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Wikipedia

Michael Foot

Michael Mackintosh Foot FRSL (23 July 1913 – 3 March 2010) was a British Labour Party politician who served as Labour Leader from 1980 to 1983. Foot began his career as a journalist on Tribune and the Evening Standard. He co-wrote the 1940 polemic against appeasement of Adolf Hitler, Guilty Men, under a pseudonym.

Michael Foot
Foot in 1981
Leader of the Opposition
In office
10 November 1980 – 2 October 1983
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterMargaret Thatcher
Preceded byJames Callaghan
Succeeded byNeil Kinnock
Leader of the Labour Party
In office
10 November 1980 – 2 October 1983
DeputyDenis Healey
Preceded byJames Callaghan
Succeeded byNeil Kinnock
Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
In office
5 April 1976 – 10 November 1980
LeaderJames Callaghan
Preceded byEdward Short
Succeeded byDenis Healey
Shadow Leader of the House of Commons
In office
4 May 1979 – 10 November 1980
LeaderJames Callaghan
Preceded byNorman St John-Stevas
Succeeded byJohn Silkin
Ministerial offices
Leader of the House of Commons
In office
8 April 1976 – 4 May 1979
Prime MinisterJames Callaghan
Preceded byEdward Short
Succeeded byNorman St John-Stevas
Lord President of the Council
In office
8 April 1976 – 4 May 1979
Prime MinisterJames Callaghan
Preceded byEdward Short
Succeeded byChristopher Soames
Secretary of State for Employment
In office
5 March 1974 – 8 April 1976
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byWilliam Whitelaw
Succeeded byAlbert Booth
Parliamentary offices
Member of Parliament
for Blaenau Gwent
Ebbw Vale (1960–1983)
In office
18 November 1960 – 16 March 1992
Preceded byAneurin Bevan
Succeeded byLlew Smith
Member of Parliament
for Plymouth Devonport
In office
5 July 1945 – 6 May 1955
Preceded byLeslie Hore-Belisha
Succeeded byJoan Vickers
Personal details
Born
Michael Mackintosh Foot

(1913-07-23)23 July 1913
Plymouth, England
Died3 March 2010(2010-03-03) (aged 96)
London, England
Resting placeGolders Green Crematorium, London, England
Political partyLabour
Spouse
(m. 1949; died 1999)
Parent(s)Isaac Foot
Eva Mackintosh
RelativesSir Dingle Foot (brother)
The Lord Caradon (brother)
The Lord Foot (brother)
Paul Foot (nephew)
Sarah Foot (niece)
Oliver Foot (nephew)
EducationPlymouth College
Forres School
Leighton Park School
Alma materWadham College, Oxford
Signature

Foot served as a Member of Parliament (MP) from 1945 to 1955 and again from 1960 until he retired in 1992. A passionate orator, and associated with the left wing of the Labour Party for most of his career, Foot was an ardent supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and of British withdrawal from the European Economic Community (EEC). He was appointed to the Cabinet as Secretary of State for Employment under Harold Wilson in 1974, and he later served as Leader of the House of Commons (1976–1979) under James Callaghan. He was also Deputy Leader of the Labour Party under Callaghan from 1976 to 1980.

Elected as a compromise candidate, Foot served as the Leader of the Labour Party, and Leader of the Opposition from 1980 to 1983.[1] His strongly left-wing political positions and criticisms of his vacillating leadership made him an unpopular leader. Not particularly telegenic, he was nicknamed "Worzel Gummidge" for his rumpled appearance.[2][3][4] A faction of the party broke away in 1981 to form the SDP. Foot led Labour into the 1983 general election, when the party obtained its lowest share of the vote since the 1918 general election and the fewest parliamentary seats it had had at any time since before 1945, which remained the case until Labour's defeat at the 2019 election.[5] He resigned the party leadership following the election, and was succeeded as leader by Neil Kinnock.

Books authored by Michael Foot include Guilty Men (1940); The Pen and the Sword (1957), a biography of Jonathan Swift; and a biography of Aneurin Bevan.

Family

Foot was born in Lipson Terrace, Plymouth, Devon, the fourth son and fifth of seven children of Isaac Foot (1880–1960) and of the Scotswoman[6] Eva[7] (née Mackintosh, died 17 May 1946). Isaac Foot was a solicitor and founder of the Plymouth law firm Foot and Bowden (which amalgamated with another firm to become Foot Anstey). Isaac Foot, an active member of the Liberal Party, served as the Liberal Member of Parliament for Bodmin in Cornwall from 1922 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1935, and as a Lord Mayor of Plymouth.[8]

Michael Foot's siblings included: Sir Dingle Foot MP (1905–78), a Liberal and subsequently Labour MP; Hugh Foot, Baron Caradon (1907–90), Governor of Cyprus (1957–60) and representative of the United Kingdom at the United Nations from 1964–70; Liberal politician John Foot, later Baron Foot (1909–99); Margaret Elizabeth Foot (1911–65); Jennifer Mackintosh Highet[citation needed] (1916-2002); and Christopher Isaac Foot (1917–84).[citation needed] Michael Foot was the uncle of campaigning journalist Paul Foot (1937–2004) and of charity worker Oliver Foot (1946–2008).[9]

Early life

Foot was educated at Plymouth College Preparatory School, Forres School in Swanage,[10] and Leighton Park School in Reading. When he left Forres School, the headmaster sent a letter to his father in which he said "he has been the leading boy in the school in every way".[11] He then went on to read Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Wadham College, Oxford. Foot was a president of the Oxford Union. He also took part in the ESU USA Tour (the debating tour of the United States run by the English-Speaking Union).

Upon graduating with a second-class degree in 1934,[12] he took a job as a shipping clerk in Birkenhead. Foot was profoundly influenced by the poverty and unemployment that he witnessed in Liverpool, which was on a different scale from anything he had seen in Plymouth. A Liberal up to this time, Foot was converted to socialism by Oxford University Labour Club president David Lewis, a Canadian Rhodes scholar, and others: " I knew him [at Oxford] when I was a Liberal [and Lewis] played a part in converting me to socialism."[13]

Foot joined the Labour Party and first stood for parliament, aged 22, at the 1935 general election, where he contested Monmouth. During the election, Foot criticised the Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, for seeking rearmament. In his election address, Foot contended that "the armaments race in Europe must be stopped now".[14] Foot also supported unilateral disarmament, after multilateral disarmament talks at Geneva had broken down in 1933.[15]

Foot became a journalist, working briefly on the New Statesman, before joining the left-wing weekly Tribune when it was set up in early 1937 to support the Unity Campaign, an attempt to secure an anti-fascist united front between Labour and other left-wing parties. The campaign's members were Stafford Cripps's (Labour-affiliated) Socialist League, the Independent Labour Party and the Communist Party of Great Britain (CP). Foot resigned in 1938 after the paper's first editor, William Mellor, was sacked for refusing to adopt a new CP policy of backing a Popular Front, including non-socialist parties, against fascism and appeasement. In a 1955 interview, Foot ideologically identified as a libertarian socialist.[16]

He was an avid anti-imperialist and was heavily involved in the India League.[17] As an Oxford graduate, he was influenced by the founder of the India League, Krishna Menon.[18] The India League was the premier UK-based organisation that fought for the 'Liberation of India'.[19] After Indian independence in 1947, Foot's interest in India continued, and he became Chair of the India League.[20]

Journalism

On the recommendation of Aneurin Bevan, Foot was soon hired by Lord Beaverbrook to work as a writer on his Evening Standard. (Bevan is supposed to have told Beaverbrook on the phone: "I've got a young bloody knight-errant here. They sacked his boss, so he resigned. Have a look at him.") At the outbreak of the Second World War, Foot volunteered for military service, but was rejected because of his chronic asthma.

In 1940, under the pen-name "Cato" he and two other Beaverbrook journalists (Frank Owen, editor of the Standard, and Peter Howard of the Daily Express) published Guilty Men, which attacked the appeasement policy and slow pace of British re-armament under the National Governments of Ramsay MacDonald, Stanley Baldwin, and Neville Chamberlain; it became a runaway bestseller. (In so doing, Foot reversed his position of the 1935 election – when he had attacked the Conservatives as militaristic and demanded disarmament in the face of Nazi Germany.) Beaverbrook made Foot editor of the Evening Standard in 1942, when he was aged 28. During the war, Foot made a speech that was later featured in the documentary TV series The World at War broadcast in February 1974.[21] Foot was speaking in defence of the Daily Mirror, which had criticised the conduct of the war by the Churchill government. He mocked the notion that the Government would make no more territorial demands of other newspapers if they allowed the Mirror to be censored.

Foot left the Standard in 1945 to join the Daily Herald as a columnist. The Daily Herald was jointly owned by the Trades Union Congress and Odhams Press, and was effectively an official Labour Party paper. He rejoined Tribune as editor from 1948 to 1952, and was again the paper's editor from 1955 to 1960. Throughout his political career he railed against the increasing corporate domination of the press.

