Child Minders Regulation Act 1948 was updated to include more categories of childminders 98 A year later the Family Law Reform Act 1969 was passed which allowed people born outside marriage to inherit on the intestacy of either parent 99 In 1967 homosexuality was partially decriminalised in England amp Wales only by the passage of the Sexual Offences Act 46 The Public Records Act 1967 also introduced a thirty year rule for access to public records replacing a previous fifty year rule 100 Industrial relations edit Wilson made periodic attempts to mitigate inflation largely through wage price controls better known in Britain as prices and incomes policy 41 As with indicative planning such controls though now generally out of favour were widely adopted at that time by governments of different ideological complexions including the Nixon administration in the United States Partly as a result of this reliance the government tended to find itself repeatedly injected into major industrial disputes with late night beer and sandwiches at Number Ten an almost routine culmination to such episodes Among the most damaging of the numerous strikes during Wilson s periods in office was a six week stoppage by the National Union of Seamen beginning shortly after Wilson s re election in 1966 and conducted he claimed by politically motivated men With public frustration over strikes mounting Wilson s government in 1969 proposed a series of changes to the legal basis for industrial relations labour law which were outlined in a White Paper In Place of Strife put forward by the Employment Secretary Barbara Castle Following a confrontation with the Trades Union Congress which strongly opposed the proposals and internal dissent from Home Secretary James Callaghan the government substantially backed down from its intentions The Heath government 1970 1974 introduced the Industrial Relations Act 1971 with many of the same ideas but this was largely repealed by the post 1974 Labour government Some elements of these changes were subsequently to be enacted in modified form during the premiership of Margaret Thatcher 41 Record on income distribution edit Despite the economic difficulties faced by the first Wilson government it succeeded in maintaining low levels of unemployment and inflation during its time in office Unemployment was kept below 2 7 and inflation for much of the 1960s remained below 4 Living standards generally improved while public spending on housing social security transport research education and health went up by an average of more than 6 between 1964 and 1970 101 The average household grew steadily richer with the number of cars in the United Kingdom rising from one to every 6 4 persons to one for every five persons in 1968 representing a net increase of three million cars on the road The rise in the standard of living was also characterised by increased ownership of various consumer durables from 1964 to 1969 as demonstrated by television sets from 88 to 90 refrigerators from 39 to 59 and washing machines from 54 to 64 46 By 1970 income in Britain was more equally distributed than in 1964 mainly because of increases in cash benefits including family allowances 102 According to the historian Dominic Sandbrook In its commitment to social services and public welfare the Wilson government put together a record unmatched by any subsequent administration and the mid sixties are justifiably seen as the golden age of the welfare state 101 As noted by Ben Pimlott the gap between those on lowest incomes and the rest of the population had been significantly reduced under Wilson s first government 103 The first Wilson government thus saw the distribution of income became more equal 57 while reductions in poverty took place 104 These achievements were mainly brought about by several increases in social welfare benefits 105 such as supplementary benefit pensions and family allowances the latter of which were doubled between 1964 and 1970 although most of the increase in family allowances did not come about until 1968 A new system of rate rebates was introduced which benefited one million households by the end of the 1960s 54 Increases in national insurance benefits in 1965 1967 1968 and 1969 ensured that those dependent on state benefits saw their disposable incomes rise faster than manual wage earners while income differentials between lower income and higher income workers were marginally narrowed Greater progressivity was introduced in the tax system with greater emphasis on direct income based as opposed to indirect typically expenditure based taxation as a means of raising revenue with the amount raised by the former increasing twice as much as that of the latter 106 Also despite an increase in unemployment the poor improved their share of the national income while that of the rich was slightly reduced 107 Despite various cutbacks after 1966 expenditure on services such as education and health was still much higher as a proportion of national wealth than in 1964 In addition by raising taxes to pay their reforms the government paid careful attention to the principle of redistribution with disposable incomes rising for the lowest paid while falling amongst the wealthiest during its time in office 108 Between 1964 and 1968 benefits in kind were significantly progressive in that over the period those in the lower half of the income scale benefited more than those in the upper half On average those receiving state benefits benefited more in terms of increases in real disposable income than the average manual worker or salaried employee between 1964 and 1969 88 From 1964 to 1969 low wage earners did substantially better than other sections of the population In 1969 a married couple with two children were 11 5 per cent richer in real terms while for a couple with three children the corresponding increase was 14 5 and for a family with four children 16 5 109 From 1965 to 1968 the income of single pensioner households as a percentage of other one adult households rose from 48 9 to 52 5 For two pensioner households the equivalent increase was from 46 8 to 48 2 43 In addition mainly as a result of big increases in cash benefits unemployed persons and large families gained more in terms of real disposable income than the rest of the population during Wilson s time in office 57 As noted by Paul Whiteley pensions sickness unemployment and supplementary benefits went up more in real terms under the First Wilson Government than under the preceding Conservative administration To compare the Conservative period of office with the Labour period we can use the changes in benefits per year as a rough estimate of comparative performance For the Conservatives and Labour respectively increases in supplementary benefits per year were 3 5 and 5 2 percentage points for sickness and unemployment benefits 5 8 and 30 6 percentage points for pensions 3 8 and 4 6 and for family allowances 1 2 and 2 6 Thus the poor the retired the sick and the unemployed did better in real terms under Labour than they did under Conservatives and families did worse 73 Between 1964 and 1968 cash benefits rose as a percentage of income for all households but more so for poorer than for wealthier households As noted by the economist Michael Stewart it seems indisputable that