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Tony Benn

Anthony Neil Wedgwood Benn (3 April 1925 – 14 March 2014), known between 1960 and 1963 as Viscount Stansgate, was a British politician, writer and diarist who served as a Cabinet minister in the 1960s and 1970s. A member of the Labour Party, he was Member of Parliament for Bristol South East and Chesterfield for 47 of the 51 years between 1950 and 2001. He later served as President of the Stop the War Coalition from 2001 to 2014.

Tony Benn
Benn in 2006
President of the Stop the War Coalition
In office
21 September 2001 – 14 March 2014
Vice PresidentLindsey German
Chairman
Preceded byPosition established
Secretary of State for Energy
In office
10 June 1975 – 4 May 1979
Prime Minister
Preceded byEric Varley
Succeeded byDavid Howell
Secretary of State for Industry
In office
5 March 1974 – 10 June 1975
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byPeter Walker (Trade and Industry)
Succeeded byEric Varley
Chairman of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party
In office
20 September 1971 – 25 September 1972
LeaderHarold Wilson
Preceded byIan Mikardo
Succeeded byWilliam Simpson
Minister of Technology
In office
4 July 1966 – 19 June 1970
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byFrank Cousins
Succeeded byGeoffrey Rippon
Postmaster General
In office
15 October 1964 – 4 July 1966
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byReginald Bevins
Succeeded byEdward Short
Parliamentary offices
Member of Parliament
for Chesterfield
In office
2 March 1984 – 14 May 2001
Preceded byEric Varley
Succeeded byPaul Holmes
Member of Parliament
for Bristol South East
In office
20 August 1963 – 13 May 1983
Preceded byMalcolm St Clair
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
In office
30 November 1950 – 17 November 1960
Preceded byStafford Cripps
Succeeded byMalcolm St Clair
Member of the House of Lords
Hereditary peerage
17 November 1960 – 31 July 1963
Preceded byThe 1st Viscount Stansgate
Succeeded byThe 3rd Viscount Stansgate (2021)
Personal details
Born
Anthony Neil Wedgwood Benn

(1925-04-03)3 April 1925
Marylebone, London, England
Died14 March 2014(2014-03-14) (aged 88)
London, England
Political partyLabour
Other political
affiliations
Socialist Campaign Group[1]
Spouse
(m. 1949; died 2000)
Children
Parents
RelativesEmily Benn (granddaughter)
EducationWestminster School
Alma materNew College, Oxford
Military service
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch/service Royal Air Force
RankPilot officer
Battles/warsWorld War II

The son of a Liberal and later Labour Party politician, Benn was born in Westminster and privately educated at Westminster School. He was elected for Bristol South East at the 1950 general election but inherited his father's peerage on his death, which prevented him from continuing to serve as an MP. He fought to remain in the House of Commons and campaigned for the ability to renounce the title, a campaign which succeeded with the Peerage Act 1963. He was an active member of the Fabian Society and served as chairman from 1964 to 1965. He served in Harold Wilson's Labour government 1964–1970, first as Postmaster General, where he oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower, and later as Minister of Technology.

Benn served as Chairman of the National Executive Committee from 1971 to 1972 while in Opposition. In the Labour government 1974–1979, he returned to the Cabinet as Secretary of State for Industry and subsequently served as Secretary of State for Energy. He retained that post when James Callaghan succeeded Wilson as Prime Minister. When the Labour Party was in opposition through the 1980s, he emerged as a prominent figure on the left wing of the party and unsuccessfully challenged Neil Kinnock for the Labour leadership in 1988. After leaving Parliament at the 2001 general election, Benn was President of the Stop the War Coalition until his death in 2014.

Benn was widely seen as a key proponent of democratic socialism and Christian socialism, though in regards to the latter he supported the United Kingdom becoming a secular state and ending the Church of England's status as an official church of the United Kingdom (known as disestablishmentarianism).[2][3] Originally considered a moderate within the party, he was identified as belonging to its left wing after leaving ministerial office. The terms Bennism and Bennite came into usage to describe the left-wing politics he espoused from the late 1970s and its adherents. He was an influence on the political views of Jeremy Corbyn, who was elected Leader of the Labour Party a year after Benn's death, and John McDonnell, who served as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer under Corbyn.

Early life and family

Benn was born in Westminster, London,[4] on 3 April 1925.[5] He had two brothers, Michael (1921–1944), who was killed in the Second World War, and David (1928–2017), a specialist in Russia and Eastern Europe.[6] Following the Thames flood in January 1928 their house was uninhabitable so the Benn family moved to Scotland for over 12 months.[7] Their father, William Benn, was a Liberal Member of Parliament from 1906 who crossed the floor to the Labour Party in 1928 and was appointed Secretary of State for India by Ramsay MacDonald in 1929, a position he held until the Labour Party's landslide electoral defeat in 1931.[8] William Benn was elevated to the House of Lords and Tony Benn was subsequently titled with the honorific prefix, The Honourable. William Benn was given the title of Viscount Stansgate in 1942: the new wartime coalition government was short of working Labour peers in the upper house.[9] In 1945–46, William Benn was the Secretary of State for Air in the first majority Labour Government.[10]

Benn's mother, Margaret Benn (née Holmes, 1897–1991), was a theologian, feminist and the founder President of the Congregational Federation. She was a member of the League of the Church Militant, which was the predecessor of the Movement for the Ordination of Women; in 1925, she was rebuked by Randall Davidson, the Archbishop of Canterbury, for advocating the ordination of women. His mother's theology had a profound influence on Benn, as she taught him that the stories in the Bible were mostly about the struggle between the prophets and the kings and that he ought in his life to support the prophets over the kings, who had power, as the prophets taught righteousness.[11]

Benn was for over 30 years a committed Christian.[12] He said that the teachings of Jesus Christ had a "radical political importance" on his life, and made a distinction between the historical Jesus as "a carpenter of Nazareth" who advocated social justice and egalitarianism and "the way in which he's presented by some religious authorities; by popes, archbishops and bishops who present Jesus as justification for their power", believing this to be a gross misunderstanding of the role of Jesus.[13] He believed that it was a "great mistake" to assume that the teachings of Christianity are outdated in modern Britain,[13] and Higgins wrote in The Benn Inheritance that Benn was "a socialist whose political commitment owes much more to the teaching of Jesus than the writing of Marx".[14] (Indeed, he did not read The Communist Manifesto until he was in his 50s.[15]) "The driving force of his life was Christian socialism," according to Peter Wilby, linking Benn to the "high-minded" founding roots of Labour.[15]

Later in his life, Benn emphasised issues regarding morality and righteousness, as well as various ethical principles of Nonconformism. On Desert Island Discs he said that he had been powerfully influenced by "what I would call the Dissenting tradition" (that is, the English Dissenters who left or were ejected from the established church, one of whom was his ancestor William Benn).[16] "I've never thought we can understand the world we lived in unless we understood the history of the church", Benn said to the Catholic Herald. "All political freedoms were won, first of all, through religious freedom. Some of the arguments about the control of the media today, which are very big arguments, are the arguments that would have been fought in the religious wars. You have the satellites coming in now—well, it is the multinational church all over again. That's why Mrs Thatcher pulled Britain out of UNESCO: she was not prepared, any more than Ronald Reagan was, to be part of an organisation that talked about a New World Information Order, people speaking to each other without the help of Murdoch or Maxwell."[17]

According to Wilby in the New Statesman, Benn "decided to do without the paraphernalia and doctrine of organised religion but not without the teachings of Jesus".[18] Although Benn became more agnostic as he became older, he was intrigued by the interconnections between Christianity, radicalism and socialism.[19] Wilby also wrote in The Guardian that although former Chancellor Stafford Cripps described Benn as "as keen a Christian as I am myself", Benn wrote in 2005 that he was "a Christian agnostic" who believed "in Jesus the prophet, not Christ the king", specifically rejecting the label of "humanist".[20]

Both of Benn's grandfathers were Liberal Party MPs; his paternal grandfather was John Benn, a successful politician, MP for Tower Hamlets and later Devonport, who was created a baronet in 1914 (and who founded a publishing company, Benn Brothers),[21] and his maternal grandfather was Daniel Holmes, MP for Glasgow Govan.[22] Benn's contact with leading politicians of the day, dates back to his earliest years. He met Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald when he was five years old, whom he described as: "A kindly old gentleman [who] leaned over me and offered me a chocolate biscuit. I've looked at Labour leaders in a funny way ever since."[23] Benn also met former Liberal Prime Minister David Lloyd George when he was 12, and later recalled that, while still a boy, he once shook hands with Mahatma Gandhi, in 1931, while his father was Secretary of State for India.[24]

During the Second World War, Benn joined and trained with the Home Guard from the age of 16, later recalling in a speech made in 2009: "I could use a bayonet, a rifle, a revolver, and if I'd seen a German officer having a meal I'd have tossed a grenade through the window. Would I have been a freedom fighter or a terrorist?"[25][26] In July 1943, Benn enlisted in the Royal Air Force as an aircraftman 2nd Class.[27] His father and elder brother Michael (who was later killed in an accident) were already serving in the RAF. He was granted an emergency commission as a pilot officer (on probation) on 10 March 1945.[28] As a pilot officer, Benn served as a pilot in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia.[29] In June 1944, he made his first solo flight, at RAF Guinea Fowl, an RAF Elementary Flying Training School, in Southern Rhodesia.[30] The aircraft was a Canadian-built Fairchild Cornell. In a 1993 article recounting the experience, he said, "I always thought that I would feel a sense of panic when I saw the ground coming up at me on my first solo, but strangely enough I didn't feel anything but exhilaration ...".[31] He relinquished his commission with effect from 10 August 1945, three months after the Second World War ended in Europe on 8 May, and just days before the war with Japan ended on 2 September.[32]