Member of Parliament

Foot fought the Plymouth Devonport constituency in the 1945 general election. His election agent was Labour activist and lifelong friend Ron Lemin. He won the seat for Labour for the first time, holding it until his surprise defeat by Dame Joan Vickers at the 1955 general election. Until 1957, he was the most prominent ally of Aneurin Bevan, who had taken Cripps's place as leader of the Labour left. He successfully urged Bevan to follow through with his threat to resign from the Cabinet in protest of the introduction of prescription charges at the National Health Service, leading to a split in the Labour Party between Bevanites and Gaitskellites.[22] Foot and Bevan fell out after Bevan renounced unilateral nuclear disarmament at the 1957 Labour Party conference.

Before the Cold War began in the late 1940s, Foot favoured a 'third way' foreign policy for Europe (he was joint author with Richard Crossman and Ian Mikardo of the pamphlet Keep Left in 1947), but in the wake of the communist seizure of power in Hungary and Czechoslovakia he and Tribune took a strongly anti-communist position, eventually embracing NATO.

Foot was however a critic of the West's handling of the Korean War, an opponent of West German rearmament in the early 1950s and a founder member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Under his editorship, Tribune opposed both the British government's Suez campaign and the Soviet crushing of the Hungarian Revolution in 1956. In this period he made regular television appearances on the current affairs programmes In The News (BBC Television) and subsequently Free Speech (ITV). "There was certainly nothing wrong with his television technique in those days", reflected Anthony Howard shortly after Foot's death.[23]

Foot returned to parliament at a by-election in Ebbw Vale, Monmouthshire, in 1960, the seat having been left vacant by Bevan's death. He had the Labour whip withdrawn in March 1961 after rebelling against the Labour leadership over Royal Air Force estimates. He only returned to the Parliamentary Labour Group in 1963, when Harold Wilson became Leader of the Labour Party after the sudden death of Hugh Gaitskell.

Harold Wilson — the subject of an enthusiastic campaign biography by Foot published by Robert Maxwell's Pergamon Press in 1964 – offered Foot a place in his first government, but Foot turned it down, instead becoming the leader of Labour's left opposition from the back benches. He opposed the government's moves to restrict immigration, join the European Communities (or "Common Market" as they were referred to) and reform the trade unions, was against the Vietnam War and Rhodesia's unilateral declaration of independence, and denounced the Soviet suppression of "socialism with a human face" in Czechoslovakia in 1968. He also famously allied with the Tory right-winger Enoch Powell to scupper the government's plan to abolish the voting rights of hereditary peers and create a House of Lords comprising only life peers – a "seraglio of eunuchs" as Foot put it.[24]

Foot challenged James Callaghan for the post of Treasurer of the Labour Party in 1967, but failed.

In government

After 1970, Labour moved to the left and Wilson came to an accommodation with Foot. Foot served in the Second Shadow Cabinet of Harold Wilson in various roles between 1970 and 1974. In April 1972, he stood for the Deputy Leadership of the party, along with Edward Short and Anthony Crosland. The first ballot saw Foot narrowly come second to Short winning 110 votes to the latter's 111. Crosland polled 61 votes and was eliminated. It was reported in the next day's The Glasgow Herald that Short was the favourite to pick up most of Crosland's votes.[25] The second ballot saw Short increase his total to 145 votes, while Foot's only rose to 116, giving Short victory by 29 votes.[26]

When, in 1974, Labour returned to office under Wilson, Foot became Secretary of State for Employment. According to Ben Pimlott, his appointment was intended to please the left of the party and the Trade Unions. In this role, he played the major part in the government's efforts to maintain the trade unions' support. He was also responsible for the Health and Safety at Work Act, as well as the Trade Union and Labour Relations Act which repealed the Heath ministry's trade union reforms, and the Employment Protection Act, which introduced legal protections against being sacked for becoming pregnant and legislated for maternity pay. His time as Employment Secretary also saw Acas adopt its current name and modern form as a body with independence from government.[27]

Foot was one of the mainstays of the "no" campaign in the 1975 referendum on British membership of the European Communities. When Wilson retired in 1976, Foot contested the party leadership and led in the first ballot, but was ultimately defeated by James Callaghan. Later that year Foot was elected Deputy Leader, and during the Callaghan government Foot took a seat in Cabinet as Leader of the House of Commons, which gave him the unenviable task of trying to maintain the survival of the Callaghan government as its majority evaporated. However, he was able to steer numerous government proposals through the Commons, often by very narrow majorities, including increases in pension and benefit rates, the creation of the Police Complaints Board, the expansion of comprehensive schools, the establishment of a statutory responsibility to provide housing for the homeless, universal Child Benefit, the nationalisation of shipbuilding, abolishing pay beds in NHS hospitals, and housing security for agricultural workers, before the government fell in a vote of no confidence by a single vote.[27] Whilst Leader of the Commons, Foot simultaneously held the post of Lord President of the Council.

In 1975, Foot, along with Jennie Lee and others, courted controversy when they supported Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister of India, after she prompted the declaration of a state of emergency. In December 1975, The Times ran an editorial titled 'Is Mr Foot a Fascist?' — their answer was that he was —[28] after Norman Tebbit accused him of 'undiluted fascism' when Foot said that the Ferrybridge Six deserved dismissal for defying a closed shop.[29]

Labour leadership

Following Labour's 1979 general election defeat by Margaret Thatcher, James Callaghan remained as party leader for the next 18 months before he resigned. Foot was elected Labour leader on 10 November 1980, beating Denis Healey in the second round of the leadership election (the last leadership contest to involve only Labour MPs). Foot presented himself as a compromise candidate, capable – unlike Healey – of uniting the party,[30] which at the time was riven by the grassroots left-wing insurgency centred around Tony Benn.

The Bennites were demanding revenge for what they considered to be the betrayals of the Callaghan government. They called for MPs who had acquiesced in Callaghan's policies to be replaced by left-wingers who would support unilateral nuclear disarmament, withdrawal from the European Communities, and widespread nationalisation. Benn did not stand for the leadership; apart from Foot and Healey, the other candidates (both eliminated in the first round) were John Silkin, a Tribunite like Foot, and Peter Shore, a Eurosceptic.

As Steve Richards notes in 1980 Healey, not Foot, was widely expected by the media and many political figures to be the next Labour leader.[31] However he notes that while "Healey was widely seen as the obvious successor to Callaghan", and that sections of the media ultimately reacted with "disbelief" at Labour not choosing him, to be leader the "choice of Foot was not as perverse as it seemed". He argues Labour MPs were looking for a figure from the left who could unite the wider party with the leadership which Healey could not do. Richards states that despite being on the left of the party Foot was not a "tribal politician" and had proved he could work with those of different ideologies and had been a loyal deputy to Callaghan. Thus Foot "was seen as the unity candidate" and won the election.[32]

When he became leader, Foot was already 67 years old; and frail. Following the 1979 energy crisis, Britain went into recession in 1980, which was blamed on the Conservative government's controversial monetarist policy against inflation, which had the effect of increasing unemployment. As a result, Labour had moved ahead of the Conservatives in the opinion polls. Following Foot's election as leader, opinion polls showed a double-digit lead for Labour, boosting his hopes of becoming prime minister at the next general election, which had to be held by May 1984.

When Foot became leader, the Conservative politician Kenneth Baker commented: "Labour was led by Dixon of Dock Green under Jim Callaghan. Now it is led by Worzel Gummidge."[3] Foot's nickname in the press gradually became "Worzel Gummidge", or "Worzel".[4] This became particularly common after Remembrance Day 1981, when he attended the Cenotaph observance wearing a coat that some said resembled a donkey jacket.[2] After his tenure as leader, Foot would be "depicted as a scarecrow on ITV’s satirical puppet show Spitting Image."[3]

Almost immediately following his election as leader, he was faced with a serious crisis. On 25 January 1981, four senior politicians on the right-wing of the Labour Party (Roy Jenkins, Shirley Williams, David Owen and William Rodgers, the so-called "Gang of Four") left Labour and formed the Social Democratic Party, which was launched on 26 March 1981. This was largely seen as the consequence of the Labour Party's swing to the left, polarising divisions in an already divided party.[33]

The SDP won the support of large sections of the British media. For most of 1981 and early-1982 its opinion poll ratings suggested that it could at least overtake Labour and possibly win a general election. The Conservatives were then unpopular because of the economic policies of Margaret Thatcher, which had seen unemployment reach a postwar high.

The Labour left was still strong. In 1981, Benn decided to challenge Healey for the Deputy Leadership of the Labour Party, a contest Healey won, albeit narrowly. Foot struggled to make an impact, and was widely criticised for his ineffectiveness, though his performances in the Commons — most notably on the Falklands War of 1982 – won him widespread respect from other parliamentarians. He was criticised by some on the left for supporting Thatcher's immediate resort to military action. The right-wing newspapers nevertheless lambasted him consistently for what they saw as his bohemian eccentricity, attacking him for wearing what they described as a "donkey jacket" (actually he wore a type of duffel coat)[34] at the wreath-laying ceremony at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Day in November 1981, for which he was likened to an "out-of-work navvy" by a fellow Labour MP.[35] Foot did not make it generally known that the Queen Mother had described it as a "sensible coat for a day like this",[36] which could be considered a slight or a compliment depending on whether irony was intended. He later donated the coat to the People's History Museum in Manchester,[37][38] which holds a collection that spans Foot's entire political career from 1938 to 1990, and his personal papers dating back to 1926.[39]

The formation of the SDP – which formed an alliance with the Liberal Party in June 1981 – contributed to a fall in Labour support. The double-digit lead which had still been intact in opinion polls at the start of 1981 was swiftly wiped out, and by the end of October the opinion polls were showing the Alliance ahead of Labour. Labour briefly regained their lead of most opinion polls in early 1982, but when the Falklands conflict ended on 14 June 1982 with a British victory over Argentina, opinion polls showed the Conservatives firmly in the lead. Their position at the top of the polls was strengthened by the return to economic growth later in the year. It was looking certain that the Conservatives would be re-elected, and the only key issue that the media were still speculating by the end of 1982 was whether it would be Labour or the Alliance who formed the next opposition.[40]

Through late 1982 and early 1983, there was constant speculation that Labour MPs would replace Foot with Healey as leader. Such speculation increased after Labour lost the 1983 Bermondsey by-election, in which Peter Tatchell was Labour candidate, standing against a Conservative, a Liberal (eventual winner Simon Hughes) and John O'Grady, who had declared himself the Real Bermondsey Labour candidate.[citation needed] Critically, Labour held on in a subsequent by-election in Darlington, and Foot remained leader for the 1983 general election.