the high priority the Labour Government gave to expenditure on education and the health service had a favourable effect on income distribution 88 For a family with two children in the income range 676 to 816 per annum cash benefits rose from 4 of income in 1964 to 22 in 1968 compared with a change from 1 to 2 for a similar family in the income range 2 122 to 2 566 over the same period For benefits in kind the changes over the same period for similar families were from 21 to 29 for lower income families and from 9 to 10 for higher income families When taking into account all benefits taxes and Government expenditures on social services the first Wilson government succeeded in bringing about a reduction in income inequality As noted by the historian Kenneth O Morgan In the long term therefore fortified by increases in supplementary and other benefits under the Crossman regime in 1968 70 the welfare state had made some impact almost by inadvertence on social inequality and the maldistribution of real income 110 Public expenditure as a percentage of GDP rose significantly under the 1964 1970 Labour government from 34 in 1964 65 to nearly 38 of GDP by 1969 70 whilst expenditure on social services rose from 16 of national income in 1964 to 23 by 1970 54 These measures had a major impact on the living standards of low income Britons with disposable incomes rising faster for low income groups than for high income groups during the 1960s When measuring disposable income after taxation but including benefits the total disposable income of those on the highest incomes fell by 33 whilst the total disposable income of those on the lowest incomes rose by 104 54 As noted by one historian the net effect of Labour s financial policies was indeed to make the rich poorer and the poor richer 111 Foreign affairs edit United States edit nbsp Wilson with US President Lyndon B Johnson at the White House in 1966Wilson believed in a strong Special Relationship with the United States and wanted to highlight his dealings with the White House to strengthen his prestige as a statesman President Lyndon B Johnson disliked Wilson and ignored any special relationship The Vietnam War was a sore point 112 Johnson needed and asked for help to maintain American prestige Wilson offered lukewarm verbal support and no military aid Wilson s policy angered the left wing of his Labour Party who opposed the Vietnam War 113 Wilson and Johnson also differed sharply on British economic weakness and its declining status as a world power Historian Jonathan Colman concludes it made for the most unsatisfactory special relationship in the 20th century 114 The only point of total agreement was that both Johnson and Wilson emphatically supported Israel in the 1967 Six Day War 115 Europe edit nbsp Wilson with West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard in 1965Among the more challenging political dilemmas Wilson faced was the issue of British membership of the European Community the forerunner of the present European Union An entry attempt was vetoed in 1963 by French President Charles de Gaulle The Labour Party in Opposition had been divided on the issue with Hugh Gaitskell having come out in 1962 in opposition to Britain joining the European Community 116 After initial hesitation Wilson s Government in May 1967 lodged the UK s second application to join the European Community It was vetoed by de Gaulle in November 1967 117 After De Gaulle lost power Conservative prime minister Edward Heath negotiated Britain s admission to the EC in 1973 Wilson in opposition showed political ingenuity in devising a position that both sides of the party could agree on opposing the terms negotiated by Heath but not membership in principle Labour s 1974 manifesto included a pledge to renegotiate terms for Britain s membership and then hold a referendum on whether to stay in the EC on the new terms This was a constitutional procedure without precedent in British history Following Wilson s return to power the renegotiations with Britain s fellow EC members were carried out by Wilson himself in tandem with Foreign Secretary James Callaghan and they toured the capital cities of Europe meeting their European counterparts The discussions focused primarily on Britain s net budgetary contribution to the EC As a small agricultural producer heavily dependent on imports Britain suffered doubly from the dominance of i agricultural spending in the EC budget ii agricultural import taxes as a source of EC revenues During the renegotiations other EEC members conceded as a partial offset the establishment of a significant European Regional Development Fund ERDF from which it was agreed that Britain would be a major net beneficiary 118 In the subsequent referendum campaign rather than the normal British tradition of collective responsibility under which the government takes a policy position which all cabinet members are required to support publicly members of the Government were free to present their views on either side of the question The electorate voted on 5 June 1975 to continue membership by a substantial majority 119 Asia edit American military involvement in Vietnam escalated continuously from 1964 to 1968 and President Lyndon B Johnson brought pressure to bear for at least a token involvement of British military units Wilson consistently avoided any commitment of British forces giving as reasons British military commitments to the Malayan Emergency and British co chairmanship of the 1954 Geneva Conference 120 His government offered some rhetorical support for the US position most prominently in the defence offered by the Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart in a much publicised teach in or debate on Vietnam On at least one occasion the British government made an unsuccessful effort to mediate in the conflict with Wilson discussing peace proposals with Alexei Kosygin the Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers On 28 June 1966 Wilson dissociated his Government from American bombing of the cities of Hanoi and Haiphong In his memoirs Wilson writes of selling LBJ a bum steer a reference to Johnson s Texas roots which conjured up images of cattle and cowboys in British minds 121 Part of the price paid by Wilson after talks with President Johnson in June 1967 for US assistance with the UK economy was his agreement to maintain a military presence East of Suez 122 In July 1967 Defence Secretary Denis Healey announced that Britain would abandon her mainland bases East of Suez by 1977 although airmobile forces would be retained which could if necessary be deployed in the region Shortly afterwards in January 1968 Wilson announced that the proposed timetable for this withdrawal was to be accelerated and that British forces were to be withdrawn from Singapore Malaysia and the Persian Gulf by the end of 1971 123 Wilson was known for his strongly pro Israel views 124 He was a particular friend of Israeli Premier Golda Meir though her tenure largely coincided with Wilson s 1970 1974 hiatus Another associate was West German Chancellor Willy Brandt all three were members of the Socialist International 125 Africa edit The British retreat from Empire had made headway by 1964 and was to continue during Wilson s administration Southern Rhodesia was not