After attending Mr Gladstone's day school near Sloane Square,[33] Benn attended Westminster School, and studied at New College, Oxford, where he read Philosophy, politics and economics and was elected President of the Oxford Union in 1947.[34] In later life, Benn removed public references to his private education from Who's Who. In 1970 all references to Westminster School were removed,[35] and in the 1975 edition his entry stated: "Education—still in progress". In the 1976 edition, almost all details were omitted except his name, jobs as a Member of Parliament and as a Government Minister, and address; the publishers confirmed that Benn had sent back the draft entry with everything else struck through.[36] In the 1977 edition, Benn's entry disappeared entirely,[37] and when he returned to Who's Who in 1983, he was listed as "Tony Benn" and all references to his education or service record were removed.[35]

In 1972, Benn said in his diaries that "Today I had the idea that I would resign my Privy Councillorship, my MA and all my honorary doctorates in order to strip myself of what the world had to offer".[35] While he acknowledged that he "might be ridiculed" for doing so,[38] Benn said that "'Wedgie Benn' and 'the Rt Honourable Anthony Wedgwood Benn' and all that stuff is impossible. I have been Tony Benn in Bristol for a long time."[35] In October 1973, he announced on BBC Radio that he wished to be known as Mr. Tony Benn rather than Anthony Wedgwood Benn,[39] and his book Speeches from 1974 is credited to "Tony Benn".[40] Despite this name change, social historian Alwyn W. Turner writes: "Just as those with an agenda to pursue still call Muhammed Ali by his original name ... so most newspapers continued to refer to Tony Benn as Wedgwood Benn, or Wedgie in the case of the tabloids, for years to come."[35]

Benn met Caroline Middleton DeCamp (born 13 October 1926, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States) over tea at Worcester College, Oxford, in 1949; just nine days after meeting her, he proposed to her on a park bench in the city. Later, he bought the bench from Oxford City Council and installed it in the garden of their home in Holland Park. Tony and Caroline had four children—Stephen, Hilary, Melissa, a feminist writer, and Joshua—and 10 grandchildren. Caroline Benn died of cancer on 22 November 2000, aged 74, after a career as an educationalist.[41]

Two of Benn's children have been active in Labour Party politics. His eldest son Stephen was an elected Member of the Inner London Education Authority from 1986 to 1990. His second son Hilary was a councillor in London, stood for Parliament in 1983 and 1987, and became Labour MP for Leeds Central in 1999. He was Secretary of State for International Development from 2003 to 2007, and then Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs until 2010, later serving as Shadow Foreign Secretary (2015–16).[42] This makes him the third generation of his family to have been a member of the Cabinet, a rare distinction for a modern political family in Britain. Benn's granddaughter Emily Benn was the Labour Party's youngest-ever candidate[43] when she failed to win East Worthing and Shoreham in 2010.[44] Benn was a first cousin once removed of the actress Margaret Rutherford.[45]

Benn and his wife Caroline became vegetarian in 1970, for ethical reasons, and remained so for the rest of their lives. Benn cited the decision of his son Hilary to become vegetarian as an important factor in his own decision to adopt a vegetarian diet.[46][47][48]

Early parliamentary career

Member of Parliament, 1950–1960

Following the Second World War, Benn worked briefly as a BBC Radio producer. On 1 November 1950, he was selected to succeed Stafford Cripps as the Labour candidate for Bristol South East, after Cripps stood down because of ill-health. He won the seat in a by-election on 30 November 1950.[49] Anthony Crosland helped him get the seat as he was the MP for nearby South Gloucestershire at the time. Upon taking the oath on 4 December 1950[50] Benn became "Baby of the House", the youngest MP, for one day, being succeeded by Thomas Teevan, who was two years younger but took his oath a day later.[51] He became the "Baby" again in 1951, when Teevan was not re-elected. In the 1950s, Benn held middle-of-the-road or soft left views, and was not associated with the young left wing group around Aneurin Bevan.[52]

As MP for Bristol South East, Benn helped organise the 1963 Bristol Bus Boycott[53] against the colour bar of the Bristol Omnibus Company against employing Black British and British Asian drivers. Benn said that he would "stay off the buses, even if I have to find a bike", and Labour leader Harold Wilson also told an anti-apartheid rally in London he was "glad that so many Bristolians are supporting the [boycott] campaign", adding that he "wish[ed] them every success".[54]

Peerage reform

Benn's father was created Viscount Stansgate in 1942 when Winston Churchill increased the number of Labour peers to aid political work in the House of Lords; at this time, Benn's elder brother Michael, then serving in the RAF, was intending to enter the priesthood and had no objections to inheriting a peerage. However, Michael was later killed in an accident while on active service in the Second World War, and this left Benn as the heir-apparent to the peerage. He made several unsuccessful attempts to renounce the succession.[52]

In November 1960, Lord Stansgate died. Benn automatically became a peer, preventing him from sitting in the House of Commons. The Speaker of the Commons, Sir Harry Hylton-Foster, did not allow him to deliver a speech from the bar of the House of Commons in April 1961 when the by-election was being called.[55] Continuing to maintain his right to abandon his peerage, Benn fought to retain his seat in a by-election caused by his succession on 4 May 1961. Although he was disqualified from taking his seat, he was re-elected. An election court found that the voters were fully aware that Benn was disqualified, and declared the seat won by the Conservative runner-up, Malcolm St Clair, who was at the time also the heir presumptive to a peerage.[56]

Benn continued his campaign outside Parliament. Within two years, though, the Conservative Government of the time, which had members in the same or similar situation to Benn's (i.e., who were going to receive title, or who had already applied for writs of summons), changed the law.[57][58] The Peerage Act 1963, allowing lifetime disclaimer of peerages, became law shortly after 6 pm on 31 July 1963. Benn was the first peer to renounce his title, doing so at 6.22 pm that day.[59] St Clair, fulfilling a promise he had made at the time of his election, then accepted the office of Steward of the Manor of Northstead, disqualifying himself from the House (outright resignation not being possible). Benn returned to the Commons after winning a by-election on 20 August 1963.[52]

In government, 1964–1970

In the 1964 Government led by Harold Wilson, Benn was Postmaster General, where he oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower, then the UK's tallest building, and the creations of the Post Bus service and Girobank. He proposed issuing stamps without the Sovereign's head, but this met with private opposition from the Queen.[60] Instead, the portrait was reduced to a small profile in silhouette, a format that is still used on commemorative stamps.[61]

Benn also led the government's opposition to the "pirate" radio stations broadcasting from international waters, which he was aware would be an unpopular measure.[62] Some of these stations were causing problems, such as interference to emergency radio used by shipping,[63] although he was not responsible for introducing the Marine Broadcasting Offences Bill when it came before Parliament at the end of July 1966 for its first reading.[64]

 
Tony Benn shaking the hand of Maurice Papon during the official presentation of Concorde, 11 December 1967.

Earlier in the month, Benn was promoted to Minister of Technology, which included responsibility for the development of Concorde and the formation of International Computers Ltd. (ICL). The period also saw government involvement in industrial rationalisation, and the merger of several car companies to form British Leyland.[65] Following Conservative MP Enoch Powell's 1968 "Rivers of Blood" speech to a Conservative Association meeting, in opposition to Harold Wilson's insistence on not "stirring up the Powell issue",[66] Benn said during the 1970 general election campaign:

The flag of racialism which has been hoisted in Wolverhampton is beginning to look like the one that fluttered 25 years ago over Dachau and Belsen. If we do not speak up now against the filthy and obscene racialist propaganda ... the forces of hatred will mark up their first success and mobilise their first offensive...Enoch Powell has emerged as the real leader of the Conservative Party. He is a far stronger character than Mr. Heath. He speaks his mind; Heath does not. The final proof of Powell's power is that Heath dare not attack him publicly, even when he says things that disgust decent Conservatives.[66]

The mainstream press attacked Benn for using language deemed as intemperate as Powell's language in his "Rivers of Blood" speech (which was widely regarded as racist),[66] and Benn noted in his diary that "letters began pouring in on the Powell speech: 2:1 against me but some very sympathetic ones saying that my speech was overdue".[67] Harold Wilson later reprimanded Benn for this speech, accusing him of losing Labour seats in the 1970 general election.[68]

During the 1970s Benn publicly defended Marxism, saying:

The Communist Manifesto, and many other works of Marxist philosophy, have always profoundly influenced the British labour movement and the British Labour Party, and have strengthened our understanding and enriched our thinking. It would be as unthinkable to try to construct the Labour Party without Marx as it would be to establish university faculties of astronomy, anthropology or psychology without permitting the study of Copernicus, Darwin or Freud, and still expect such faculties to be taken seriously.[69][70]

Labour lost the 1970 election to Edward Heath's Conservatives and upon Heath's application to join the European Economic Community, a surge in left-wing Euroscepticism emerged.[71] Benn "was stridently against membership",[72] and campaigned in favour of a referendum on the UK's membership. The Shadow Cabinet voted to support a referendum on 29 March 1972, and as a result Roy Jenkins resigned as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party.[73]

In government, 1974–1979

In the Labour Government of 1974, Benn was Secretary of State for Industry and as such increased nationalised industry pay, provided better terms and conditions for workers such as the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was involved in setting up worker cooperatives in firms which were struggling,[74] the best known being at Meriden, outside Coventry, producing Triumph Motorcycles. In 1975, he was appointed Secretary of State for Energy, immediately following his unsuccessful campaign for a "No" vote in the referendum on the UK's continued membership of the European Community (Common Market). Later in his diary, (25 October 1977) Benn wrote that he "loathed" the EEC; he claimed it was "bureaucratic and centralised" and "of course it is really dominated by Germany. All the Common Market countries except the UK have been occupied by Germany, and they have this mixed feeling of hatred and subservience towards the Germans".[75]