1983 general election

The 1983 Labour manifesto, strongly socialist in tone, advocated unilateral nuclear disarmament, higher personal taxation and a return to a more interventionist industrial policy. The manifesto also pledged that a Labour government would abolish the House of Lords, nationalise banks and immediately withdraw from the then-European Economic Community. Gerald Kaufman, once Harold Wilson's press officer and during the 1980s a prominent figure on the Labour right-wing, described the 1983 Labour manifesto as "the longest suicide note in history."[41]

As a statement on internal democracy, Foot passed the edict that the manifesto would consist of all resolutions arrived at conference. The party also failed to master the medium of television, while Foot addressed public meetings around the country, and made some radio broadcasts, in the same manner as Clement Attlee did in 1945.

The Daily Mirror was the only major newspaper to back Foot and the Labour Party at the 1983 general election, urging its readers to vote Labour and "Stop the waste of our nation, for your job your children and your future" in response to the mass unemployment which followed Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's monetarist economic policies to reduce inflation. Most other newspapers urged their readers to vote Conservative.[42]

The Labour Party, led by Foot, lost to the Conservatives in a landslide – a result which had been widely predicted by the opinion polls since the previous summer. The only consolation for Foot and Labour was that they did not lose their place in opposition to the SDP–Liberal Alliance, who came close to them in terms of votes but were still a long way behind in terms of seats.[43] Despite this, Foot was very critical of the Alliance, accusing them of "siphoning" Labour support and enabling the Tories to win more seats.[44]

Foot resigned days following the bitter election defeat, and was succeeded as leader on 2 October by Neil Kinnock; who had been tipped from the outset to be Labour's choice of new leader.

Backbenches and retirement

Foot took a back seat in Labour politics following 1983 and retired from the House of Commons at the 1992 general election, when Labour lost to the Conservative Party (led by John Major) for the fourth election in succession, but remained politically active. From 1987 to 1992, he was the oldest sitting British MP (preceding former Prime Minister Sir Edward Heath). He defended Salman Rushdie, after Ayatollah Khomeini advocated killing the novelist in a fatwā, and took a strongly pro-interventionist position against Serbia and Montenegro during the Yugoslav Wars, supporting NATO forces whilst citing defence of civilian populations in Croatia and Bosnia. In addition, he was among the Patrons of the British-Croatian Society.[45] The Guardian's political editor Michael White criticised Foot's "overgenerous" support for Croatian President Franjo Tuđman.[46]

Foot remained a high-profile member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). He wrote several books, including highly regarded biographies of Aneurin Bevan and H. G. Wells. Indeed, he was a distinguished Vice-president of the H. G. Wells Society. Many of his friends have said publicly that they regret that he ever gave up literature for politics.

Michael Foot became a supporter of pro-Europeanism in the 1990s.[47]

Foot was an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society and a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association.[48] In 1988, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.[citation needed]

In a poll of Labour Party activists he was voted the worst post-war Labour Party leader.[49] Though Foot is considered by many right-wingers to be a failure as Labour leader, his biographer Mervyn Jones strongly makes the case that no one else could have held Labour together at the time, particularly in the face of the controversy over the infiltration of the party by Militant.[citation needed] Foot is remembered with affection in Westminster as a great parliamentarian. He was widely liked, and admired for his integrity, habitual courtesy, and generosity of spirit, by both his colleagues and opponents.[citation needed]

A portrait of Foot by the artist Robert Lenkiewicz now permanently hangs in Portcullis House, Westminster.

Gordievsky's KGB allegations

Oleg Gordievsky, a high-ranking KGB officer who defected from the Soviet Union to the UK in 1985, made allegations against Foot in his 1995 memoirs.[50] Essentially, the allegations claimed that, up until 1968, Foot had spoken to KGB agents "dozens of times", passing information about politics and the trade unions, and Foot had been paid a total of around £1,500 for his information (said to be worth £37,000 in 2018).[51] The Sunday Times, which serialised Gordievsky's book under the headline "KGB: Michael Foot was our agent", claimed in an article of 19 February that the Soviet intelligence services regarded Foot as an "agent of influence" (and a "useful idiot"), codenamed "Agent BOOT", and that he was in the pay of the KGB for many years. Crucially, the newspaper used material from the original manuscript of the book which mentioned Foot by name, something excluded from the published book.[52]

At the time a leading article in The Independent newspaper asserted: "It seems extraordinary that such an unreliable figure should now be allowed, given the lack of supporting evidence, to damage the reputation of figures such as Mr Foot."[53] In a February 1992 interview, Gordievsky declared that he had no further revelations to make about the Labour Party.[53] Foot successfully sued the Sunday Times, winning "substantial" damages.[52]

Following Foot's death, Charles Moore writing in The Daily Telegraph in 2010, gave an account which he said had been provided to him by Gordievsky, providing additional uncorroborated information concerning his allegations. Moore said there was no evidence to show that Foot gave away state secrets.[54]

Plymouth Argyle

Foot was a passionate supporter of Plymouth Argyle Football Club from his childhood and once remarked that he was not going to die until he had seen them play in the Premier League.[55] He served for several years as a director of the club, seeing two promotions under his tenure.[56]

For his 90th birthday, Foot was registered with the Football League as an honorary player and given the shirt number 90. This made him the oldest registered professional player in the history of football.[56][57]

Personal life

Foot was married to the film-maker, author and feminist historian Jill Craigie (1911–1999) from 1949 until her death fifty years later. He had no children.[58]

In February 2007, it was revealed that Foot had an extramarital affair with a woman around 35 years his junior in the early 1970s. The affair, which lasted nearly a year, put a considerable strain on his marriage. The affair is detailed in Foot's official biography, published in March 2007.[59]

On 23 July 2006, his 93rd birthday, Michael Foot became the longest-lived leader of a major British political party, passing Lord Callaghan's record of 92 years, 364 days.

A staunch republican (though well liked by the Royal Family on a personal level),[59] Foot rejected honours from the Queen and the government, including a knighthood and a peerage, on more than one occasion.

He was also an atheist. As of June 2021, he was one of four leaders of the Labour Party to declare that they did not follow any religion.[60][61]

Health

Foot suffered from asthma (which disqualified him from service in the Second World War) and eczema.[62]

In October 1963, he was involved in a car crash, suffering pierced lungs, broken ribs, and a broken left leg. Foot used a walking stick for the rest of his life.[58] According to former MP Tam Dalyell, Foot had, up until the accident, been a chain-smoker, but he gave up the habit thereafter.[63] Jill Craigie also suffered a crushed hand in this car crash.

In October 1976, Foot became blind in one eye following an attack of shingles.[64]

Death

Foot died at his Hampstead, north London home on the morning of 3 March 2010 at the age of 96. The House of Commons was informed of the news later that day by Justice Secretary Jack Straw,[65] who told the House: "I am sure that this news will be received with great sadness not only in my own party but across the country as a whole."[66] Foot's funeral was a non-religious service, held on 15 March 2010 at Golders Green Crematorium in North-West London.[67]

In popular culture

"Foot Heads Arms Body"

On 22 June 1978, The Guardian ran an article with the headline "Foot hits back on Nazi comparison".[68] Reader David C. Allan of Edinburgh responded with a letter to the editor, which the paper ran on 27 June. Decrying the headline's apparent pun, Allen suggested that, if Foot were in future to be appointed Secretary of State for Defence, The Guardian might cover it under the headline "Foot Heads Arms Body".[69] The belief later gained currency that The Times actually had run the headline. Some decades later, Martyn Cornell recalled the story as true, saying he had written the headline himself as a Times subeditor around 1986.[70] The headline does not, however, appear in The Times Digital Archive, which includes every day's newspaper from 1785 into the 21st century.[71]

Fictional portrayals

Foot was portrayed by Patrick Godfrey in the 2002 BBC production of Ian Curteis's long unproduced The Falklands Play and by Michael Pennington in the film The Iron Lady.[72][73]