granted independence principally because Wilson refused to grant independence to the white minority government headed by Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith which was not willing to extend unqualified voting rights to the native African population Smith s defiant response was a Unilateral Declaration of Independence on 11 November 1965 Wilson s immediate recourse was to the United Nations and in 1965 the Security Council imposed sanctions which were to last until official independence in 1979 This involved British warships blockading the port of Beira to try to cause economic collapse in Rhodesia Wilson was applauded by most nations for taking a firm stand on the issue and none extended diplomatic recognition to the Smith regime A number of nations did not join in with sanctions undermining their efficiency Certain sections of public opinion started to question their efficacy and to demand the toppling of the regime by force Wilson declined to intervene in Rhodesia with military force believing the British population would not support such action against their kith and kin The two leaders met for discussions aboard British warships Tiger in 1966 and Fearless in 1968 Smith subsequently attacked Wilson in his memoirs accusing him of delaying tactics during negotiations and alleging duplicity Wilson responded in kind questioning Smith s good faith and suggesting that Smith had moved the goal posts whenever a settlement appeared in sight 121 The matter was still unresolved at the time of Wilson s resignation in 1976 Wilson had a good relationship with Siaka Stevens of Sierra Leone the two leaders attempted to work together to find a solution the question of Biafra in Nigeria 126 127 Electoral defeat and resignation edit By 1969 the Labour Party was suffering serious electoral reverses and by the turn of 1970 had lost a total of 16 seats in by elections since the previous general election 128 By 1970 the economy was showing signs of improvement and by May that year Labour had overtaken the Conservatives in the opinion polls 129 Wilson responded to this apparent recovery in his government s popularity by calling a general election but to the surprise of most observers was defeated at the polls by the Conservatives under Heath Most opinion polls had predicted a Labour win with a poll six days before the election showing a 12 4 Labour lead Writing in the aftermath of the election The Times journalist George Clark wrote that the 1970 contest would be remembered as the occasion when the people of the United Kingdom hurled the findings of the opinion polls back into the faces of the pollsters and at the voting booths proved them wrong most of them badly wrong 130 Heath and the Conservatives had attacked Wilson over the economy Towards the end of the campaign bad trade figures for May added weight to Heath s campaign and he claimed that a Labour victory would result in a further devaluation Wilson considered Heath s claims irresponsible and damaging to the nation 131 Ultimately however the election saw Labour s vote share fall to its lowest since 1935 132 Several prominent Labour figures lost their seats notably George Brown who was still Deputy Leader of the Labour Party 133 Return to opposition 1970 1974 editAfter the elections and Labour s subsequent defeat Wilson survived as leader of the Labour Party in opposition In August 1973 holidaying on the Isles of Scilly he tried to board a motorboat from a dinghy and stepped into the sea He was unable to get into the boat and was left in the cold water for more than half an hour hanging on to the fenders of the motorboat He was close to death before he was saved by Paul Wolff the father of novelist Isabel Wolff When word of the incident became public the following month Wilson downplayed its severity it was taken up by the press and resulted in some embarrassment His press secretary Joe Haines tried to deflect some of the comment by blaming Wilson s dog Paddy for the problem 134 Economic conditions during the 1970s were becoming more difficult for Britain and many other western economies as a result of the Nixon shock and the 1973 oil crisis and the Heath government in its turn was buffeted by economic adversity and industrial unrest notably including confrontation with the coalminers which led to the Three Day Week towards the end of 1973 and on 7 February 1974 with the crisis still ongoing Heath called a snap election for 28 February 135 Prime minister 1974 1976 editFurther information Labour government 1974 1979 nbsp Harold Wilson with U S President Gerald Ford in 1975 during his second term as prime minister Labour won more seats though fewer votes than the Conservative Party in the general election in February 1974 which resulted in a hung parliament As Heath was unable to persuade the Liberals to form a coalition Wilson returned to 10 Downing Street on 4 March 1974 as prime minister of a minority Labour Government He gained a three seat majority in another election later that year on 10 October 1974 1975 European referendum edit One of the key issues addressed during his second period in office was the referendum on British membership of the European Community EC which took place in June 1975 Labour had pledged in its February 1974 manifesto to renegotiate the terms of British accession to the EC and then to consult the public in a referendum on whether Britain should stay in on the new terms Although the government recommended a vote in favour of continued membership the cabinet was split on the issue and Ministers were allowed to campaign on different sides of the question The referendum resulted in a near two to one majority in favour of Britain remaining in the EC 136 Domestic economic affairs edit The Second Wilson Government made a major commitment to the expansion of the British welfare state with increased spending on education health and housing rents 87 To pay for it it imposed controls and raised taxes on the rich It partially reversed the 1971 reduction in the top rate of tax from 90 to 75 increasing it to 83 in the first budget from new chancellor Denis Healey which came into law in April 1974 Also implemented was an investment income surcharge which raised the top rate on investment income to 98 the highest level since the Second World War Despite its achievements in social policy Wilson s government came under scrutiny in 1975 for the rise in the unemployment rate with the total number of Britons out of work passing one million by that April 137 Wilson s second government came into office at a troubled time for the British economy due to a global recession and stagflation in large part this was due to the 1973 oil crisis and also the preceding government s inflationary attempts to boost growth 138 In order to deal with inflation which peaked at 26 in 1975 the government negotiated a social contract with the Trades Union Congress to implement a voluntary incomes policy in which pay rises were held down to limits set by the government This policy operated with reasonable success for the next few years and inflation fell to single figures by 1978 136 By 1976 the recession had ended and economic recovery began 138 by 1978 79 living standards recovered to the level they had been in 1973 74 139 The Labour governments of the 1970s did