Upon the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, Benn described Mao as "one of the greatest—if not the greatest—figures of the twentieth century: a schoolteacher who transformed China, released it from civil war and foreign attack and constructed a new society there" in his diaries, adding that "he certainly towers above any twentieth-century figure I can think of in his philosophical contribution and military genius".[76] On his trip to the Chinese embassy after Mao's death, Benn recorded in an earlier volume of his diaries that he was "a great admirer of Mao", while also admitting that "he made mistakes, because everybody does".[77]

Harold Wilson resigned as Leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister in March 1976. Benn later attributed the collapse of the Wilson government to cuts enforced on the UK by global capital, in particular the International Monetary Fund.[78] In the resulting leadership contest Benn finished in fourth place out of the six cabinet ministers who stood—he withdrew as 11.8 per cent of colleagues voted for him in the first ballot. Benn withdrew from the second ballot and endorsed Michael Foot; James Callaghan eventually won. Despite not receiving his support in the second and third rounds of the vote, Callaghan kept Benn on as Energy Secretary. In 1976, there was a sterling crisis, and Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey sought a loan from the International Monetary Fund. Underlining a wish to counter international market forces which seemed to penalise a larger welfare state, Benn publicly circulated the divided Cabinet minutes in which a narrow majority of the Labour Cabinet under Ramsay MacDonald supported a cut in unemployment benefits in order to obtain a loan from American bankers. As he highlighted, these minutes resulted in the 1931 split of the Labour Party in which MacDonald and his allies formed a National Government with Conservatives and Liberals. Callaghan allowed Benn to put forward the Alternative Economic Strategy, which consisted of a self-sufficient economy less dependent on low-rate fresh borrowing, but the AES, which according to opponents would have led to a "siege economy", was rejected by the Cabinet.[79] In response, Benn later recalled that: "I retorted that their policy was a siege economy, only they had the bankers inside the castle with all our supporters left outside, whereas my policy would have our supporters in the castle with the bankers outside."[78] Benn blamed the Winter of Discontent on these cuts to socialist policies.[78]

During Benn's time as energy minister from 1975 to 1979 he supported the United Kingdom's use of nuclear power. However, later in his life he became an opponent of nuclear power, attributing his time as running it as a minister to persuading him it was not cheap, safe or peaceful.[80][81] When asked in an interview in January 2009 on what he had changed his mind on over the course of his life he expanded on this issue by saying:

"Nuclear power, for example. In 1955 when Eisenhower said he was going for ‘Atoms for Peace’ I became a passionate supporter of it. Having been brought up on the Bible I liked the idea of swords into ploughshares. I advocated nuclear power as Minister of Technology. I was told, and believed, that nuclear power was cheap, safe and peaceful. Having been in charge of nuclear power I discovered it wasn’t cheap, wasn’t safe and when I left office I was told that during my period as Secretary of State for Energy, plutonium from our nuclear power stations went to the Pentagon to make nuclear weapons. So every nuclear power station in Britain is a bomb factory for America. I was utterly shaken by that. Nothing in the world would now induce me to support nuclear power. It was a mistake."[82]

Move to the left

By the end of the 1970s, Benn's views had shifted to the left-wing of the Labour Party. He attributed this political shift to his experience as a Cabinet Minister in the 1964–1970 Labour Government. Benn ascribed his move to the left to four lessons:

  1. How "the Civil Service can frustrate the policies and decisions of popularly elected governments"
  2. The centralised nature of the Labour Party which allowed the Leader to run "the Party almost as if it were his personal kingdom"
  3. "The power of industrialists and bankers to get their way by use of the crudest form of economic pressure, even blackmail, against a Labour Government"
  4. The power of the media, which "like the power of the medieval Church, ensures that events of the day are always presented from the point of the view of those who enjoy economic privilege"[83]

As regards the power of industrialists and bankers, Benn remarked:

Compared to this, the pressure brought to bear in industrial disputes by the unions is minuscule. This power was revealed even more clearly in 1976 when the International Monetary Fund secured cuts in our public expenditure. ... These [four] lessons led me to the conclusion that the UK is only superficially governed by MPs and the voters who elect them. Parliamentary democracy is, in truth, little more than a means of securing a periodical change in the management team, which is then allowed to preside over a system that remains in essence intact. If the British people were ever to ask themselves what power they truly enjoyed under our political system they would be amazed to discover how little it is, and some new Chartist agitation might be born and might quickly gather momentum.[84]

Benn's philosophy consisted of a form of syndicalism, state planning where necessary to ensure national competitiveness, greater democracy in the structures of the Labour Party and observance of Party Conference decisions.[85] Alongside an alleged 12 Labour MPs,[86] he spent 12 years affiliated with the Institute for Workers' Control, beginning in 1971 when he visited the Upper Clyde Shipyards, arguing in 1975 for the "labour movement to intensify its discussion about industrial democracy".[87]

He was vilified by most of the press while his opponents implied and stated that a Benn-led Labour Government would implement a type of Eastern European state socialism,[88] with Edward Heath referring to Benn as "Commissar Benn"[89] and others referring to Benn as a "Bollinger Bolshevik".[35] Despite this, Benn was overwhelmingly popular with Labour activists in the constituencies: a survey of delegates at the Labour Party Conference in 1978 found that by large margins they supported Benn for the leadership, as well as many Bennite policies.[90]

He publicly supported Sinn Féin and the unification of Ireland, although in 2005 he suggested to Sinn Féin leaders that it abandon its long-standing policy of not taking seats at Westminster (abstentionism). Sinn Féin in turn argued that to do so would recognise Britain's claim over Northern Ireland, and the Sinn Féin constitution prevented its elected members from taking their seats in any British-created institution.[91] A supporter of the Scottish Parliament and political devolution, Benn however opposed the Scottish National Party and Scottish independence, saying: "I think nationalism is a mistake. And I am half Scots and feel it would divide me in half with a knife. The thought that my mother would suddenly be a foreigner would upset me very much."[92]

In British politics during this period, the term "Bennism" came into use to describe the conviction politics, economic, social and political ideology of Tony Benn; and an exponent or advocate of Bennism was regarded as a "Bennite".[93][94][95]

In opposition, 1979–1997

In a keynote speech to the Labour Party Conference of 1980, shortly before the resignation of party leader James Callaghan and election of Michael Foot as successor, Benn outlined what he envisaged the next Labour Government would do. "Within days", a Labour Government would gain powers to nationalise industries, control capital and implement industrial democracy; "within weeks", all powers from Brussels would be returned to Westminster, and the House of Lords would be abolished by creating one thousand new peers and then abolishing the peerage. Benn received tumultuous applause.[96] On 25 January 1981, Roy Jenkins, David Owen, Shirley Williams and Bill Rodgers (known collectively as the "Gang of Four") launched the Council for Social Democracy, which became the Social Democratic Party in March. The "Gang of Four" left the Labour Party because of what they perceived to be the influence of the Militant tendency and the Bennite "hard left" within the party.[97][98] Benn was highly critical of the SDP, saying that "Britain has had SDP governments for the past 25 years."[99]

 
Benn speaking at the Glastonbury Festival in 2008

Benn stood against Denis Healey, the party's incumbent deputy leader, triggering the 1981 deputy leadership election, disregarding an appeal from Michael Foot to either stand for the leadership or abstain from inflaming the party's divisions. Benn defended his decision insisting that it was "not about personalities, but about policies". The result was announced on 27 September 1981; Healey retained his position by a margin of barely one per cent. The decision of several soft left MPs, including Neil Kinnock, to abstain triggered the split of the Socialist Campaign Group from the left of the Tribune Group.[1] After Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands in April 1982, Benn argued that the dispute should be settled by the United Nations and that the British Government should not send a task force to recapture the islands. The task force was sent, and following the Falklands War, they were back in British control by mid-June. In a debate in the Commons just after the Falklands were recaptured, Benn's demand for "a full analysis of the costs in life, equipment and money in this tragic and unnecessary war" was rejected by Margaret Thatcher, who stated that "he would not enjoy the freedom of speech that he put to such excellent use unless people had been prepared to fight for it".[100]

For the 1983 election Benn's Bristol South East constituency was abolished by boundary changes, and he lost to Michael Cocks in the selection of a candidate to stand in the new winnable seat of Bristol South. Rejecting offers from the new seat of Livingston in Scotland, Benn contested Bristol East, losing to the Conservative's Jonathan Sayeed in June 1983. Foot resigned as leader following the defeat which reduced Labour to only 209 MPs, while Healey also decided to step down as deputy leader. However Benn's absence from parliament meant that he was unable to stand in the resulting leadership contest as only MPs were eligible to be candidates.[101] Benn's absence from the contest was reported by The Glasgow Herald to leave Neil Kinnock as "the favourite Left-wing candidate".[101] Ultimately Kinnock won the contest, formally replacing Foot as party leader in October of that year.[102]

In a by-election, Benn was elected as the MP for Chesterfield, the next Labour seat to fall vacant, after Eric Varley had left the Commons to head Coalite. On the day of the by-election, 1 March 1984, The Sun newspaper ran a hostile feature article, "Benn on the Couch", which purported to be the opinions of an American psychiatrist.[103]