Bibliography

  • Cato (pen name), Guilty Men, Left Book Club (1940); by Foot, Peter Howard, and Frank Owen
  • Cassius (pen name), Brendan and Beverley, Victor Gollancz (1940)
  • Cassius (pen name), The Trial of Mussolini: Being a Verbatim Report of the First Great Trial for War Criminals Held in London Sometime in 1944 or 1945, Victor Gollancz (1943)
  • The Pen and the Sword, MacGibbon and Kee (1957) ISBN 0-261-61989-6; 3rd printing (1966), The Pen & the Sword: A Year in the Life of Jonathan Swift LCCN 70--38605
  • Guilty Men, 1957, by Foot and Mervyn Jones, Gollancz (1957); US title, Guilty Men, 1957: Suez & Cyprus LCCN 57--10197
  • Aneurin Bevan, MacGibbon and Kee (volume 1:1962) (volume 2:1973) ISBN 0-261-61508-4
  • Debts of Honour, Harper and Row (1981) ISBN 0-06-039001-8
  • Another Heart and Other Pulses, Collins (1984) ISBN 978-0-00-217256-1.
  • H. G.: The History of Mr Wells, Doubleday (1985) ISBN 978-1-887178-04-4
  • Loyalists and Loners, Collins (1986) ISBN 978-0-00-217583-8
  • Politics of Paradise, HarperCollins (1989) ISBN 0-06-039091-3
  • "Introduction" in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, Penguin (1967)
  • ' "Bevan's Message to the World" ' in Geoffrey Goodman, ed., The State of the Nation: The Political Legacy of Aneurin Bevan, Gollancz (1997)
  • "Introduction" in Bertrand Russell's Autobiography, Routledge (1998)
  • Dr Strangelove, I Presume, Gollancz (1999)
  • The Uncollected Michael Foot, by Foot and editor Brian Brivati, Politicos Publishing (2003) ISBN 978-1-84275-096-4
  • "Foreword" in Greg Rosen's Old Labour to New, Methuen Publishing (2005) ISBN 978-1-84275-045-2
  • Isaac Foot: A West Country Boy – Apostle of England, Politicos Publishing (2006) ISBN 978-1-84275-181-7

Footnotes

  1. ^ "1980: Michael Foot is new Labour leader". BBC News. 10 November 1980. from the original on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
  2. ^ a b BBC News 29 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine, 3 March 2010, Michael Foot reflects on his infamous jacket
  3. ^ a b c Daily Telegraph 27 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Michael Foot – The best British political insults and putdowns
  4. ^ a b The Independent, 11 April 1994, Book Review / How Worzel came to save the Labour Party: 'Michael Foot' – Mervyn Jones: Victor Gollancz, 20 pounds, by John Torode.
  5. ^ Philpot, Robert (4 June 2013). . Total Politics. UK. Archived from the original on 23 March 2014.
  6. ^ Harrington, Illytd (28 December 2006). "Extraordinary life of Apostle of England". Camden New Journal. from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  7. ^ Moore, Jonathan (3 March 2010). "Obituary: Michael Foot". politics.co.uk. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  8. ^ Foot, John (1998). "Isaac Foot". In Duncan Brack (ed.). Dictionary of Liberal Biography. Malcolm Baines, Katie Hall, Graham Lippiatt, Tony Little, Mark Pack, Geoffrey Sell, Jen Tankard (1st ed.). Artillery Row, London: Politico's Publishing. pp. 109–112. ISBN 978-1-902301-09-9.
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  10. ^ fsmschool Michael Foot Tribute 28 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 6 April 2014
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  15. ^ Jones, p. 30.
  16. ^ Labour's Old Romantic: A Film Portrait of Michael Foot 20 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine (1997). BBC TV. ftvdb.bfi.org.uk 12 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Alison Cahn (Producer). Anne Tyerman (Series editor). Michael Cockerell (Reporter). Retrieved 5 December 2010.
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  19. ^ Nasta, Susheila, ed. (2013). India in Britain: South Asian networks and connections, 1858-1950. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-39271-7. OCLC 802321049.
  20. ^ "India League in a league of its own". 2017.
  21. ^ Calder, Angus (13 February 1974). "The World at War". Episode 15: "The Home Front 1940–44". Internet Movie Database. from the original on 5 November 2010. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  22. ^ Campbell, John (2010). Pistols at Dawn: Two Hundred Years of Political Rivalry from Pitt and Fox to Blair and Brown. London: Vintage. p. 210. ISBN 978-1-84595-091-0. OCLC 489636152.
  23. ^ Howard, Anthony (5 March 2010). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 8 March 2010. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  24. ^ PARLIAMENT (No. 2) BILL 9 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine, HC Deb 3 February 1969 vol 777 cc43-171
  25. ^ Warden, John (21 April 1972). "Short leads by one vote in first ballot". The Glasgow Herald. p. 1. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  26. ^ Warden, John (26 April 1972). "Unity call as Short wins by 29 votes". The Glasgow Herald. p. 1. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  27. ^ a b Johnson, Richard (23 July 2021). "The Life and Legacy of Michael Foot". Tribune. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  28. ^ "Is Mr. Foot a Fascist?". The Times. 2 December 1975.
  29. ^ The Spectator Volume 237, Part 2. London: F.C. Westley. 1976. p. 12.
  30. ^ Crewe, Ivor; King, Anthony (1995). SDP: The Birth, Life and Death of the Social Democratic Party. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 73. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2015.[ISBN missing]
  31. ^ Richards, Steve (2021). The Prime Ministers We Never Had; Success and Failure from Butler to Corbyn. London: Atlantic Books. pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-1-83895-241-9.
  32. ^ Richards, Steve (2021). The Prime Ministers We Never Had; Success and Failure from Butler to Corbyn. London: Atlantic Books. pp. 116–119. ISBN 978-1-83895-241-9.
  33. ^ "1983 general election". BBC News. from the original on 6 April 2018. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  34. ^ "Michael Foot: RIP". New Statesman. 3 March 2010. from the original on 6 October 2015. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  35. ^ Sandbrook, Dominic (11 March 2007). "A lion in a donkey jacket (Review of Michael Foot: a Life by Kenneth O Morgan)". Sunday Telegraph. from the original on 23 April 2010. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  36. ^ Kirkup, James (3 March 2010). "Michael Foot and the donkey jacket that wasn't". from the original on 11 August 2014. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  37. ^ "Ode to the Donkey Jacket". BBC (Today (BBC Radio 4)). from the original on 3 March 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
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Biographies

External links

  • Michael Foot at IMDb
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Michael Foot
  • Johann Hari, 24 July 2003 – In-depth biographical interview marking Foot's 90th birthday
  • slideshow at The First Post
  • "March 3: In 2010" (fictitious obituary) at Today in Alternate History – "what if the Falklands Task Force had been defeated?"
  • The Labour History Archive and Study Centre hold Michael Foot's archive at: People's History Museum
  • "Michael Foot 1913–2010" at New Statesman – "the last published interview [6 November 2008] with the former Labour leader"
  • Works by Michael Foot at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Michael Foot at Library of Congress Authorities, with 33 catalogue records
Media offices
Preceded by Editor of the Evening Standard
1942–1943
Succeeded by
Preceded by Editor of Tribune
1948–1952
Served alongside: Evelyn Anderson
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Preceded by Editor of Tribune
1955–1960
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Plymouth Devonport
1945–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ebbw Vale
1960–1983
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for Blaenau Gwent
1983–1992
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State for Employment
1974–1976
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1976–1979
Succeeded by
Lord President of the Council
1976–1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1980–1983
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
1976–1980
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Labour Party
1980–1983
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Oldest sitting member of the House of Commons
1987–1992
Succeeded by