however manage to protect the living standards of many people from the worst effects of the recession and high inflation with pensions increasing by 20 in real terms between 1974 and 1979 while measures such as rent and price controls and food and transport subsidies mitigated the adverse impact on the living standards of many more people 140 The government s industrial policy was greatly influenced by the economist Stuart Holland and the Secretary of State for Industry Tony Benn The centrepiece of the policy was the National Enterprise Board NEB which was established in 1975 and was intended to channel public investment into industry in return for taking a holding of equity in private companies The NEB was intended to extend public ownership of the economy as well as investing in the regeneration of industry although it had some successes in that aim in practice one of its main activities became that of propping up failing companies such as British Leyland The government also continued its policy of encouraging regional development by increasing Regional Employment Premiums which had first been established in 1967 136 141 Northern Ireland edit Wilson s earlier government had witnessed the outbreak of The Troubles in Northern Ireland In response to a request from the Government of Northern Ireland Wilson agreed to deploy the British Army in August 1969 to restore the peace While out of office in late 1971 Wilson had formulated a 16 point 15 year programme that was designed to pave the way for the unification of Ireland The proposal was not adopted by the then Heath government 142 In May 1974 when back in office as leader of a minority government Wilson condemned the Unionist controlled Ulster Workers Council Strike as a sectarian strike which was being done for sectarian purposes having no relation to this century but only to the seventeenth century He refused to pressure a reluctant British Army to face down the Ulster loyalist paramilitaries who were intimidating utility workers In a televised speech later he referred to the loyalist strikers and their supporters as spongers who expected Britain to pay for their lifestyles The strike was eventually successful in breaking the power sharing Northern Ireland executive On 11 September 2008 BBC Radio 4 s Document programme claimed to have unearthed a secret plan codenamed Doomsday which proposed to cut all of the United Kingdom s constitutional ties with Northern Ireland and transform the province into an independent dominion Document went on to claim that the Doomsday plan was devised mainly by Wilson and was kept a closely guarded secret The plan then allegedly lost momentum due in part it was claimed to warnings made by both the then Foreign Secretary James Callaghan and the then Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs Garret FitzGerald who admitted the 12 000 strong Irish Army would be unable to deal with the ensuing civil war 143 Later Callaghan himself spoke and wrote despondently about the prospect for a British derived solution to the Northern Ireland issue supporting a similar plan to push Northern Ireland towards independent status 144 In 1975 Wilson secretly offered Libya s dictator Muammar Gaddafi 14 million to stop arming the Provisional Irish Republican Army but Gaddafi demanded a far greater sum of money 145 146 This offer did not become publicly known until 2009 Resignation edit When Wilson entered office for the second time he had privately admitted that he had lost his enthusiasm for the role telling a close adviser in 1974 that I have been around this racetrack so often that I cannot generate any more enthusiasm for jumping any more hurdles 136 On 16 March 1976 Wilson announced his resignation as prime minister taking effect on 5 April He claimed that he had always planned on resigning at the age of 60 and that he was physically and mentally exhausted As early as the late 1960s he had been telling intimates like his doctor Sir Joseph Stone later Lord Stone of Hendon that he did not intend to serve more than eight or nine years as prime minister Roy Jenkins has suggested that Wilson may have been motivated partly by the distaste for politics felt by his loyal and long suffering wife Mary 16 His doctor had detected problems which would later be diagnosed as colon cancer and Wilson had begun drinking brandy during the day to cope with stress 2 In addition by 1976 he might already have been aware of the first stages of early onset Alzheimer s disease which was to cause both his formerly excellent memory and his powers of concentration to fail dramatically 147 Wilson s Resignation Honours included many businessmen and celebrities along with his political supporters His choice of appointments caused lasting damage to his reputation worsened by the suggestion that the first draft of the list had been written by his political secretary Marcia Williams on lavender notepaper it became known as the Lavender List Roy Jenkins noted that Wilson s retirement was disfigured by his at best eccentric resignation honours list which gave peerages or knighthoods to some adventurous business gentlemen several of whom were close neither to him nor to the Labour Party 16 Some of those whom Wilson honoured included Lord Kagan the inventor of Gannex Wilson s preferred raincoat who was eventually imprisoned for fraud and Sir Eric Miller who later committed suicide while under police investigation for corruption The Labour Party held an election to replace Wilson as leader of the Party and therefore prime minister Six candidates stood in the first ballot in order of votes they were Michael Foot James Callaghan Roy Jenkins Tony Benn Denis Healey and Anthony Crosland In the third ballot on 5 April Callaghan defeated Foot in a parliamentary vote of 176 to 137 thus becoming Wilson s successor as prime minister and leader of the Labour Party and he continued to serve as prime minister until May 1979 As Wilson wished to remain an MP after leaving office he was not immediately given the peerage customarily offered to retired prime ministers but instead was created a Knight Companion of the Garter He fought one last election in 1979 in which he was returned as a backbench MP for Huyton Following his departure from the House of Commons before the 1983 general election after 38 years of service he was granted a life peerage as Baron Wilson of Rievaulx of Kirklees in the County of West Yorkshire 148 149 after Rievaulx Abbey in the north of his native Yorkshire the Kirklees refers to his home address of Huddersfield and is not part of his title Post premiership 1976 1995 editRetirement edit nbsp Wilson in 1986He was appointed in 1976 to chair the Committee to Review the Functioning of Financial Institutions the Wilson Committee which reported in June 1980 150 Shortly after resigning as prime minister Wilson was signed by David Frost to host a series of interview chat show programmes The pilot episode proved to be a flop as Wilson appeared uncomfortable with the informality of the format Wilson also hosted two editions of the BBC chat show Friday Night Saturday Morning He famously floundered in the role and in 2000 Channel 4 chose one of his appearances as one of the 100 Moments of TV Hell A lifelong Gilbert and Sullivan fan in 1975 Wilson joined the Board of Trustees