Newly elected to a mining seat, Benn was a supporter of the 1984–85 UK miners' strike, which was beginning when he returned to the Commons, and of his long-standing friend, the National Union of Mineworkers leader Arthur Scargill. However, some miners considered Benn's 1977 industry reforms to have caused problems during the strike; firstly, that they led to huge wage differences and distrust between miners of different regions; and secondly that the controversy over balloting miners for these reforms made it unclear as to whether a ballot was needed for a strike or whether it could be deemed as a "regional matter" in the same way that the 1977 reforms had been.[104][105] Benn also spoke at a Militant tendency rally held in 1984, saying: "The labour movement is not engaged in a personalised battle against individual cabinet ministers, nor do we seek to win public support by arguing that the crisis could be ended by the election of a new and more humane team of ministers who are better qualified to administer capitalism. We are working for a majority labour government, elected on a socialist programme, as decided by conference."[106]

In June 1985, three months after the miners admitted defeat and ended their strike, Benn introduced the Miners' Amnesty (General Pardon) Bill into the Commons, which would have extended an amnesty to all miners imprisoned during the strike. This would have included two men convicted of murder (later reduced to manslaughter) for the killing of David Wilkie, a taxi driver driving a non-striking miner to work in South Wales during the strike.[107]

Benn stood for election as party leader in 1988, against Neil Kinnock, following Labour's third successive defeat in the 1987 general election, losing by a substantial margin, and received only about 11 per cent of the vote. In May 1989 he made an extended appearance on Channel 4's late-night discussion programme After Dark, alongside among others Lord Dacre and Miles Copeland. During the Gulf War, Benn visited Baghdad in order to try to persuade Saddam Hussein to release the hostages who had been captured.[108]

Benn supported various LGBT social movements, which were then known as gay liberation;[109] Benn had voted in favour of decriminalisation in 1967.[110] Talking about Section 28 of the 1988 Local Government Act, a piece of anti-gay legislation preventing the "promotion of homosexuality", Benn said:

if the sense of the word "promote" can be read across from "describe", every murder play promotes murder, every war play promotes war, every drama involving the eternal triangle promotes adultery; and Mr. Richard Branson's condom campaign promotes fornication. The House had better be very careful before it gives to judges, who come from a narrow section of society, the power to interpret "promote".[110]

Benn later voted for the repeal of Section 28 during the first term of Tony Blair's New Labour Government, and voted in favour of equalising the age of consent.[110]

In 1990 he proposed a "Margaret Thatcher (Global Repeal) Bill", which he said "could go through both Houses in 24 hours. It would be easy to reverse the policies and replace the personalities—the process has begun—but the rotten values that have been propagated from the platform of political power in Britain during the past 10 years will be an infection—a virulent strain of right-wing capitalist thinking which it will take time to overcome."[111]

In 1991, with Labour still in opposition and a general election due by June 1992, he proposed the Commonwealth of Britain Bill, abolishing the monarchy in favour of the United Kingdom becoming a "democratic, federal and secular commonwealth", a republic with a written constitution. It was read in Parliament a number of times until his retirement at the 2001 election, but never achieved a second reading.[112] He presented an account of his proposal in Common Sense: A New Constitution for Britain.[113]

The bill included the following:

In the same year, Benn also received a Pipe Smoker of the Year award, claiming in his acceptance speech that "pipe smoking stopped you going to war".[115]

In 1991, Benn reiterated his opposition to the European Commission and highlighted an alleged democratic deficit in the institution, saying: "Some people genuinely believe that we shall never get social justice from the British Government, but we shall get it from Jacques Delors. They believe that a good king is better than a bad Parliament. I have never taken that view."[116][117] This argument has also been used by many on the right-wing Eurosceptic wing of the Conservative Party, such as Daniel Hannan MEP.[118] Jonathan Freedland writes in The Guardian: "For [Tony Benn], even benign rule by a monarch was worthless because the king's whim could change and there'd be nothing you could do about it."[119]

Prior to retirement, 1997–2001

In 1997, the Labour Party under the leadership of Tony Blair won the general election in a landslide, after 18 years of Conservative Party rule. Despite later calling Labour under Blair "the idea of a Conservative group who had taken over Labour"[120] and saying that "[Blair] set up a new political party, New Labour",[121] his political diaries Free at Last show that Benn was initially somewhat sympathetic to Blair, welcoming a change of government. Benn supported the introduction of the national minimum wage, and welcomed the progress towards peace and security in Northern Ireland (particularly under Mo Mowlam). He was supportive of the extra money given to public services in the New Labour years but believed it to be under the guise of privatisation. Overall, his concluding judgement on New Labour is highly critical; he describes its evolution as a way of retaining office by abandoning socialism and distancing the party from the trade union movement,[122] adopting a presidentialist style of politics, overriding the concept of the collective ministerial responsibility by reducing the power of the Cabinet, eliminated any effective influence from the annual conference of the Labour Party and "hinged its foreign policy on support for one of the worst presidents in US history".[123]

Benn strongly objected to the bombing of Iraq in December 1998,[124] calling it immoral and saying: "Aren't Arabs terrified? Aren't Iraqis terrified? Don't Arab and Iraqi women weep when their children die? Does bombing strengthen their determination? ... Every Member of Parliament tonight who votes for the government motion will be consciously and deliberately accepting the responsibility for the deaths of innocent people if the war begins, as I fear it will."[125] Benn also opposed the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.[126]

Several months prior to his retirement, Benn was a signatory to a letter, alongside Niki Adams (Legal Action for Women), Ian Macdonald QC, Gareth Peirce, and other legal professionals, that was published in The Guardian newspaper on 22 February 2001 condemning raids of more than 50 brothels in the central London area of Soho. At the time, a police spokesman said: "As far as we know, this is the biggest simultaneous crackdown on brothels and prostitution in this country in recent times", the arrest of 28 people in an operation that involved around 110 police officers.[127] The letter read:

In the name of "protecting" women from trafficking, about 40 women, including a woman from Iraq, were arrested, detained and in some cases summarily removed from Britain. If any of these women have been trafficked ... they deserve protection and resources, not punishment by expulsion. ... Having forced women into destitution, the government first criminalised those who begged. Now it is trying to use prostitution as a way to make deportation of the vulnerable more acceptable. We will not allow such injustice to go unchallenged.[128]

Retirement and final years, 2001–2014

 
Benn about to join the March 2005 anti-war demonstration in London

Benn chose not to seek re-election at the 2001 general election, saying he was "leaving parliament in order to spend more time on politics."[129] Along with former Prime Minister Edward Heath, Benn was permitted by the Speaker to continue using the House of Commons Library and Members' refreshment facilities. Shortly after his retirement, he became the President of the Stop the War Coalition.[108] He became a leading figure of the British opposition to the War in Afghanistan from 2001 and the Iraq War, and in February 2003 he travelled to Baghdad to meet Saddam Hussein. The interview was broadcast on British television.[130]

He spoke against the war at the February 2003 protest in London organised by the Stop the War Coalition, with police saying it was the biggest ever demonstration in the UK with about 750,000 marchers, and the organisers estimating nearly a million people participating.[131] In February 2004 and 2008, he was re-elected President of the Stop the War Coalition.[132]

He toured with a one-man stage show and appeared a few times each year in a two-man show with folk singer Roy Bailey. In 2003, his show with Bailey was voted 'Best Live Act' at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards.[133][134] In 2002, he opened the "Left Field" stage at the Glastonbury Festival. He continued to speak at each subsequent festival; attending one of his speeches was described as a "Glastonbury rite of passage".[135] In October 2003, he was a guest of British Airways on the last scheduled Concorde flight from New York to London. In June 2005, he was a panellist on a special edition of BBC One's Question Time edited entirely by a school-age film crew selected by a BBC competition.[136]

On 21 June 2005, Benn presented a programme on democracy as part of the Channel 5 series Big Ideas That Changed The World. He presented a left-wing view of democracy as the means to pass power from the "wallet to the ballot". He argued that traditional social democratic values were under threat in an increasingly globalised world in which powerful institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the European Commission are unelected and unaccountable to those whose lives they affect daily.[137]

 
Tony Benn and Giles Fraser speaking at Levellers' Day, Burford, 17 May 2008

On 27 September 2005, Benn became ill while attending the annual Labour Party Conference in Brighton and was taken by ambulance to the Royal Sussex County Hospital after being treated by paramedics on-the-scene at the Brighton Centre. Benn reportedly fell and struck his head. He was kept in hospital for observation and was described as being in a "comfortable condition".[138] He was subsequently fitted with an artificial pacemaker to help regulate his heartbeat.[139]

In a list compiled by the magazine New Statesman in 2006, he was voted twelfth in the list of "Heroes of our Time". In September 2006, Benn joined the "Time to Go" demonstration in Manchester the day before the final Labour Party Conference with Tony Blair as Leader of the Labour Party, with the aim of persuading the Government to withdraw troops from Iraq, to refrain from attacking Iran and to reject replacing the Trident missile and submarines with a new system. He spoke to the demonstrators in the rally afterwards.[140] In 2007, he appeared in an extended segment in the Michael Moore film Sicko giving comments about democracy, social responsibility and healthcare, notably, "If we can find the money to kill people, we can find the money to help people."[141] A poll by the BBC2 The Daily Politics programme in January 2007 selected Benn as the UK's "Political Hero" with 38% of the vote, narrowly defeating Margaret Thatcher, who had 35%.[142]

For the 2007 Labour Party leadership election, Benn backed the left-wing MP John McDonnell in his unsuccessful bid. In September 2007, Benn called for the government to hold a referendum on the EU Reform Treaty.[143] In October 2007, aged 82, and when it appeared that a general election was about to be held, Benn reportedly announced that he wanted to stand, having written to his local Constituency Labour Party offering himself as a prospective candidate for the newly drawn Kensington seat. His main opponent would have been the incumbent Conservative MP for the predecessor seat of Kensington and Chelsea, Malcolm Rifkind.[144][145] However, there was no election held in 2007, and so the boundary changes did not take effect until the eventual election in 2010, when Benn was not a candidate and the new seat was won by Rifkind.