michael, foot, other, people, named, disambiguation, michael, mackintosh, foot, frsl, july, 1913, march, 2010, british, labour, party, politician, served, labour, leader, from, 1980, 1983, foot, began, career, journalist, tribune, evening, standard, wrote, 194. For other people named Michael Foot see Michael Foot disambiguation Michael Mackintosh Foot FRSL 23 July 1913 3 March 2010 was a British Labour Party politician who served as Labour Leader from 1980 to 1983 Foot began his career as a journalist on Tribune and the Evening Standard He co wrote the 1940 polemic against appeasement of Adolf Hitler Guilty Men under a pseudonym The Right HonourableMichael FootFRSLFoot in 1981Leader of the OppositionIn office 10 November 1980 2 October 1983MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterMargaret ThatcherPreceded byJames CallaghanSucceeded byNeil KinnockLeader of the Labour PartyIn office 10 November 1980 2 October 1983DeputyDenis HealeyPreceded byJames CallaghanSucceeded byNeil KinnockDeputy Leader of the Labour PartyIn office 5 April 1976 10 November 1980LeaderJames CallaghanPreceded byEdward ShortSucceeded byDenis HealeyShadow Leader of the House of CommonsIn office 4 May 1979 10 November 1980LeaderJames CallaghanPreceded byNorman St John StevasSucceeded byJohn SilkinMinisterial officesLeader of the House of CommonsIn office 8 April 1976 4 May 1979Prime MinisterJames CallaghanPreceded byEdward ShortSucceeded byNorman St John StevasLord President of the CouncilIn office 8 April 1976 4 May 1979Prime MinisterJames CallaghanPreceded byEdward ShortSucceeded byChristopher SoamesSecretary of State for EmploymentIn office 5 March 1974 8 April 1976Prime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byWilliam WhitelawSucceeded byAlbert BoothParliamentary officesMember of Parliamentfor Blaenau GwentEbbw Vale 1960 1983 In office 18 November 1960 16 March 1992Preceded byAneurin BevanSucceeded byLlew SmithMember of Parliamentfor Plymouth DevonportIn office 5 July 1945 6 May 1955Preceded byLeslie Hore BelishaSucceeded byJoan VickersPersonal detailsBornMichael Mackintosh Foot 1913 07 23 23 July 1913Plymouth EnglandDied3 March 2010 2010 03 03 aged 96 London EnglandResting placeGolders Green Crematorium London EnglandPolitical partyLabourSpouseJill Craigie m 1949 died 1999 wbr Parent s Isaac FootEva MackintoshRelativesSir Dingle Foot brother The Lord Caradon brother The Lord Foot brother Paul Foot nephew Sarah Foot niece Oliver Foot nephew EducationPlymouth CollegeForres SchoolLeighton Park SchoolAlma materWadham College OxfordSignatureFoot served as a Member of Parliament MP from 1945 to 1955 and again from 1960 until he retired in 1992 A passionate orator and associated with the left wing of the Labour Party for most of his career Foot was an ardent supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and of British withdrawal from the European Economic Community EEC He was appointed to the Cabinet as Secretary of State for Employment under Harold Wilson in 1974 and he later served as Leader of the House of Commons 1976 1979 under James Callaghan He was also Deputy Leader of the Labour Party under Callaghan from 1976 to 1980 Elected as a compromise candidate Foot served as the Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition from 1980 to 1983 1 His strongly left wing political positions and criticisms of his vacillating leadership made him an unpopular leader Not particularly telegenic he was nicknamed Worzel Gummidge for his rumpled appearance 2 3 4 A faction of the party broke away in 1981 to form the SDP Foot led Labour into the 1983 general election when the party obtained its lowest share of the vote since the 1918 general election and the fewest parliamentary seats it had had at any time since before 1945 which remained the case until Labour s defeat at the 2019 election 5 He resigned the party leadership following the election and was succeeded as leader by Neil Kinnock Books authored by Michael Foot include Guilty Men 1940 The Pen and the Sword 1957 a biography of Jonathan Swift and a biography of Aneurin Bevan Contents 1 Family 2 Early life 3 Journalism 4 Member of Parliament 4 1 In government 5 Labour leadership 6 1983 general election 7 Backbenches and retirement 7 1 Gordievsky s KGB allegations 8 Plymouth Argyle 9 Personal life 10 Health 11 Death 12 In popular culture 12 1 Foot Heads Arms Body 12 2 Fictional portrayals 13 Bibliography 14 Footnotes 15 Biographies 16 External linksFamily EditFoot was born in Lipson Terrace Plymouth Devon the fourth son and fifth of seven children of Isaac Foot 1880 1960 and of the Scotswoman 6 Eva 7 nee Mackintosh died 17 May 1946 Isaac Foot was a solicitor and founder of the Plymouth law firm Foot and Bowden which amalgamated with another firm to become Foot Anstey Isaac Foot an active member of the Liberal Party served as the Liberal Member of Parliament for Bodmin in Cornwall from 1922 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1935 and as a Lord Mayor of Plymouth 8 Michael Foot s siblings included Sir Dingle Foot MP 1905 78 a Liberal and subsequently Labour MP Hugh Foot Baron Caradon 1907 90 Governor of Cyprus 1957 60 and representative of the United Kingdom at the United Nations from 1964 70 Liberal politician John Foot later Baron Foot 1909 99 Margaret Elizabeth Foot 1911 65 Jennifer Mackintosh Highet citation needed 1916 2002 and Christopher Isaac Foot 1917 84 citation needed Michael Foot was the uncle of campaigning journalist Paul Foot 1937 2004 and of charity worker Oliver Foot 1946 2008 9 Early life EditFoot was educated at Plymouth College Preparatory School Forres School in Swanage 10 and Leighton Park School in Reading When he left Forres School the headmaster sent a letter to his father in which he said he has been the leading boy in the school in every way 11 He then went on to read Philosophy Politics and Economics at Wadham College Oxford Foot was a president of the Oxford Union He also took part in the ESU USA Tour the debating tour of the United States run by the English Speaking Union Upon graduating with a second class degree in 1934 12 he took a job as a shipping clerk in Birkenhead Foot was profoundly influenced by the poverty and unemployment that he witnessed in Liverpool which was on a different scale from anything he had seen in Plymouth A Liberal up to this time Foot was converted to socialism by Oxford University Labour Club president David Lewis a Canadian Rhodes scholar and others I knew him at Oxford when I was a Liberal and Lewis played a part in converting me to socialism 13 Foot joined the Labour Party and first stood for parliament aged 22 at the 1935 general election where he contested Monmouth During the election Foot criticised the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin for seeking rearmament In his election address Foot contended that the armaments race in Europe must be stopped now 14 Foot also supported unilateral disarmament after multilateral disarmament talks at Geneva had broken down in 1933 15 Foot became a journalist working briefly on the New Statesman before joining the left wing weekly Tribune when it was set up in early 1937 to support the Unity Campaign an attempt to secure an anti fascist united front between Labour and other left wing parties The campaign s members were Stafford Cripps s Labour affiliated Socialist League the Independent Labour Party and the Communist Party of Great Britain CP Foot resigned in 1938 after the paper s first editor William Mellor was sacked for refusing to adopt a new CP policy of backing a Popular Front including non socialist parties against fascism and appeasement In a 1955 interview Foot ideologically identified as a libertarian socialist 16 He was an avid anti imperialist and was heavily involved in the India League 17 As an Oxford graduate he was influenced by the founder of the India League Krishna Menon 18 The India League was the premier UK based organisation that fought for the Liberation of India 19 After Indian independence in 1947 Foot s interest in India continued and he became Chair of the India League 20 Journalism EditOn the recommendation of Aneurin Bevan Foot was soon hired by Lord Beaverbrook to work as a writer on his Evening Standard Bevan is supposed to have told Beaverbrook on the phone I ve got a young bloody knight errant here They sacked his boss so he resigned Have a look at him At the outbreak of the Second World War Foot volunteered for military service but was rejected because of his chronic asthma In 1940 under the pen name Cato he and two other Beaverbrook journalists Frank Owen editor of the Standard and Peter Howard of the Daily Express published Guilty Men which attacked the appeasement policy and slow pace of British re armament under the National Governments of Ramsay MacDonald Stanley Baldwin and Neville Chamberlain it became a runaway bestseller In so doing Foot reversed his position of the 1935 election when he had attacked the Conservatives as militaristic and demanded disarmament in the face of Nazi Germany Beaverbrook made Foot editor of the Evening Standard in 1942 when he was aged 28 During the war Foot made a speech that was later featured in the documentary TV series The World at War broadcast in February 1974 21 Foot was speaking in defence of the Daily Mirror which had criticised the conduct of the war by the Churchill government He mocked the notion that the Government would make no more territorial demands of other newspapers if they allowed the Mirror to be censored Foot left the Standard in 1945 to join the Daily Herald as a columnist The Daily Herald was jointly owned by the Trades Union Congress and Odhams Press and was effectively an official Labour Party paper He rejoined Tribune as editor from 1948 to 1952 and was again the paper s editor from 1955 to 1960 Throughout his political career he railed against the increasing corporate domination of the press Member of Parliament EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Foot fought the Plymouth Devonport constituency in the 1945 general election His election agent was Labour activist and lifelong friend Ron Lemin He won the seat for Labour for the first time holding it until his surprise defeat by Dame Joan Vickers at the 1955 general election Until 1957 he was the most prominent ally of Aneurin Bevan who had taken Cripps s place as leader of the Labour left He successfully urged Bevan to follow through with his threat to resign from the Cabinet in protest of the introduction of prescription charges at the National Health Service leading to a split in the Labour Party between Bevanites and Gaitskellites 22 Foot and Bevan fell out after Bevan renounced unilateral nuclear disarmament at the 1957 Labour Party conference Before the Cold War began in the late 1940s Foot favoured a third way foreign policy for Europe he was joint author with Richard Crossman and Ian Mikardo of the pamphlet Keep Left in 1947 but in the wake of the communist seizure of power in Hungary and Czechoslovakia he and Tribune took a strongly anti communist position eventually embracing NATO Foot was however a critic of the West s handling of the Korean War an opponent of West German rearmament in the early 1950s and a founder member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament Under his editorship Tribune opposed both the British government s Suez campaign and the Soviet crushing of the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 In this period he made regular television appearances on the current affairs