of the D Oyly Carte Trust at the invitation of Sir Hugh Wontner who was then the Lord Mayor of London 151 At Christmas 1978 Wilson appeared on the Morecambe and Wise Christmas Special Eric Morecambe s habit of appearing not to recognise the guest stars was repaid by Wilson who referred to him throughout as Morry camby the mispronunciation of Morecambe s name made by Ed Sullivan when the pair appeared on his famous American television show Wilson appeared on the show again in 1980 Wilson was not especially active in the House of Lords although he did initiate a debate on unemployment in May 1984 152 His last speech was in a debate on marine pilotage in 1986 when he commented as an elder brother of Trinity House 153 In the same year he played himself as prime minister in an Anglia Television drama Inside Story 154 Death edit nbsp Harold Wilson s graveWilson continued regularly attending the House of Lords until just over a year before his death the last sitting he attended was on 27 April 1994 He had a picture taken with other Labour Lords on 15 June 1994 just under a year before his death 155 156 He died from colon cancer and Alzheimer s disease on 24 May 1995 aged 79 157 His death came five months before that of his predecessor Alec Douglas Home Wilson s memorial service was held in Westminster Abbey on 13 July 1995 It was attended by the Prince of Wales former prime ministers Edward Heath James Callaghan and Margaret Thatcher incumbent Prime Minister John Major and also Tony Blair then Leader of the Opposition and later prime minister Wilson was buried at St Mary s Old Church St Mary s Isles of Scilly on 6 June 16 His epitaph is Tempus Imperator Rerum Time the Commander of Things 158 Legacy editPolitical style edit Wilson regarded himself as a man of the people and did much to promote this image contrasting himself with the stereotypical aristocratic conservatives and other statesmen who had preceded him as an example of social mobility He largely retained his Yorkshire accent Other features of this persona included his working man s Gannex raincoat his pipe the British Pipesmokers Council voted him Pipe Smoker of the Year in 1965 and Pipeman of the Decade in 1976 though in private he preferred cigars his love of simple cooking and fondness for popular British relish HP Sauce and his support for his home town s football team Huddersfield Town 159 His first general election victory relied heavily on associating these down to earth attributes with a sense that the UK urgently needed to modernise after thirteen years of Tory mis rule 160 Wilson exhibited his populist touch in June 1965 when he had the Beatles honoured with the award of MBE such awards are officially bestowed by the monarch but are nominated by the prime minister of the day The award was popular with young people and contributed to a sense that the prime minister was in touch with the younger generation There were some protests by conservatives and elderly members of the military who were earlier recipients of the award but such protesters were in the minority Critics claimed that Wilson acted to solicit votes for the next general election which took place less than a year later but defenders noted that since the minimum voting age at that time was 21 this was hardly likely to impact many of the Beatles fans who at that time were predominantly teenagers It cemented Wilson s image as a modernistic leader and linked him to the burgeoning pride in the New Britain typified by the Beatles 161 The Beatles mentioned Wilson rather negatively naming both him and his opponent Edward Heath in George Harrison s song Taxman the opener to 1966 s Revolver recorded and released after the MBEs 162 In 1967 Wilson had a different interaction with a musical ensemble He sued the pop group the Move for libel after the band s manager Tony Secunda published a promotional postcard for the single Flowers in the Rain featuring a caricature depicting Wilson in bed with his female assistant Marcia Williams Gossip had hinted at an improper relationship though these rumours were never substantiated Wilson won the case and all royalties from the song composed by Move leader Roy Wood were assigned in perpetuity to a charity of Wilson s choosing 163 Wilson coined the term Selsdon Man to refer to the free market policies of the Conservative leader Edward Heath developed at a policy retreat held at the Selsdon Park Hotel in early 1970 This phrase intended to evoke the primitive throwback qualities of anthropological discoveries such as Piltdown Man and Swanscombe Man was part of a British political tradition of referring to political trends by suffixing man 164 Other memorable phrases attributed to Wilson include the white heat of the technological revolution and a week is a long time in politics meaning that political fortunes can change extremely rapidly 165 In his broadcast after the 1967 devaluation of the pound Wilson said This does not mean that the pound here in Britain in your pocket or purse is worth any less and the phrase the pound in your pocket subsequently took on a life of its own 166 Reputation edit Despite his successes Wilson s reputation took a long time to start a recovery from the low ebb reached immediately following his second premiership The reinvention of the Labour Party would take the better part of two decades at the hands of Neil Kinnock John Smith and electorally and most conclusively Tony Blair Disillusion with Britain s weak economic performance and troubled industrial relations combined with active spadework by figures such as Sir Keith Joseph had helped to make a radical market programme politically feasible for Margaret Thatcher which was in turn to influence the subsequent Labour leadership especially under Blair An opinion poll in September 2011 found that Wilson came in third place when respondents were asked to name the best post war Labour Party leader He was beaten only by John Smith and Tony Blair 167 According to Glen O Hara in 2006 168 Much of the disillusionment with Harold Wilson as Labour s leader and prime minister was due to his perceived failure on the economic front He pledged not to devalue sterling but did exactly that in 1967 he promised to keep unemployment low but had by 1970 accepted a higher rate of joblessness than the Conservatives had managed Some of the elements in Labour s programme the emphasis on steadier growth for instance were probably misguided These problems and defeats have however obscured some of the real achievements of the period Science and education spending grew very quickly industrial investment rose government was increasingly well informed and better advised about the performance of the economy In an increasingly unstable and rapidly changing economic environment this government s economic record is here shown to be if not hugely impressive then at least relatively creditable Possible plots and conspiracy theories editMain article Harold Wilson conspiracy theories In 1963 Soviet defector Anatoliy Golitsyn is said to have secretly claimed that Wilson was a KGB agent 169 The majority of intelligence officers did not believe that Golitsyn was credible in this and various other claims but a significant number did most prominently James Jesus Angleton Deputy Director of Operations for Counter