 
Benn on the cover of Dartford Living, September 2009

In early 2008, Benn appeared on Scottish singer-songwriter Colin MacIntyre's album The Water, reading a poem he had written himself.[146][147] In September 2008, he appeared on the DVD release for the Doctor Who story The War Machines with a vignette discussing the Post Office Tower; he became the second Labour politician, after Roy Hattersley to appear on a Doctor Who DVD.[148]

At the Stop the War Conference 2009, he described the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as "Imperialist war(s)" and discussed the killing of American and allied troops by Iraqi or foreign insurgents, questioning whether they were in fact freedom fighters, and comparing the insurgents to a British Dad's Army, saying: "If you are invaded you have a right to self-defence, and this idea that people in Iraq and Afghanistan who are resisting the invasion are militant Muslim extremists is a complete bloody lie. I joined Dad's Army when I was sixteen, and if the Germans had arrived, I tell you, I could use a bayonet, a rifle, a revolver, and if I'd seen a German officer having a meal I'd have tossed a grenade through the window. Would I have been a freedom fighter or a terrorist?"[25]

In an interview published in Dartford Living in September 2009, Benn was critical of the Government's decision to delay the findings of the Iraq War Inquiry until after the general election, stating that "people can take into account what the inquiry has reported on but they’ve deliberately pushed it beyond the election. Government is responsible for explaining what it has done and I don't think we were told the truth."[149] He also stated that local government was strangled by Margaret Thatcher and had not been liberated by New Labour.[149]

In 2009, Benn was admitted to hospital and An Evening with Tony Benn, scheduled to take place at London's Cadogan Hall, was cancelled. He performed his show, The Writing on the Wall, with Roy Bailey at St Mary's Church, Ashford, Kent, in September 2011, as part of the arts venue's first Revelation St. Mary's Season.[150] In July 2011 Benn was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Glamorgan, Wales.[151]

 
Tony Benn speaking at the Tolpuddle Martyrs' Festival and Rally 2012

Benn headed the "coalition of resistance", a group which was opposed to the UK austerity programme.[152][153] In interviews in 2010 with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now! and 2013 with Afshin Rattansi on RT UK, Benn claimed that the actions of New Labour in the leadup to and aftermath of the Iraq War were such that the former Prime Minister Tony Blair should be tried for war crimes.[154][155] Benn also claimed in 2010 that Blair had lost the "trust of the nation" regarding the war in Iraq.[156]

In 2012, Benn was awarded an honorary degree from Goldsmiths, University of London. He was also the honorary president of the Goldsmiths Students' Union, who successfully campaigned for him to retract comments dismissing the Julian Assange rape allegations.[157][158] In February 2013, Benn was among those who gave their support to the People's Assembly in a letter published by The Guardian newspaper.[159] He gave a speech at the People's Assembly Conference held at Westminster Central Hall on 22 June 2013.

In 2013, Benn reiterated his previous opposition to European integration. Speaking to the Oxford Union on the alleged overshadowing of the EU debate by "UKIP and Tory backbenchers", he said:

I took the view that having fought [Europeans in the Second World War] that we should now work with them, and co-operate, and that was my first thought about it. Then how I saw how the European Union was developing, it was very obvious that what they had in mind was not democratic. ... And the way that Europe has developed is that the bankers and the multinational corporations have got very powerful positions, and if you come in on their terms, they will tell you what you can and cannot do. And that is unacceptable. My view about the European Union has always been not that I am hostile to foreigners, but that I am in favour of democracy ... I think they're building an empire there, they want us to be a part of their empire and I don't want that.[160]

Illness and death

In 1990, Benn was diagnosed with chronic lymphatic leukaemia and given three or four years to live; at this time, he kept the news of his leukaemia from everyone except his immediate family. Benn said: "When you're in parliament, you can't describe your medical condition. People immediately start wondering what your majority is and when there will be a by-election. They're very brutal."[161] This was revealed in 2002 with the release of his 1990–2001 diaries.[161]

Benn suffered a stroke in 2012, and spent much of the following year in hospital.[162] He was reported to be "seriously ill" in hospital in February 2014.[163] Benn died at home on 14 March 2014, surrounded by his family, less than a month shy of his 89th birthday.[164]

Benn's funeral took place on 27 March 2014 at St Margaret's Church, Westminster.[165][166] His body had lain in rest at St Mary Undercroft in the Palace of Westminster the night before the funeral service.[167] The service ended with the singing of "The Red Flag".[168] His body was then cremated; the ashes were expected to be buried alongside those of his wife at the family home near Steeple, Essex.[169]

Figures from across the political spectrum praised Benn following his death,[170][171] and the leaders of all three major political parties (the Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats) in the United Kingdom paid tribute.

Conservative leader and Prime Minister David Cameron said:

... he was an extraordinary man: a great writer, a brilliant speaker, extraordinary in Parliament, and a great life of public and political and parliamentary service. I mean, I disagreed with most of what he said. But he was always engaging and interesting, and you were never bored when reading or listening to him, and the country a great campaigner, a great writer, and someone who I'm sure whose words will be followed keenly for many, many years to come.[172][173]

Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg called Benn an "astonishing, iconic figure" and a "veteran parliamentarian, he was a great writer, he had great warmth and he had great conviction ... his political life will be looked back on with affection and admiration".[173]

Leader of the Opposition and Labour leader Ed Miliband, who knew Benn personally as a family friend, said:

I think Tony Benn will be remembered as a champion of the powerless, as a conviction politician, as somebody of deep principle and integrity. The thing about Tony Benn is that you always knew what he stood for, and who he stood up for. And I think that's why he was admired right across the political spectrum. There are people who agreed with him and disagreed with him, including in my own party, but I think people admired that sense of conviction and integrity that shone through from Tony Benn.[172][173]

Diaries and biographies

External video
  Interview with Benn on his diaries, July 13, 1994, C-SPAN

Benn was a prolific diarist.[174] Nine volumes of his diaries have been published. The final volume was published in 2013.[175] Collections of his speeches and writings were published as Arguments for Socialism (1979), Arguments for Democracy (1981), (both edited by Chris Mullin), Fighting Back (1988) and (with Andrew Hood) Common Sense (1993), as well as Free Radical: New Century Essays (2004). In August 2003, London DJ Charles Bailey created an album of Benn's speeches (ISBN 1-904734-03-0) set to ambient groove.

He made public several episodes of audio diaries he made during his time in Parliament and after retirement, entitled The Benn Tapes, broadcast originally on BBC Radio 4. Short series have been played periodically on BBC Radio 4 Extra.[176] A major biography was written by Jad Adams and published by Macmillan in 1992; it was updated to cover the intervening 20 years and reissued by Biteback Publishing in 2011: Tony Benn: A Biography (ISBN 0-333-52558-2). A more recent "semi-authorised" biography with a foreword by Benn was published in 2001: David Powell, Tony Benn: A Political Life, Continuum Books (ISBN 978-0826464156). An autobiography, Dare to be a Daniel: Then and Now, Hutchinson (ISBN 978-0099471530), a reference to the Old Testament prophet in the lions' den , was published in 2004.[177]

There are substantial essays on Benn in the Dictionary of Labour Biography by Phillip Whitehead, Greg Rosen (eds), Politicos Publishing, 2001 (ISBN 978-1902301181) and in Labour Forces: From Ernie Bevin to Gordon Brown, Kevin Jefferys (ed.), I.B. Tauris Publishing, 2002 (ISBN 978-1860647437). American Michael Moore dedicates his book Mike's Election Guide 2008 (ISBN 978-0141039817) to Benn, with the words: "For Tony Benn, keep teaching us".[178]

On 5 March 2019, it was announced that a large political archive of Benn's speeches, diaries, letters, pamphlets, recordings and ephemera had been accepted in lieu of £210,000 inheritance tax and allocated to the British Library. The audio recordings total to thousands of hours of content.[179]

Plaques

During his final years in Parliament, Benn placed three plaques within the Houses of Parliament. Two are in a room between the Central Lobby and Strangers' Gallery that holds a permanent display about the suffragettes.[180] The first was placed in 1995. The second was placed in 1996 and is dedicated to all who work within the Houses of Parliament.

The third is dedicated to Emily Wilding Davison, who died for the cause of "Votes for women", and was placed in the broom cupboard next to the Undercroft Chapel, where Davison is said to have hidden during the night of the 1911 census in order to establish her address as the House of Commons.[181][182]

In 2011, Benn unveiled a plaque in Highbury, North London, to commemorate the Peasants' Revolt of 1381.[183]

Legacy

In Bristol, where Benn first served as a member of parliament, a number of tributes exist in his honour. A bust of him was unveiled in Bristol's City Hall in 2005.[184][185] In 2012 Transport House on Victoria Street, headquarters of Unite the Union's regional office, was officially renamed Tony Benn House and opened by Benn himself.[186] As of 2015 he appears, alongside other famous people associated with the city, on the reverse of the Bristol pound's £B5 banknote.[187]

Benn told the Socialist Review in 2007:

I'd like to have on my gravestone: "He encouraged us." I'm proud to have been in the parliament that introduced the health service, the welfare state and voted against means testing. I did my maiden speech on nationalising the steel industry, put down the first motion for the boycott of South African goods, and resigned from the shadow cabinet in 1958 because of their support for nuclear weapons.

I think you do plant a few acorns, and I have lived to see one or two trees growing: gay rights, freedom of information, CND. I'm not claiming them for myself but you feel you have encouraged other people and see the arguments developing.