programmes In The News BBC Television and subsequently Free Speech ITV There was certainly nothing wrong with his television technique in those days reflected Anthony Howard shortly after Foot s death 23 Foot returned to parliament at a by election in Ebbw Vale Monmouthshire in 1960 the seat having been left vacant by Bevan s death He had the Labour whip withdrawn in March 1961 after rebelling against the Labour leadership over Royal Air Force estimates He only returned to the Parliamentary Labour Group in 1963 when Harold Wilson became Leader of the Labour Party after the sudden death of Hugh Gaitskell Harold Wilson the subject of an enthusiastic campaign biography by Foot published by Robert Maxwell s Pergamon Press in 1964 offered Foot a place in his first government but Foot turned it down instead becoming the leader of Labour s left opposition from the back benches He opposed the government s moves to restrict immigration join the European Communities or Common Market as they were referred to and reform the trade unions was against the Vietnam War and Rhodesia s unilateral declaration of independence and denounced the Soviet suppression of socialism with a human face in Czechoslovakia in 1968 He also famously allied with the Tory right winger Enoch Powell to scupper the government s plan to abolish the voting rights of hereditary peers and create a House of Lords comprising only life peers a seraglio of eunuchs as Foot put it 24 Foot challenged James Callaghan for the post of Treasurer of the Labour Party in 1967 but failed In government Edit After 1970 Labour moved to the left and Wilson came to an accommodation with Foot Foot served in the Second Shadow Cabinet of Harold Wilson in various roles between 1970 and 1974 In April 1972 he stood for the Deputy Leadership of the party along with Edward Short and Anthony Crosland The first ballot saw Foot narrowly come second to Short winning 110 votes to the latter s 111 Crosland polled 61 votes and was eliminated It was reported in the next day s The Glasgow Herald that Short was the favourite to pick up most of Crosland s votes 25 The second ballot saw Short increase his total to 145 votes while Foot s only rose to 116 giving Short victory by 29 votes 26 When in 1974 Labour returned to office under Wilson Foot became Secretary of State for Employment According to Ben Pimlott his appointment was intended to please the left of the party and the Trade Unions In this role he played the major part in the government s efforts to maintain the trade unions support He was also responsible for the Health and Safety at Work Act as well as the Trade Union and Labour Relations Act which repealed the Heath ministry s trade union reforms and the Employment Protection Act which introduced legal protections against being sacked for becoming pregnant and legislated for maternity pay His time as Employment Secretary also saw Acas adopt its current name and modern form as a body with independence from government 27 Foot was one of the mainstays of the no campaign in the 1975 referendum on British membership of the European Communities When Wilson retired in 1976 Foot contested the party leadership and led in the first ballot but was ultimately defeated by James Callaghan Later that year Foot was elected Deputy Leader and during the Callaghan government Foot took a seat in Cabinet as Leader of the House of Commons which gave him the unenviable task of trying to maintain the survival of the Callaghan government as its majority evaporated However he was able to steer numerous government proposals through the Commons often by very narrow majorities including increases in pension and benefit rates the creation of the Police Complaints Board the expansion of comprehensive schools the establishment of a statutory responsibility to provide housing for the homeless universal Child Benefit the nationalisation of shipbuilding abolishing pay beds in NHS hospitals and housing security for agricultural workers before the government fell in a vote of no confidence by a single vote 27 Whilst Leader of the Commons Foot simultaneously held the post of Lord President of the Council In 1975 Foot along with Jennie Lee and others courted controversy when they supported Indira Gandhi the Prime Minister of India after she prompted the declaration of a state of emergency In December 1975 The Times ran an editorial titled Is Mr Foot a Fascist their answer was that he was 28 after Norman Tebbit accused him of undiluted fascism when Foot said that the Ferrybridge Six deserved dismissal for defying a closed shop 29 Labour leadership EditSee also Shadow Cabinet of Michael Foot Following Labour s 1979 general election defeat by Margaret Thatcher James Callaghan remained as party leader for the next 18 months before he resigned Foot was elected Labour leader on 10 November 1980 beating Denis Healey in the second round of the leadership election the last leadership contest to involve only Labour MPs Foot presented himself as a compromise candidate capable unlike Healey of uniting the party 30 which at the time was riven by the grassroots left wing insurgency centred around Tony Benn The Bennites were demanding revenge for what they considered to be the betrayals of the Callaghan government They called for MPs who had acquiesced in Callaghan s policies to be replaced by left wingers who would support unilateral nuclear disarmament withdrawal from the European Communities and widespread nationalisation Benn did not stand for the leadership apart from Foot and Healey the other candidates both eliminated in the first round were John Silkin a Tribunite like Foot and Peter Shore a Eurosceptic As Steve Richards notes in 1980 Healey not Foot was widely expected by the media and many political figures to be the next Labour leader 31 However he notes that while Healey was widely seen as the obvious successor to Callaghan and that sections of the media ultimately reacted with disbelief at Labour not choosing him to be leader the choice of Foot was not as perverse as it seemed He argues Labour MPs were looking for a figure from the left who could unite the wider party with the leadership which Healey could not do Richards states that despite being on the left of the party Foot was not a tribal politician and had proved he could work with those of different ideologies and had been a loyal deputy to Callaghan Thus Foot was seen as the unity candidate and won the election 32 When he became leader Foot was already 67 years old and frail Following the 1979 energy crisis Britain went into recession in 1980 which was blamed on the Conservative government s controversial monetarist policy against inflation which had the effect of increasing unemployment As a result Labour had moved ahead of the Conservatives in the opinion polls Following Foot s election as leader opinion polls showed a double digit lead for Labour boosting his hopes of becoming prime minister at the next general election which had to be held by May 1984 When Foot became leader the Conservative politician Kenneth Baker commented Labour was led by Dixon of Dock Green under Jim Callaghan Now it is led by Worzel Gummidge 3 Foot s nickname in the press gradually became Worzel Gummidge or Worzel 4 This became particularly common after Remembrance Day 1981 when he attended the Cenotaph observance wearing a coat that some said resembled a donkey jacket 2 After his tenure as leader Foot would be depicted as a scarecrow on ITV s satirical puppet show Spitting Image 3 Almost immediately following his election as leader he was faced with a serious crisis On 25 January 1981 four senior politicians on the right wing of the Labour Party Roy Jenkins Shirley Williams David Owen and William Rodgers the so called Gang of Four left Labour and formed the Social Democratic Party which was launched on 26 March 1981 This was largely seen as the consequence of the Labour Party s swing to the left polarising divisions in an already divided party 33 The SDP won the support of large sections of the British media For most of 1981 and early 1982 its opinion poll ratings suggested that it could at least overtake Labour and possibly win a general election The Conservatives were then unpopular because of the economic policies of Margaret Thatcher which had seen unemployment reach a postwar high The Labour left was still strong In 1981 Benn decided to challenge Healey for the Deputy Leadership of the Labour Party a contest Healey won albeit narrowly Foot struggled to make an impact and was widely criticised for his ineffectiveness though his performances in the Commons most notably on the Falklands War of 1982 won him widespread respect from other parliamentarians He was criticised by some on the left for supporting Thatcher s immediate resort to military action The right wing newspapers nevertheless lambasted him consistently for what they saw as his bohemian eccentricity attacking him for wearing what they described as a donkey jacket actually he wore a type of duffel coat 34 at the wreath laying ceremony at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Day in November 1981 for which he was likened to an out of work navvy by a fellow Labour MP 35 Foot did not make it generally known that the Queen Mother had described it as a sensible coat for a day like this 36 which could be considered a slight or a compliment depending on whether irony was intended He later donated the coat to the People s History Museum in Manchester 37 38 which holds a collection that spans Foot s entire political career from 1938 to 1990 and his personal papers dating back to 1926 39 The formation of the SDP which formed an alliance with the Liberal Party in June 1981 contributed to a fall in Labour support The double digit lead which had still been intact in opinion polls at the start of 1981 was swiftly wiped out and by the end of October the opinion polls were showing the Alliance ahead of Labour Labour briefly regained their lead of most opinion polls in early 1982 but when the Falklands conflict ended on 14 June 1982 with a British victory over Argentina opinion polls showed the Conservatives firmly in the lead Their position at the top of the polls was strengthened by the return to economic growth later in the year It was looking certain that the Conservatives would be re elected and the only key issue that the media were still speculating by the end of 1982 was whether it would be Labour or the Alliance who formed the next opposition 40 Through late 1982 and early 1983 there was constant speculation that Labour MPs would replace Foot with Healey as leader Such speculation increased after Labour lost the 1983 Bermondsey by election in which Peter Tatchell was Labour candidate standing against a Conservative a Liberal eventual winner Simon Hughes and John O Grady who had declared himself the Real Bermondsey Labour candidate citation needed Critically Labour held on in a subsequent by election in Darlington and Foot remained leader for the 1983 general election 1983 general election EditMain article 1983 United Kingdom general election The 1983 Labour manifesto strongly socialist in tone advocated unilateral nuclear disarmament higher personal taxation and a return to a more interventionist industrial policy The manifesto also pledged that a Labour government would abolish the House of Lords nationalise banks and immediately withdraw from the then European Economic Community Gerald Kaufman once Harold Wilson s press officer and during the 1980s a prominent figure on the Labour