Intelligence at the U S Central Intelligence Agency and factional strife broke out between the two groups Former MI5 officer Peter Wright claimed in his memoirs Spycatcher that 30 MI5 agents then collaborated in an attempt to undermine Wilson He retracted that claim saying there was only one man 170 In March 1987 James Miller a former agent claimed that the Ulster Workers Council Strike of 1974 had been promoted by MI5 to help destabilise Wilson s government 171 In July 1987 Labour MP Ken Livingstone used his maiden speech to raise the 1975 allegations of a former Army Press officer in Northern Ireland Colin Wallace who also alleged a plot to destabilise Wilson Chris Mullin MP speaking on 23 November 1988 argued that sources other than Peter Wright supported claims of a long standing attempt by MI5 to undermine Wilson s government 172 On the BBC television programme The Plot Against Harold Wilson broadcast on 16 March 2006 on BBC2 it was claimed there were threats of a coup d etat against the Wilson government which were corroborated by leading figures of the time on both the left and the right Wilson told two BBC journalists Barrie Penrose and Roger Courtiour who recorded the meetings on a cassette tape recorder that he feared he was being undermined by MI5 The first time was in the late 1960s after the Wilson Government devalued the pound sterling but the threat faded after Conservative leader Edward Heath won the election of 1970 However after the 1972 British miners strike Heath decided to hold an election to renew his mandate to govern in February 1974 but lost narrowly to Wilson There was again talk of a military coup with rumours of Lord Mountbatten as head of an interim administration after Wilson had been deposed 173 In 1974 the British Army occupied Heathrow Airport on the grounds of training for possible IRA terrorist action at the airport Although the military stated that this was a planned military exercise 10 Downing Street was not informed in advance and Wilson himself interpreted it as a show of strength or warning being made by the army 174 Historian Christopher Andrew s official history of MI5 The Defence of the Realm The Authorized History of MI5 included a chapter section E part 4 specifically alluding to a conspiracy instead of a plot against Wilson in the 1970s The characterisation of Harold Wilson as paranoid does not take account of the political context of the time which was characterised by a paranoid political style generally which applied to both left and right including MI5 itself The suspicion of Wilson and others towards the unlawful activities of the security services and other right wing figures resulted from concrete domestic and international developments discussed in more detail below Andrew is correct to be sceptical and there remains limited evidence of a plot if a plot is defined as a tightly organised high level conspiracy with a detailed plan However there is evidence of a conspiracy a loosely connected series of unlawful manoeuvres against an elected government by a group of like minded figures 175 The Director General of the Security Service assured Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and she told the House of Commons on 6 May 1987 He has found no evidence of any truth in the allegations He has given me his personal assurance that the stories are false In particular he has advised me that all the Security Service officers who have been interviewed have categorically denied that they were involved in or were aware of any activities or plans to undermine or discredit Lord Wilson and his Government when he was prime minister 176 177 In 2009 The Defence of the Realm held that while MI5 kept a file on Wilson from 1945 when he became an MP because communist civil servants claimed that he had similar political sympathies there was no bugging of his home or office and no conspiracy against him 178 In 2010 newspaper reports made detailed allegations that the Cabinet Office had required that the section on bugging of 10 Downing Street be omitted from the history for wider public interest reasons In 1963 on Macmillan s orders following the Profumo affair MI5 bugged the Cabinet room the waiting room and the prime minister s study until the devices were removed in 1977 on Callaghan s orders From the records it is unclear if Wilson or Heath knew of the bugging and no recorded conversations were retained by MI5 so possibly the bugs were never activated 179 Professor Andrew had previously recorded in the preface of the history that One significant excision as a result of these Cabinet Office requirements in the chapter on The Wilson Plot is I believe hard to justify giving credence to these new allegations 180 As a result of his concerns about the danger to British parliamentary democracy from these activities Wilson issued instructions that no agency should ever bug the telephones of any members of Parliament a policy still in place which came to be known as the Wilson Doctrine Honours editWilson was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1969 under Statute 12 of the Society s regulations which covers people who have rendered conspicuous service to the cause of science or are such that their election would be of signal benefit to the Society 181 In 2013 the Government of Bangladesh awarded Wilson with the Friends of Liberation War Honour for highlighting the plight of the people of Bangladesh during the Bangladesh Liberation War 182 Statues and other tributes edit nbsp Statue in St George s Square HuddersfieldA portrait of Harold Wilson painted by the Scottish portrait artist Cowan Dobson hangs today at University College Oxford 183 Two statues of Harold Wilson stand in prominent places The first unveiled by the then prime minister Tony Blair in July 1999 stands outside Huddersfield railway station in St George s Square Huddersfield Costing 70 000 the statue designed by sculptor Ian Walters is based on photographs taken in 1964 and depicts Wilson in walking pose at the start of his first term as prime minister His widow Mary requested that the eight foot tall monument not show Wilson holding his famous pipe as she feared it would make the representation a caricature 184 A block of high rise flats owned by Kirklees Metropolitan District Council in Huddersfield is named after Wilson In September 2006 Tony Blair unveiled a second bronze statue of Wilson in the latter s former constituency of Huyton near Liverpool The statue was created by Liverpool sculptor Tom Murphy and Blair paid tribute to Wilson s legacy at the unveiling including the Open University He added He also brought in a whole new culture a whole new country He made the country very very different 185 Also in 2006 a street on a new housing development in Tividale West Midlands was named Wilson Drive in honour of Wilson Along with neighbouring new development Callaghan Drive named after James Callaghan it formed part of a large housing estate developed since the 1960s where all streets were named after former prime ministers or senior parliamentary figures citation needed Arms editCoat of arms of Harold Wilson nbsp Coronet An Baron s Coronet Crest In front of a mount of rock thereon a lighthouse a spade in bend proper debruised by a quill pen in bend sinister Argent Escutcheon Argent an