I'm not ashamed of making mistakes. I've made a million mistakes and they're all in the diary. When we edit the diary—which is cut to around 10 per cent—every mistake has to be printed because people look to see if you do. I would be ashamed if I thought I'd ever said anything I didn't believe to get on, but making mistakes is part of life, isn't it?[188]

Benn was widely seen as a key proponent of democratic socialism.[189] He was described as "one of the few UK politicians to have become more left-wing after holding ministerial office".[190] Harold Wilson, his former boss, maintained that Benn was the only man he knew who "immatures with age".[191]

He has been cited as being a key mentor to future leader of the Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn, with his Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell commenting that "they would discuss everything under the sun. Jeremy was very close to Tony right up until the end."[192] Corbyn was elected as leader of the Labour Party a little over a year after Benn's death, an act which Hilary Benn said would have made his father feel "thrilled".[193]

Styles

  • Anthony Wedgwood Benn, Esq. (1925 – 12 January 1942)
  • The Hon. Anthony Wedgwood Benn (12 January 1942 – 30 November 1950)
  • The Hon. Anthony Wedgwood Benn, MP (30 November 1950 – 17 November 1960)
  • The Rt Hon. The Viscount Stansgate (17 November 1960 – 31 July 1963)
  • Anthony Wedgwood Benn, Esq. (31 July – 20 August 1963)
  • Anthony Wedgwood Benn, Esq., MP (20 August 1963 – 1964)
  • The Rt Hon. Anthony Wedgwood Benn, MP (1964 – October 1973)
  • The Rt Hon. Tony Benn, MP (October 1973 – 9 June 1983)
  • The Rt Hon. Tony Benn (9 June 1983 – 1 March 1984)
  • The Rt Hon. Tony Benn, MP (1 March 1984 – 14 May 2001)
  • The Rt Hon. Tony Benn (14 May 2001 – 14 March 2014)

Bibliography

Diaries

See also

References

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External links

By date

  • Contributions in Parliament by Tony Benn. Hansard, 1925–2005.
  • Late Developer: Review of Against the Tide: Diaries 1973–1976 by Tony Benn. Author – Paul Foot, 1985.
  • Andrew Roth. "Tony Benn Chesterfield and Bristol South East MP". The Guardian, 25 March 2001.
  • The Guardian web guide to Benn.. 6 June 2002.
  • Face-to-Face with Tony Benn. Freeview video interview by the Vega Science Trust. Recorded in 2005.
  • Benn, Tony. . Glastonbury Festival. Archived from the original on 24 May 2005. Retrieved 5 May 2016 – via the Wayback Machine.
  • Tony Benn. "Atomic hypocrisy: West is not in a position to take a high moral line". The Guardian, 30 November 2005.
  • Interview with Tony Benn – Radio France Internationale. 28 March 2008 – 6-minute audio – Ahead of G20 marches, London.
  • Tony Benn on Tony Blair: "He Is Guilty of a War Crime". Video report by Democracy Now!. 21 September 2010.
  • Obituary: Tony Benn. BBC News, 14 March 2014.
  • Tony Benn: a stalwart of the peace and anti-nuclear movement. Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, 14 March 2014.
  • Allegretti, Aubrey (12 July 2021). "Tony Benn's son takes House of Lords seat renounced by his father". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 November 2021.

Other

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by MP for Bristol South East
19501960
Succeeded by
Preceded by Baby of the House
1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by Baby of the House
1951–1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by MP for Bristol South East
19631983
Constituency abolished
Preceded by MP for Chesterfield
19842001
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Postmaster General
1964–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Technology
1966–1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for Industry
1974–1975
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for Energy
1975–1979
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chair of the Fabian Society
1964–1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Labour Party
1971–1972
Succeeded by
Non-profit organisation positions
New office President of the
Stop the War Coalition

2001–2014
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Viscount Stansgate
1960–1963
Disclaimed
Title next held by
Stephen Benn