right wing described the 1983 Labour manifesto as the longest suicide note in history 41 As a statement on internal democracy Foot passed the edict that the manifesto would consist of all resolutions arrived at conference The party also failed to master the medium of television while Foot addressed public meetings around the country and made some radio broadcasts in the same manner as Clement Attlee did in 1945 The Daily Mirror was the only major newspaper to back Foot and the Labour Party at the 1983 general election urging its readers to vote Labour and Stop the waste of our nation for your job your children and your future in response to the mass unemployment which followed Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher s monetarist economic policies to reduce inflation Most other newspapers urged their readers to vote Conservative 42 The Labour Party led by Foot lost to the Conservatives in a landslide a result which had been widely predicted by the opinion polls since the previous summer The only consolation for Foot and Labour was that they did not lose their place in opposition to the SDP Liberal Alliance who came close to them in terms of votes but were still a long way behind in terms of seats 43 Despite this Foot was very critical of the Alliance accusing them of siphoning Labour support and enabling the Tories to win more seats 44 Foot resigned days following the bitter election defeat and was succeeded as leader on 2 October by Neil Kinnock who had been tipped from the outset to be Labour s choice of new leader Backbenches and retirement EditFoot took a back seat in Labour politics following 1983 and retired from the House of Commons at the 1992 general election when Labour lost to the Conservative Party led by John Major for the fourth election in succession but remained politically active From 1987 to 1992 he was the oldest sitting British MP preceding former Prime Minister Sir Edward Heath He defended Salman Rushdie after Ayatollah Khomeini advocated killing the novelist in a fatwa and took a strongly pro interventionist position against Serbia and Montenegro during the Yugoslav Wars supporting NATO forces whilst citing defence of civilian populations in Croatia and Bosnia In addition he was among the Patrons of the British Croatian Society 45 The Guardian s political editor Michael White criticised Foot s overgenerous support for Croatian President Franjo Tuđman 46 Foot remained a high profile member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CND He wrote several books including highly regarded biographies of Aneurin Bevan and H G Wells Indeed he was a distinguished Vice president of the H G Wells Society Many of his friends have said publicly that they regret that he ever gave up literature for politics Michael Foot became a supporter of pro Europeanism in the 1990s 47 Foot was an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society and a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association 48 In 1988 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature citation needed In a poll of Labour Party activists he was voted the worst post war Labour Party leader 49 Though Foot is considered by many right wingers to be a failure as Labour leader his biographer Mervyn Jones strongly makes the case that no one else could have held Labour together at the time particularly in the face of the controversy over the infiltration of the party by Militant citation needed Foot is remembered with affection in Westminster as a great parliamentarian He was widely liked and admired for his integrity habitual courtesy and generosity of spirit by both his colleagues and opponents citation needed A portrait of Foot by the artist Robert Lenkiewicz now permanently hangs in Portcullis House Westminster Gordievsky s KGB allegations Edit Oleg Gordievsky a high ranking KGB officer who defected from the Soviet Union to the UK in 1985 made allegations against Foot in his 1995 memoirs 50 Essentially the allegations claimed that up until 1968 Foot had spoken to KGB agents dozens of times passing information about politics and the trade unions and Foot had been paid a total of around 1 500 for his information said to be worth 37 000 in 2018 51 The Sunday Times which serialised Gordievsky s book under the headline KGB Michael Foot was our agent claimed in an article of 19 February that the Soviet intelligence services regarded Foot as an agent of influence and a useful idiot codenamed Agent BOOT and that he was in the pay of the KGB for many years Crucially the newspaper used material from the original manuscript of the book which mentioned Foot by name something excluded from the published book 52 At the time a leading article in The Independent newspaper asserted It seems extraordinary that such an unreliable figure should now be allowed given the lack of supporting evidence to damage the reputation of figures such as Mr Foot 53 In a February 1992 interview Gordievsky declared that he had no further revelations to make about the Labour Party 53 Foot successfully sued the Sunday Times winning substantial damages 52 Following Foot s death Charles Moore writing in The Daily Telegraph in 2010 gave an account which he said had been provided to him by Gordievsky providing additional uncorroborated information concerning his allegations Moore said there was no evidence to show that Foot gave away state secrets 54 Plymouth Argyle EditFoot was a passionate supporter of Plymouth Argyle Football Club from his childhood and once remarked that he was not going to die until he had seen them play in the Premier League 55 He served for several years as a director of the club seeing two promotions under his tenure 56 For his 90th birthday Foot was registered with the Football League as an honorary player and given the shirt number 90 This made him the oldest registered professional player in the history of football 56 57 Personal life EditFoot was married to the film maker author and feminist historian Jill Craigie 1911 1999 from 1949 until her death fifty years later He had no children 58 In February 2007 it was revealed that Foot had an extramarital affair with a woman around 35 years his junior in the early 1970s The affair which lasted nearly a year put a considerable strain on his marriage The affair is detailed in Foot s official biography published in March 2007 59 On 23 July 2006 his 93rd birthday Michael Foot became the longest lived leader of a major British political party passing Lord Callaghan s record of 92 years 364 days A staunch republican though well liked by the Royal Family on a personal level 59 Foot rejected honours from the Queen and the government including a knighthood and a peerage on more than one occasion He was also an atheist As of June 2021 update he was one of four leaders of the Labour Party to declare that they did not follow any religion 60 61 Health EditFoot suffered from asthma which disqualified him from service in the Second World War and eczema 62 In October 1963 he was involved in a car crash suffering pierced lungs broken ribs and a broken left leg Foot used a walking stick for the rest of his life 58 According to former MP Tam Dalyell Foot had up until the accident been a chain smoker but he gave up the habit thereafter 63 Jill Craigie also suffered a crushed hand in this car crash In October 1976 Foot became blind in one eye following an attack of shingles 64 Death EditFoot died at his Hampstead north London home on the morning of 3 March 2010 at the age of 96 The House of Commons was informed of the news later that day by Justice Secretary Jack Straw 65 who told the House I am sure that this news will be received with great sadness not only in my own party but across the country as a whole 66 Foot s funeral was a non religious service held on 15 March 2010 at Golders Green Crematorium in North West London 67 In popular culture Edit Foot Heads Arms Body Edit On 22 June 1978 The Guardian ran an article with the headline Foot hits back on Nazi comparison 68 Reader David C Allan of Edinburgh responded with a letter to the editor which the paper ran on 27 June Decrying the headline s apparent pun Allen suggested that if Foot were in future to be appointed Secretary of State for Defence The Guardian might cover it under the headline Foot Heads Arms Body 69 The belief later gained currency that The Times actually had run the headline Some decades later Martyn Cornell recalled the story as true saying he had written the headline himself as a Times subeditor around 1986 70 The headline does not however appear in The Times Digital Archive which includes every day s newspaper from 1785 into the 21st century 71 Fictional portrayals Edit Foot was portrayed by Patrick Godfrey in the 2002 BBC production of Ian Curteis s long unproduced The Falklands Play and by Michael Pennington in the film The Iron Lady 72 73 Bibliography EditCato pen name Guilty Men Left Book Club 1940 by Foot Peter Howard and Frank Owen Cassius pen name Brendan and Beverley Victor Gollancz 1940 Cassius pen name The Trial of Mussolini Being a Verbatim Report of the First Great Trial for War Criminals Held in London Sometime in 1944 or 1945 Victor Gollancz 1943 The Pen and the Sword MacGibbon and Kee 1957 ISBN 0 261 61989 6 3rd printing 1966 The Pen amp the Sword A Year in the Life of Jonathan Swift LCCN 70 38605 Guilty Men 1957 by Foot and Mervyn Jones Gollancz 1957 US title Guilty Men 1957 Suez amp Cyprus LCCN 57 10197 Aneurin Bevan MacGibbon and Kee volume 1 1962 volume 2 1973 ISBN 0 261 61508 4 Debts of Honour Harper and Row 1981 ISBN 0 06 039001 8 Another Heart and Other Pulses Collins 1984 ISBN 978 0 00 217256 1 H G The History of Mr Wells Doubleday 1985 ISBN 978 1 887178 04 4 Loyalists and Loners Collins 1986 ISBN 978 0 00 217583 8 Politics of Paradise HarperCollins 1989 ISBN 0 06 039091 3 Introduction in Jonathan Swift s Gulliver s Travels Penguin 1967 Bevan s Message to the World in Geoffrey Goodman ed The State of the Nation The Political Legacy of Aneurin Bevan Gollancz 1997 Introduction in Bertrand Russell s Autobiography Routledge 1998 Dr Strangelove I Presume Gollancz 1999 The Uncollected Michael Foot by Foot and editor Brian Brivati Politicos Publishing 2003 ISBN 978 1 84275 096 4 Foreword in Greg Rosen s Old Labour to New Methuen Publishing 2005 ISBN 978 1 84275 045 2 Isaac Foot A West Country Boy Apostle of England Politicos Publishing 2006 ISBN 978 1 84275 181 7Footnotes Edit 1980 Michael Foot is new Labour leader BBC News 10 November 1980 Archived from the original on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 31 August 2011 a b BBC News Archived 29 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine 3 March 2010 Michael Foot reflects on his infamous jacket a b c Daily Telegraph Archived 27 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Michael Foot The best British political insults and putdowns a b The Independent 11 April 1994 Book Review How Worzel came to save the Labour Party Michael Foot Mervyn Jones Victor Gollancz 20 pounds by John Torode Philpot Robert 4 June 2013 1983 election Alliance and skirmish Total Politics UK Archived from the original on 23 March 2014 Harrington Illytd 28 December 2006 Extraordinary life of Apostle of England Camden New Journal Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Moore Jonathan 3 March 2010 Obituary Michael Foot politics co uk Retrieved 15 August 2010 Foot John 1998 Isaac Foot In Duncan Brack ed Dictionary of Liberal Biography Malcolm Baines Katie Hall Graham Lippiatt Tony Little