ancient galley proper pennons flying to the dexter Gules on a chief Gules a stag s head cabossed Or between two water bougets Argent Supporters Dexter a winged lion Purpure charged on the wing with three roses Argent barbed Or seeded Vert Sinister a griffin Or charged on the wing with three roses Gules barbed Or Motto TEMPUS RERUM IMPERATORScholastic honours editChancellor visitor governor and fellowshipsLocation Date School Position nbsp England 1977 University of Huddersfield Honorary Fellow 186 nbsp England 1966 1985 University of Bradford Chancellor 187 Honorary degreesLocation Date School Degree nbsp England 1964 Lancaster University Doctor of Laws LL D 188 189 190 nbsp England 1965 University of Liverpool Doctor of Laws LL D 191 nbsp England 1966 University of Sussex Doctor of Laws LL D 192 nbsp England 1966 University of Nottingham Doctor of Laws LL D 193 nbsp England 1967 University of Essex Doctorate 194 nbsp England 18 May 1974 Open University Doctor of the University D Univ 195 196 nbsp Israel 1976 Bar Ilan University Doctor of Philosophy Ph D 197 Cultural depictions editFurther information Cultural depictions of British prime ministers Harold WilsonSee also editHistory of the Labour Party UK Lord GoodmanReferences edit Andrew S Crines and Kevin Hickson eds Harold Wilson The Unprincipled Prime Minister A Reappraisal of Harold Wilson Biteback Publishing 2016 p 311 a b Goodman Geoffrey 1 July 2005 Harold Wilson obituary The Guardian London Archived from the original on 14 June 2018 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Ben Pimlott Harold Wilson 1992 p 264 Ben Pimlott Harold Wilson 1992 pp 604 605 648 656 670 677 689 Ben Pimlott Harold Wilson 1992 pp 3 20 quote p 20 Major John 24 May 1995 Mr Major s Commons Tribute to Harold Wilson 24 May 1995 The Rt Hon Sir John Major KG CH 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From Winston Churchill to David Cameron A amp C Black p 47 ISBN 9781780931142 Archived from the original on 18 January 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2019 Sandbrook Dominic 2015 White Heat A History of Britain in the Swinging Sixties Little Brown p 4 ISBN 9780349141282 Archived from the original on 4 January 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2019 Keegan William 2019 Nine Crises Fifty Years of Covering the British Economy from Devaluation to Brexit Biteback Publishing p 47 ISBN 9781785903939 Archived from the original on 12 January 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2019 More from YouGov Sunday Times Archived 17 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine UKPollingReport blog Full polling results Archived 6 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Glen O Hara Dynamic Exciting Thrilling Change the Wilson Government s Economic Policies 1964 70 Contemporary British History 2006 20 3 383 402 DOI 10 1080 13619460500407087 Vasili Mitrokhin Christopher Andrew 2000 The Mitrokhin Archive The KGB in Europe and the West Gardners Books ISBN 978 0 14 028487 4 Andrew Defend the Realm p 642 Chronology of the Conflict 1987 Cain ulst ac uk Archived from the original on 7 February 2018 Retrieved 1 July 2012 House of Commons Hansard Debates for 23 November 1988 Archived 16 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 1 July 2012 Wheeler Brian 9 March 2006 Wilson plot The secret tapes BBC News Archived from the original on 15 February 2009 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Freedland Jonathan 15 March 2006 Enough of this cover up the Wilson plot was our Watergate The Guardian London Archived from the original on 29 November 2021 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Jon Moran Conspiracy and contemporary history revisiting MI5 and the Wilson plot s Journal of Intelligence History 2014 13 2 pp 161 175 quote at p 162 Jon Moran Conspiracy and contemporary history at fn 32 See MI5 The Wilson Plot Archived 8 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine MI5 kept file on former PM Wilson BBC News 3 October 2009 Archived from the original on 9 November 2020 Bourne Brendan 18 April 2010 Allegations No 10 was bugged by MI5 removed from official history The Sunday Times London Archived from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Andrew Christopher 3 November 2009 Defend the Realm The Authorized History of MI5 Knopf Doubleday Publishing ISBN 9780307272911 Archived from the original on 9 October 2021 Retrieved 22 April 2021 Election 1968 Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London Royal Society of London 24 25 2 323 1970 doi 10 1098 rsnr 1970 0023 S2CID 202574391 Habib Haroon 24 March 2013 Castro Basu among those honoured by Bangladesh The Hindu Archived from the original on 7 January 2023 Retrieved 7 January 2023 The Right Honourable Sir Harold Wilson 1916 1995 Lord Wilson of Rievaulx Fellow Prime Minister 1964 1970 amp 1974 1976 Art UK Archived from the original on 8 July 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2019 UK PoliticsPipeless Wilson immortalised in bronze BBC News 15 April 2010 Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 1 October 2010 Blair s tribute to Harold Wilson Evening Standard London 15 April 2010 Archived from the original on 12 September 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2010 Honorary graduates University of Huddersfield www hud ac uk Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Former Chancellors University of Bradford www bradford ac uk Archived from the original on 15 May 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 University of Lancaster www lancaster ac uk Archived from the original on 14 April 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Honorary Graduates Lancaster University www lancaster ac uk Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Lancaster University 29 June 2011 Harold Wilson s Acceptance Speech Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2018 via YouTube Honorary Graduates of the University Archived 7 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine University of Liverpool Accessed on 31 October 2019 Honorary Degrees Committee List of Honorary Graduates as at 01 10 2019 University of Sussex Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2020 Honorary Graduates of the University of Nottingham PDF www nottingham ac uk Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 12 December 2020 Honorary Graduates Honorary Graduates University of Essex www1 essex ac uk Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Honorary graduate cumulative list 2017 Archived 22 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Open University Accessed on 31 October 2019 Clip Honorary Degree Open University Digital Archive www open ac uk Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Honorary Doctorate Recipients Bar Ilan University www1 biu ac il Archived from the original on 24 May 2017 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Further reading editBibliography edit Main article Harold Wilson bibliography Wilson Harold A Personal Record The Labour Government 1964 1970 1971 Wilson Harold The Labour Government 1964 1970 A Personal Record 1979 Biographical edit Farr Martin Wilson James Harold 1st Baron Wilson 1916 1995 in David Loades ed Reader s Guide to British History London Routledge 2003 online at