tony, benn, anthony, neil, wedgwood, benn, april, 1925, march, 2014, known, between, 1960, 1963, viscount, stansgate, british, politician, writer, diarist, served, cabinet, minister, 1960s, 1970s, member, labour, party, member, parliament, bristol, south, east. Anthony Neil Wedgwood Benn 3 April 1925 14 March 2014 known between 1960 and 1963 as Viscount Stansgate was a British politician writer and diarist who served as a Cabinet minister in the 1960s and 1970s A member of the Labour Party he was Member of Parliament for Bristol South East and Chesterfield for 47 of the 51 years between 1950 and 2001 He later served as President of the Stop the War Coalition from 2001 to 2014 The Right HonourableTony BennBenn in 2006President of the Stop the War CoalitionIn office 21 September 2001 14 March 2014Vice PresidentLindsey GermanChairmanAndrew Murray Jeremy CorbynPreceded byPosition establishedSecretary of State for EnergyIn office 10 June 1975 4 May 1979Prime MinisterHarold Wilson James CallaghanPreceded byEric VarleySucceeded byDavid HowellSecretary of State for IndustryIn office 5 March 1974 10 June 1975Prime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byPeter Walker Trade and Industry Succeeded byEric VarleyChairman of the National Executive Committee of the Labour PartyIn office 20 September 1971 25 September 1972LeaderHarold WilsonPreceded byIan MikardoSucceeded byWilliam SimpsonMinister of TechnologyIn office 4 July 1966 19 June 1970Prime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byFrank CousinsSucceeded byGeoffrey RipponPostmaster GeneralIn office 15 October 1964 4 July 1966Prime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byReginald BevinsSucceeded byEdward ShortParliamentary officesMember of Parliamentfor ChesterfieldIn office 2 March 1984 14 May 2001Preceded byEric VarleySucceeded byPaul HolmesMember of Parliamentfor Bristol South EastIn office 20 August 1963 13 May 1983Preceded byMalcolm St ClairSucceeded byConstituency abolishedIn office 30 November 1950 17 November 1960Preceded byStafford CrippsSucceeded byMalcolm St ClairMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalHereditary peerage 17 November 1960 31 July 1963Preceded byThe 1st Viscount StansgateSucceeded byThe 3rd Viscount Stansgate 2021 Personal detailsBornAnthony Neil Wedgwood Benn 1925 04 03 3 April 1925Marylebone London EnglandDied14 March 2014 2014 03 14 aged 88 London EnglandPolitical partyLabourOther politicalaffiliationsSocialist Campaign Group 1 SpouseCaroline DeCamp m 1949 died 2000 wbr ChildrenStephenHilaryMelissaJoshuaParentsWilliam Wedgwood Benn father Margaret Holmes mother RelativesEmily Benn granddaughter EducationWestminster SchoolAlma materNew College OxfordMilitary serviceAllegiance United KingdomBranch service Royal Air ForceRankPilot officerBattles warsWorld War IIThe son of a Liberal and later Labour Party politician Benn was born in Westminster and privately educated at Westminster School He was elected for Bristol South East at the 1950 general election but inherited his father s peerage on his death which prevented him from continuing to serve as an MP He fought to remain in the House of Commons and campaigned for the ability to renounce the title a campaign which succeeded with the Peerage Act 1963 He was an active member of the Fabian Society and served as chairman from 1964 to 1965 He served in Harold Wilson s Labour government 1964 1970 first as Postmaster General where he oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower and later as Minister of Technology Benn served as Chairman of the National Executive Committee from 1971 to 1972 while in Opposition In the Labour government 1974 1979 he returned to the Cabinet as Secretary of State for Industry and subsequently served as Secretary of State for Energy He retained that post when James Callaghan succeeded Wilson as Prime Minister When the Labour Party was in opposition through the 1980s he emerged as a prominent figure on the left wing of the party and unsuccessfully challenged Neil Kinnock for the Labour leadership in 1988 After leaving Parliament at the 2001 general election Benn was President of the Stop the War Coalition until his death in 2014 Benn was widely seen as a key proponent of democratic socialism and Christian socialism though in regards to the latter he supported the United Kingdom becoming a secular state and ending the Church of England s status as an official church of the United Kingdom known as disestablishmentarianism 2 3 Originally considered a moderate within the party he was identified as belonging to its left wing after leaving ministerial office The terms Bennism and Bennite came into usage to describe the left wing politics he espoused from the late 1970s and its adherents He was an influence on the political views of Jeremy Corbyn who was elected Leader of the Labour Party a year after Benn s death and John McDonnell who served as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer under Corbyn Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Early parliamentary career 2 1 Member of Parliament 1950 1960 2 2 Peerage reform 3 In government 1964 1970 4 In government 1974 1979 4 1 Move to the left 5 In opposition 1979 1997 6 Prior to retirement 1997 2001 7 Retirement and final years 2001 2014 8 Illness and death 9 Diaries and biographies 10 Plaques 11 Legacy 12 Styles 13 Bibliography 13 1 Diaries 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksEarly life and family EditBenn was born in Westminster London 4 on 3 April 1925 5 He had two brothers Michael 1921 1944 who was killed in the Second World War and David 1928 2017 a specialist in Russia and Eastern Europe 6 Following the Thames flood in January 1928 their house was uninhabitable so the Benn family moved to Scotland for over 12 months 7 Their father William Benn was a Liberal Member of Parliament from 1906 who crossed the floor to the Labour Party in 1928 and was appointed Secretary of State for India by Ramsay MacDonald in 1929 a position he held until the Labour Party s landslide electoral defeat in 1931 8 William Benn was elevated to the House of Lords and Tony Benn was subsequently titled with the honorific prefix The Honourable William Benn was given the title of Viscount Stansgate in 1942 the new wartime coalition government was short of working Labour peers in the upper house 9 In 1945 46 William Benn was the Secretary of State for Air in the first majority Labour Government 10 Benn s mother Margaret Benn nee Holmes 1897 1991 was a theologian feminist and the founder President of the Congregational Federation She was a member of the League of the Church Militant which was the predecessor of the Movement for the Ordination of Women in 1925 she was rebuked by Randall Davidson the Archbishop of Canterbury for advocating the ordination of women His mother s theology had a profound influence on Benn as she taught him that the stories in the Bible were mostly about the struggle between the prophets and the kings and that he ought in his life to support the prophets over the kings who had power as the prophets taught righteousness 11 Benn was for over 30 years a committed Christian 12 He said that the teachings of Jesus Christ had a radical political importance on his life and made a distinction between the historical Jesus as a carpenter of Nazareth who advocated social justice and egalitarianism and the way in which he s presented by some religious authorities by popes archbishops and bishops who present Jesus as justification for their power believing this to be a gross misunderstanding of the role of Jesus 13 He believed that it was a great mistake to assume that the teachings of Christianity are outdated in modern Britain 13 and Higgins wrote in The Benn Inheritance that Benn was a socialist whose political commitment owes much more to the teaching of Jesus than the writing of Marx 14 Indeed he did not read The Communist Manifesto until he was in his 50s 15 The driving force of his life was Christian socialism according to Peter Wilby linking Benn to the high minded founding roots of Labour 15 Later in his life Benn emphasised issues regarding morality and righteousness as well as various ethical principles of Nonconformism On Desert Island Discs he said that he had been powerfully influenced by what I would call the Dissenting tradition that is the English Dissenters who left or were ejected from the established church one of whom was his ancestor William Benn 16 I ve never thought we can understand the world we lived in unless we understood the history of the church Benn said to the Catholic Herald All political freedoms were won first of all through religious freedom Some of the arguments about the control of the media today which are very big arguments are the arguments that would have been fought in the religious wars You have the satellites coming in now well it is the multinational church all over again That s why Mrs Thatcher pulled Britain out of UNESCO she was not prepared any more than Ronald Reagan was to be part of an organisation that talked about a New World Information Order people speaking to each other without the help of Murdoch or Maxwell 17 According to Wilby in the New Statesman Benn decided to do without the paraphernalia and doctrine of organised religion but not without the teachings of Jesus 18 Although Benn became more agnostic as he became older he was intrigued by the interconnections between Christianity radicalism and socialism 19 Wilby also wrote in The Guardian that although former Chancellor Stafford Cripps described Benn as as keen a Christian as I am myself Benn wrote in 2005 that he was a Christian agnostic who believed in Jesus the prophet not Christ the king specifically rejecting the label of humanist 20 Both of Benn s grandfathers were Liberal Party MPs his paternal grandfather was John Benn a successful politician MP for Tower Hamlets and later Devonport who was created a baronet in 1914 and who founded a publishing company Benn Brothers 21 and his maternal grandfather was Daniel Holmes MP for Glasgow Govan 22 Benn s contact with leading politicians of the day dates back to his earliest years He met Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald when he was five years old whom he described as A kindly old gentleman who leaned over me and offered me a chocolate biscuit I ve looked at Labour leaders in a funny way ever since 23 Benn also met former Liberal Prime Minister David Lloyd George when he was 12 and later recalled that while still a boy he once shook hands with Mahatma Gandhi in 1931 while his father was Secretary of State for India 24 During the Second World War Benn joined and trained with the Home Guard from the age of 16 later recalling in a speech made in 2009 I could use a bayonet a rifle a revolver and if I d seen a German officer having a meal I d have tossed a grenade through the window Would I have been a freedom fighter or a terrorist 25 26 In July 1943 Benn enlisted in the Royal Air Force as an aircraftman 2nd Class 27 His father and elder brother Michael who was later killed in an accident were already serving in the RAF He was granted an emergency commission as a pilot officer on probation on 10 March 1945 28 As a pilot officer Benn served as a pilot in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia 29 In June 1944 he made his first solo flight at RAF Guinea Fowl an RAF Elementary Flying Training School in Southern Rhodesia 30 The aircraft was a Canadian built Fairchild Cornell In a 1993 article recounting the experience he said I always thought that I would feel a sense of panic when I saw the ground coming up at me on my first solo but strangely enough I didn t feel anything but exhilaration 31 He relinquished his commission with effect from 10 August 1945 three months after the Second World War ended in Europe on 8 May and just days before the war with Japan ended on 2 September 32 After attending Mr Gladstone s day school near Sloane Square 33 Benn attended Westminster School and studied at New College Oxford where he read Philosophy politics and economics and was elected President of the Oxford Union in 1947 34 In later life Benn removed public references to his private education from Who s Who In 1970 all references to Westminster School were removed 35 and in the 1975 edition his entry stated Education still in progress In the 1976 edition almost all details were omitted except his name jobs as a Member of Parliament and as a Government Minister and address the publishers confirmed that Benn had sent back the draft entry with everything else struck through 36 In the 1977 edition Benn s entry disappeared entirely 37 and when he returned to Who s Who in 1983 he was listed as Tony Benn and all references to his education or service record were removed 35 In 1972 Benn said in his diaries that Today I had the idea that I would resign my Privy Councillorship my MA and all my honorary doctorates in order to strip myself of what the world had to offer 35 While he acknowledged that he might be ridiculed for doing so 38 Benn said that Wedgie Benn and the Rt Honourable Anthony Wedgwood Benn and all that stuff is impossible I have been Tony Benn in Bristol for a long time 35 In October 1973 he announced on BBC Radio that he wished to be known as Mr Tony Benn rather than Anthony Wedgwood Benn 39 and his book Speeches from 1974 is credited to Tony Benn 40 Despite this name change social historian Alwyn W Turner writes Just as those with an agenda to pursue still call Muhammed Ali by his original name so most newspapers continued to refer to Tony Benn as Wedgwood Benn or Wedgie in the case of the tabloids for years to come 35 Benn met Caroline Middleton DeCamp born 13 October 1926 Cincinnati Ohio United States over tea at Worcester College Oxford in 1949 just nine days after meeting her he proposed to her on a park bench in the city Later he bought the bench from Oxford City Council and installed it in the garden of their home in Holland Park Tony and Caroline had four children Stephen Hilary Melissa a feminist writer and Joshua and 10 grandchildren Caroline Benn died of cancer on 22 November 2000 aged 74 after a career as an educationalist 41 Two of Benn s children have been active in Labour Party politics His eldest son Stephen was an elected Member of the Inner London Education Authority from 1986 to 1990 His second son Hilary was a councillor in London stood for Parliament in 1983 and 1987 and became Labour MP for Leeds Central in 1999 He was Secretary of State for International Development from 2003 to 2007 and then Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs until 2010 later serving as Shadow Foreign Secretary 2015 16 42 This makes him the third generation of his family to have been a member of the Cabinet a rare distinction for a modern political family in Britain Benn s granddaughter Emily Benn was the Labour Party s youngest ever candidate 43 when she failed to win East Worthing and Shoreham in 2010 44 Benn was a first cousin once removed of the actress Margaret Rutherford 45 Benn and his wife Caroline became vegetarian in 1970 for ethical reasons and remained so for the rest of their lives Benn cited the decision of his son Hilary to become vegetarian as an important factor in his own decision to adopt a vegetarian diet 46 47 48 Early