Mark Pack Geoffrey Sell Jen Tankard 1st ed Artillery Row London Politico s Publishing pp 109 112 ISBN 978 1 902301 09 9 Oliver Foot Daily Telegraph 9 February 2008 ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2019 fsmschool Michael Foot Tribute Archived 28 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 6 April 2014 Hurley Catherine ed 2003 Could do Better Simon amp Schuster UK Pocket Books ISBN 978 0743450256 Michael Foot The Telegraph 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 20 February 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2015 Smith Cameron 1989 Unfinished Journey The Lewis Family Toronto Summerhill Press pp 161 162 ISBN 978 0 929091 04 4 Foot in an interview with the author in 1985 Jones Mervyn 1995 Michael Foot Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 43 ISBN 978 0 575 05933 7 Jones p 30 Labour s Old Romantic A Film Portrait of Michael Foot Archived 20 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine 1997 BBC TV ftvdb bfi org uk Archived 12 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Alison Cahn Producer Anne Tyerman Series editor Michael Cockerell Reporter Retrieved 5 December 2010 Michael Foot loved old India backed the new Hindustan Times 2010 Nasta Susheila Michael Foot Nasta Susheila ed 2013 India in Britain South Asian networks and connections 1858 1950 New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 39271 7 OCLC 802321049 India League in a league of its own 2017 Calder Angus 13 February 1974 The World at War Episode 15 The Home Front 1940 44 Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on 5 November 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Campbell John 2010 Pistols at Dawn Two Hundred Years of Political Rivalry from Pitt and Fox to Blair and Brown London Vintage p 210 ISBN 978 1 84595 091 0 OCLC 489636152 Howard Anthony 5 March 2010 Michael Foot The last of a dying breed The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 8 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 PARLIAMENT No 2 BILL Archived 9 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine HC Deb 3 February 1969 vol 777 cc43 171 Warden John 21 April 1972 Short leads by one vote in first ballot The Glasgow Herald p 1 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Warden John 26 April 1972 Unity call as Short wins by 29 votes The Glasgow Herald p 1 Retrieved 23 March 2021 a b Johnson Richard 23 July 2021 The Life and Legacy of Michael Foot Tribune Retrieved 31 July 2021 Is Mr Foot a Fascist The Times 2 December 1975 The Spectator Volume 237 Part 2 London F C Westley 1976 p 12 Crewe Ivor King Anthony 1995 SDP The Birth Life and Death of the Social Democratic Party New York Oxford University Press p 73 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2015 ISBN missing Richards Steve 2021 The Prime Ministers We Never Had Success and Failure from Butler to Corbyn London Atlantic Books pp 100 101 ISBN 978 1 83895 241 9 Richards Steve 2021 The Prime Ministers We Never Had Success and Failure from Butler to Corbyn London Atlantic Books pp 116 119 ISBN 978 1 83895 241 9 1983 general election BBC News Archived from the original on 6 April 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2018 Michael Foot RIP New Statesman 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 6 October 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2015 Sandbrook Dominic 11 March 2007 A lion in a donkey jacket Review of Michael Foot a Life by Kenneth O Morgan Sunday Telegraph Archived from the original on 23 April 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Kirkup James 3 March 2010 Michael Foot and the donkey jacket that wasn t Archived from the original on 11 August 2014 Retrieved 26 July 2014 Ode to the Donkey Jacket BBC Today BBC Radio 4 Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Collection Highlights People s History Museum Archived from the original on 20 January 2015 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Collection Catalogues and Descriptions Labour History Archive and Study Centre Archived from the original on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Voting Intention in Great Britain 1976 present Ipsos MORI 21 June 2010 Archived from the original on 25 August 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Mann Nyta 14 July 2003 Foot s message of hope to left BBC Online Archived from the original on 2 September 2017 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Katy Stoddard 4 May 2010 Newspaper support in UK general elections The Guardian London Archived from the original on 1 August 2013 Retrieved 26 July 2014 1983 Thatcher triumphs again BBC News 5 April 2005 Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 Retrieved 10 August 2010 1983 Thatcher wins landslide victory On This Day BBC News 2008 Archived from the original on 12 June 2015 Retrieved 15 August 2010 The British Croatian Society Registered Charity No 1086139 Info and CV s of the members The British Croatian Society Archived from the original on 4 March 2009 Retrieved 15 August 2010 White Michael 18 April 2007 Michael Foot s lucky life The Times Literary Supplement Archived from the original on 17 May 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2019 The King of Lost Causes drb ie Archived from the original on 29 July 2017 Retrieved 29 July 2017 BHA mourns Rt Hon Michael Foot activist journalist and humanist 1913 2010 Humanists UK Retrieved 8 March 2020 Crick Michael 25 September 2008 Place That Labour Face BBC Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Gordievsky Oleg 1995 Next Stop Execution Macmillan pp 187 189 ISBN 978 0 333 62086 1 The Spy and the Traitor 2018 Ben MacIntyre ISBN 978 0241972137 a b Williams Rhys 8 July 1995 Sunday Times pays Foot damages over KGB claim The Independent London Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 15 August 2010 a b Leading Article Michael Foot s tainted accuser The Independent London 20 February 1995 Archived from the original on 23 January 2012 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Moore Charles 5 March 2010 Was Foot a national treasure or the KGB s useful idiot The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 23 May 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 I refuse to conk out until I have seen Argyle play in the top division Foot Michael 4 March 2010 Remembering Argyle s greatest ever left winger The Independent London Archived from the original on 6 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 a b Michael Foot Plymouth Argyle FC 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 23 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Michael Foot s passion for Plymouth Argyle BBC News 3 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 a b Michael Foot obituary The Daily Telegraph London 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 6 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 a b Brooks Richard 25 February 2007 Michael Foot had a young black mistress The Sunday Times London Archived from the original on 27 February 2007 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Keir Starmer I may not believe in god but I do believe in faith inews co uk 11 April 2021 Retrieved 9 July 2021 Should we keep God out of politics BBC Archived from the original on 19 June 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2017 Henderson Mark 4 March 2010 Michael Foot Labour Party Leader obituary The Times London Archived from the original on 24 May 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Beattie Jason 4 April 2010 Michael Foot was the heart and soul of Labour and a giant of the movement even his enemies will mourn Daily Mirror London Archived from the original on 6 July 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Jones Mervyn 3 March 2010 Michael Foot obituary The Guardian London Archived from the original on 15 March 2014 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Former Labour leader Michael Foot dies BBC News 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 3 September 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Michael Foot dies New Statesman UK 3 March 2010 Archived from the original on 6 March 2010 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Siddique Haroon 15 March 2010 Gordon Brown leads mourners at funeral of Michael Foot The Guardian agencies UK Archived from the original on 7 April 2015 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Foot hits back on Nazi comparison The Guardian 22 June 1978 Allan David C 27 June 1978 Footnote letter to the editor The Guardian p 10 Hoggart Simon 5 March 2010 Footnotes to a life well lived The Guardian London Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 The Times Digital Archive Cengage Learning 2011 Archived from the original on 30 April 2016 Retrieved 28 May 2016 Patrick Godfrey IMDB IMDb Retrieved 5 January 2021 Michael Pennington IMDB IMDb Retrieved 5 January 2021 Biographies EditHoggart Simon amp Leigh David Michael Foot a Portrait Hodder 1981 ISBN 0 340 27040 3 Jones Mervyn Michael Foot Gollancz 1993 ISBN 0 575 05933 8 Morgan Kenneth O Michael Foot A Life HarperPress HarperCollins 2007 ISBN 978 0 00 717826 1External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Michael Foot Wikimedia Commons has media related to Michael Foot Michael Foot at IMDb Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Michael Foot Michael Foot at 90 Johann Hari 24 July 2003 In depth biographical interview marking Foot s 90th birthday Michael Foot 1913 2010 slideshow at The First Post March 3 In 2010 fictitious obituary at Today in Alternate History what if the Falklands Task Force had been defeated The Labour History Archive and Study Centre hold Michael Foot s archive at People s History Museum Michael Foot 1913 2010 at New Statesman the last published interview 6 November 2008 with the former Labour leader Works by Michael Foot at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Michael Foot at Library of Congress Authorities with 33 catalogue recordsMedia officesPreceded byFrank Owen Editor of the Evening Standard1942 1943 Succeeded bySydney ElliottPreceded byJon Kimche Editor of Tribune1948 1952 Served alongside Evelyn Anderson Succeeded byBob EdwardsPreceded byEvelyn AndersonPreceded byBob Edwards Editor of Tribune1955 1960 Succeeded byRichard ClementsParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byLeslie Hore Belisha Member of Parliament for Plymouth Devonport1945 1955 Succeeded byJoan VickersPreceded byAneurin Bevan Member of Parliament for Ebbw Vale1960 1983 Constituency abolishedNew constituency Member of Parliament for Blaenau Gwent1983 1992 Succeeded byLlew SmithPolitical officesPreceded byWilliam Whitelaw Secretary of State for Employment1974 1976 Succeeded byAlbert BoothPreceded byEdward Short Leader of the House of Commons1976 1979 Succeeded byNorman St John StevasLord President of the Council1976 1979 Succeeded byThe Lord SoamesPreceded byJames Callaghan Leader of the Opposition1980 1983 Succeeded byNeil KinnockParty political officesPreceded byEdward Short Deputy Leader of the Labour Party1976 1980 Succeeded byDenis HealeyPreceded byJames Callaghan Leader of the Labour Party1980 1983 Succeeded byNeil KinnockHonorary titlesPreceded byRobert Edwards Oldest sitting member of the House of Commons1987 1992 Succeeded byEdward Heath Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Foot amp oldid 1130573052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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