Credo Reference historiography Jenkins Roy 7 January 2016 Wilson James Harold Baron Wilson of Rievaulx Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 58000r Subscription or UK public library membership required Pimlott Ben 1992 Harold Wilson HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 215189 4 830pp a standard scholarly biography Routledge Paul 2006 Wilson Series The 20 British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century Haus Publishing ISBN 978 1 904950 68 4 Ziegler Philip 1993 Wilson The Authorised Life of Lord Wilson of Rievaulx Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 81276 0 the authorised biographyDomestic policy and politics edit Blick Andrew Harold Wilson Labour and the machinery of government Contemporary British History 20 3 2006 343 362 Butler David and Anthony King The British General Election of 1964 1965 Butler David and M Pinto Duschinsky The British General Election of 1970 1971 Butler David and Dennis Kavanagh The British General Election of February 1974 1974 Butler David and Dennis Kavanagh The British General Election of October 1974 1975 Campbell John 1987 Nye Bevan and the Mirage of British Socialism London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 78998 7 Childs David Britain since 1945 A Political History 7th ed 2012 pp 117 161 179 196 excerpt Coopey Richard and Steven Fielding The Wilson Governments 1964 1970 1993 Davies Andrew To build a new Jerusalem the British Labour movement from the 1880s to the 1990s 1992 pp 209 231 Dell Edmund The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 HarperCollins 1997 covers economic policy under the Attlee and Wilson governments Donoughue Bernard Prime Minister the conduct of policy under Harold Wilson and James Callaghan 1987 highly favourable report by insider Dorey Pete Well Harold Insists on Having It The Political Struggle to Establish The Open University 1965 67 Contemporary British History 29 2 2015 241 272 Fielding Steven ed The Labour governments 1964 70 volume 1 Labour and cultural change Manchester UP 2003 Heppell Timothy The Labour Party leadership election of 1963 Explaining the unexpected election of Harold Wilson Contemporary British History 24 2 2010 151 171 online Holmes Martin The labour government 1974 79 political aims and economic reality Macmillan 1985 King Anthony The British General Election of 1966 1966 Lapping Brian The Labour Government 1964 70 Penguin books 1970 Morgan Kenneth O The People s Peace British History 1945 1989 1990 pp 239 313 O Hara Glen From dreams to disillusionment economic and social planning in 1960s Britain Palgrave Macmillan 2007 online PhD version Ponting Clive Breach of promise Labour in power 1964 1970 Penguin 1989 Pugh Martin Speak for Britain A New History of the Labour Party 2010 pp 319 352 Rogers Chris From Social Contract to Social Contrick The Depoliticisation of Economic Policy Making under Harold Wilson 1974 751 British Journal of Politics amp International Relations 11 4 2009 634 651 online Sked Alan and Chris Cook Post War Britain A Political History 4th ed 1993 pp 200 253 292 311 Foreign policy edit Colman Jonathan A Special Relationship Harold Wilson Lyndon B Johnson and Anglo American Relations At the Summit 1964 68 2004 online Daddow Oliver J Harold Wilson and European integration Britain s second application to join the EEC Psychology Press 2003 Dockrill Saki Forging the Anglo American global defence partnership Harold Wilson Lyndon Johnson and the Washington summit December 1964 Journal of Strategic Studies 23 4 2000 107 129 Ellis Sylvia A Lyndon Johnson Harold Wilson and the Vietnam War A Not So Special Relationship in Jonathan Hollowell ed Twentieth Century Anglo American Relations Palgrave Macmillan UK 2001 pp 180 204 Haeussler Mathias A Pyrrhic Victory Harold Wilson Helmut Schmidt and the British Renegotiation of EC Membership 1974 5 International History Review 37 4 2015 768 789 Hughes Geraint Harold Wilson s Cold War The Labour Government and East West Politics 1964 1970 2009 Parr Helen A question of leadership July 1966 and Harold Wilson s European decision Contemporary British History 19 4 2005 437 458 Parr Helen Britain s Policy Towards the European Community Harold Wilson and Britain s World Role 1964 1967 Routledge 2005 Vickers Rhiannon Harold Wilson the British Labour Party and the War in Vietnam Journal of Cold War Studies 10 2 2008 41 70 online Young John W ed The Labour governments 1964 1970 volume 2 International policy 2008 Historiography edit Crines Andrew S ed Harold Wilson The Unprincipled Prime Minister A Reappraisal of Harold Wilson 2016 evaluations by scholars and politicians excerpt O Hara Glen Parr Helen The Fall and Rise of a Reputation Contemporary British History 2006 20 3 pp 295 302 Perkins Anne Labour needs to rethink Harold Wilson s legacy It still matters The Guardian 10 March 2016 Pimlott Ben Frustrate Their Knavish Tricks Writings on Biography History and Politics 1994 pp 31 36 External links editHarold Wilson at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Harold Wilson Harold Wilson amp Censorship UK Parliament Living Heritage Lord Wilson of Rievaulx obituary in The Daily Telegraph Harold Wilson on the Downing Street website Portraits of Harold Wilson at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Archival material relating to Harold Wilson UK National Archives nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded byStephen King Hall Member of Parliamentfor Ormskirk1945 1950 Succeeded byRonald CrossNew constituency Member of Parliament for Huyton1950 1983 Constituency abolishedPolitical officesPreceded byReginald Manningham Buller Parliamentary Secretary at the Ministry of Works1945 1947 Succeeded byEvan DurbinPreceded byHilary Marquand Secretary for Overseas Trade1947 Succeeded byArthur BottomleyPreceded byStafford Cripps President of the Board of Trade1947 1951 Succeeded byHartley ShawcrossPreceded byHugh Gaitskell Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer1955 1961 Succeeded byJames CallaghanPreceded byDenis Healey Shadow Foreign Secretary1961 1963 Succeeded byPatrick Gordon WalkerPreceded byGeorge Brown Leader of the Opposition1963 1964 Succeeded byAlec Douglas HomePreceded byAlec Douglas Home Prime Minister of the United Kingdom1964 1970 Succeeded byEdward HeathFirst Lord of the Treasury1964 1970New office Minister for the Civil Service1968 1970Preceded byEdward Heath Leader of the Opposition1970 1974Prime Minister of the United Kingdom1974 1976 Succeeded byJames CallaghanFirst Lord of the Treasury1974 1976Minister for the Civil Service1974 1976Party political officesPreceded byAusten Albu Chair of the Fabian Society1954 1955 Succeeded byMargaret ColePreceded byRichard Crossman Chair of the Labour Party1961 1962 Succeeded byDai DaviesPreceded byHugh Gaitskell Leader of the Labour Party1963 1976 Succeeded byJames CallaghanAcademic officesNew office Chancellor of the University of Bradford1966 1985 Succeeded byJohn Harvey JonesPreceded byGeorge Barnard President of the Royal Statistical Society1972 1973 Succeeded byD J Finney Portals nbsp Politics nbsp Socialism nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Wilson amp oldid 1188612761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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