parliamentary career EditMember of Parliament 1950 1960 Edit Following the Second World War Benn worked briefly as a BBC Radio producer On 1 November 1950 he was selected to succeed Stafford Cripps as the Labour candidate for Bristol South East after Cripps stood down because of ill health He won the seat in a by election on 30 November 1950 49 Anthony Crosland helped him get the seat as he was the MP for nearby South Gloucestershire at the time Upon taking the oath on 4 December 1950 50 Benn became Baby of the House the youngest MP for one day being succeeded by Thomas Teevan who was two years younger but took his oath a day later 51 He became the Baby again in 1951 when Teevan was not re elected In the 1950s Benn held middle of the road or soft left views and was not associated with the young left wing group around Aneurin Bevan 52 As MP for Bristol South East Benn helped organise the 1963 Bristol Bus Boycott 53 against the colour bar of the Bristol Omnibus Company against employing Black British and British Asian drivers Benn said that he would stay off the buses even if I have to find a bike and Labour leader Harold Wilson also told an anti apartheid rally in London he was glad that so many Bristolians are supporting the boycott campaign adding that he wish ed them every success 54 Peerage reform Edit Benn s father was created Viscount Stansgate in 1942 when Winston Churchill increased the number of Labour peers to aid political work in the House of Lords at this time Benn s elder brother Michael then serving in the RAF was intending to enter the priesthood and had no objections to inheriting a peerage However Michael was later killed in an accident while on active service in the Second World War and this left Benn as the heir apparent to the peerage He made several unsuccessful attempts to renounce the succession 52 In November 1960 Lord Stansgate died Benn automatically became a peer preventing him from sitting in the House of Commons The Speaker of the Commons Sir Harry Hylton Foster did not allow him to deliver a speech from the bar of the House of Commons in April 1961 when the by election was being called 55 Continuing to maintain his right to abandon his peerage Benn fought to retain his seat in a by election caused by his succession on 4 May 1961 Although he was disqualified from taking his seat he was re elected An election court found that the voters were fully aware that Benn was disqualified and declared the seat won by the Conservative runner up Malcolm St Clair who was at the time also the heir presumptive to a peerage 56 Benn continued his campaign outside Parliament Within two years though the Conservative Government of the time which had members in the same or similar situation to Benn s i e who were going to receive title or who had already applied for writs of summons changed the law 57 58 The Peerage Act 1963 allowing lifetime disclaimer of peerages became law shortly after 6 pm on 31 July 1963 Benn was the first peer to renounce his title doing so at 6 22 pm that day 59 St Clair fulfilling a promise he had made at the time of his election then accepted the office of Steward of the Manor of Northstead disqualifying himself from the House outright resignation not being possible Benn returned to the Commons after winning a by election on 20 August 1963 52 In government 1964 1970 EditIn the 1964 Government led by Harold Wilson Benn was Postmaster General where he oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower then the UK s tallest building and the creations of the Post Bus service and Girobank He proposed issuing stamps without the Sovereign s head but this met with private opposition from the Queen 60 Instead the portrait was reduced to a small profile in silhouette a format that is still used on commemorative stamps 61 Benn also led the government s opposition to the pirate radio stations broadcasting from international waters which he was aware would be an unpopular measure 62 Some of these stations were causing problems such as interference to emergency radio used by shipping 63 although he was not responsible for introducing the Marine Broadcasting Offences Bill when it came before Parliament at the end of July 1966 for its first reading 64 Tony Benn shaking the hand of Maurice Papon during the official presentation of Concorde 11 December 1967 Earlier in the month Benn was promoted to Minister of Technology which included responsibility for the development of Concorde and the formation of International Computers Ltd ICL The period also saw government involvement in industrial rationalisation and the merger of several car companies to form British Leyland 65 Following Conservative MP Enoch Powell s 1968 Rivers of Blood speech to a Conservative Association meeting in opposition to Harold Wilson s insistence on not stirring up the Powell issue 66 Benn said during the 1970 general election campaign The flag of racialism which has been hoisted in Wolverhampton is beginning to look like the one that fluttered 25 years ago over Dachau and Belsen If we do not speak up now against the filthy and obscene racialist propaganda the forces of hatred will mark up their first success and mobilise their first offensive Enoch Powell has emerged as the real leader of the Conservative Party He is a far stronger character than Mr Heath He speaks his mind Heath does not The final proof of Powell s power is that Heath dare not attack him publicly even when he says things that disgust decent Conservatives 66 The mainstream press attacked Benn for using language deemed as intemperate as Powell s language in his Rivers of Blood speech which was widely regarded as racist 66 and Benn noted in his diary that letters began pouring in on the Powell speech 2 1 against me but some very sympathetic ones saying that my speech was overdue 67 Harold Wilson later reprimanded Benn for this speech accusing him of losing Labour seats in the 1970 general election 68 During the 1970s Benn publicly defended Marxism saying The Communist Manifesto and many other works of Marxist philosophy have always profoundly influenced the British labour movement and the British Labour Party and have strengthened our understanding and enriched our thinking It would be as unthinkable to try to construct the Labour Party without Marx as it would be to establish university faculties of astronomy anthropology or psychology without permitting the study of Copernicus Darwin or Freud and still expect such faculties to be taken seriously 69 70 Labour lost the 1970 election to Edward Heath s Conservatives and upon Heath s application to join the European Economic Community a surge in left wing Euroscepticism emerged 71 Benn was stridently against membership 72 and campaigned in favour of a referendum on the UK s membership The Shadow Cabinet voted to support a referendum on 29 March 1972 and as a result Roy Jenkins resigned as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party 73 In government 1974 1979 EditIn the Labour Government of 1974 Benn was Secretary of State for Industry and as such increased nationalised industry pay provided better terms and conditions for workers such as the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was involved in setting up worker cooperatives in firms which were struggling 74 the best known being at Meriden outside Coventry producing Triumph Motorcycles In 1975 he was appointed Secretary of State for Energy immediately following his unsuccessful campaign for a No vote in the referendum on the UK s continued membership of the European Community Common Market Later in his diary 25 October 1977 Benn wrote that he loathed the EEC he claimed it was bureaucratic and centralised and of course it is really dominated by Germany All the Common Market countries except the UK have been occupied by Germany and they have this mixed feeling of hatred and subservience towards the Germans 75 Upon the death of Mao Zedong in 1976 Benn described Mao as one of the greatest if not the greatest figures of the twentieth century a schoolteacher who transformed China released it from civil war and foreign attack and constructed a new society there in his diaries adding that he certainly towers above any twentieth century figure I can think of in his philosophical contribution and military genius 76 On his trip to the Chinese embassy after Mao s death Benn recorded in an earlier volume of his diaries that he was a great admirer of Mao while also admitting that he made mistakes because everybody does 77 Harold Wilson resigned as Leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister in March 1976 Benn later attributed the collapse of the Wilson government to cuts enforced on the UK by global capital in particular the International Monetary Fund 78 In the resulting leadership contest Benn finished in fourth place out of the six cabinet ministers who stood he withdrew as 11 8 per cent of colleagues voted for him in the first ballot Benn withdrew from the second ballot and endorsed Michael Foot James Callaghan eventually won Despite not receiving his support in the second and third rounds of the vote Callaghan kept Benn on as Energy Secretary In 1976 there was a sterling crisis and Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey sought a loan from the International Monetary Fund Underlining a wish to counter international market forces which seemed to penalise a larger welfare state Benn publicly circulated the divided Cabinet minutes in which a narrow majority of the Labour Cabinet under Ramsay MacDonald supported a cut in unemployment benefits in order to obtain a loan from American bankers As he highlighted these minutes resulted in the 1931 split of the Labour Party in which MacDonald and his allies formed a National Government with Conservatives and Liberals Callaghan allowed Benn to put forward the Alternative Economic Strategy which consisted of a self sufficient economy less dependent on low rate fresh borrowing but the AES which according to opponents would have led to a siege economy was rejected by the Cabinet 79 In response Benn later recalled that I retorted that their policy was a siege economy only they had the bankers inside the castle with all our supporters left outside whereas my policy would have our supporters in the castle with the bankers outside 78 Benn blamed the Winter of Discontent on these cuts to socialist policies 78 During Benn s time as energy minister from 1975 to 1979 he supported the United Kingdom s use of nuclear power However later in his life he became an opponent of nuclear power attributing his time as running it as a minister to persuading him it was not cheap safe or peaceful 80 81 When asked in an interview in January 2009 on what he had changed his mind on over the course of his life he expanded on this issue by saying Nuclear power for example In 1955 when Eisenhower said he was going for Atoms for Peace I became a passionate supporter of it Having been brought up on the Bible I liked the idea of swords into ploughshares I advocated nuclear power as Minister of Technology I was told and believed that nuclear power was cheap safe and peaceful Having been in charge of nuclear power I discovered it wasn t cheap wasn t safe and when I left office I was told that during my period as Secretary of State for Energy plutonium from our nuclear power stations went to the Pentagon to make nuclear weapons So every nuclear power station in Britain is a bomb factory for America I was utterly shaken by that Nothing in the world would now induce me to support nuclear power It was a mistake 82 Move to the left Edit By the end of the 1970s Benn s views had shifted to the left wing of the Labour Party He attributed this political shift to his experience as a Cabinet Minister in the 1964 1970 Labour Government Benn ascribed his move to the left to four lessons How the Civil Service can frustrate the policies and decisions of popularly elected governments The centralised nature of the Labour Party which allowed the Leader to run the Party almost as if it were his personal kingdom The power of industrialists and bankers to get their way by use of the crudest form of economic pressure even blackmail against a Labour Government The power of the media which like the power of the medieval Church ensures that events of the day are always presented from the point of the view of those who enjoy economic privilege 83 As regards the power of industrialists and bankers Benn remarked Compared to this the pressure brought to bear in industrial disputes by the unions is minuscule This power was revealed even more clearly in 1976 when the International Monetary Fund secured cuts in our public expenditure These four lessons led me to the conclusion that the UK is only superficially governed by MPs and the voters who elect them Parliamentary democracy is in truth little more than a means of securing a periodical change in the management team which is then allowed to preside over a system that remains in essence intact If the British people were ever to ask themselves what power they truly enjoyed under our political system they would be amazed to discover how little it is and some new Chartist agitation might be born and might quickly gather momentum 84 Benn s philosophy consisted of a form of syndicalism state planning where necessary to ensure national competitiveness greater democracy in the structures of the Labour Party and observance of Party Conference decisions 85 Alongside an alleged 12 Labour MPs 86 he spent 12 years affiliated with the Institute for Workers Control beginning in 1971 when he visited the Upper Clyde Shipyards arguing in 1975 for the labour movement to intensify its discussion about industrial democracy 87 He was vilified by most of the press while his opponents implied and stated that a Benn led Labour Government would implement a type of Eastern European state socialism 88 with Edward Heath referring to Benn as Commissar Benn 89 and others referring to Benn as a Bollinger Bolshevik 35 Despite this Benn was overwhelmingly popular with Labour activists in the constituencies a survey of delegates at the Labour Party Conference in 1978 found that by large margins they supported Benn for the leadership as well as many Bennite policies 90 He publicly supported Sinn Fein and the unification of Ireland although in 2005 he suggested to Sinn Fein leaders that it abandon its long standing policy of not taking seats at Westminster abstentionism Sinn Fein in turn argued that to do so would recognise Britain s claim over Northern Ireland and the Sinn Fein constitution prevented its elected members from taking their seats in any British created institution 91 A supporter of the Scottish Parliament and political devolution Benn however opposed the Scottish National Party and Scottish independence saying I think nationalism is a mistake And I am half Scots and feel it would divide me in half with a knife The thought that my mother would suddenly be a foreigner would upset me very much 92 In British politics during this period the term Bennism came into use to describe the conviction politics economic social and political ideology of Tony Benn and an exponent or advocate of Bennism was regarded as a Bennite 93 94 95 In opposition 1979 1997 EditIn a keynote speech to the Labour Party Conference of 1980 shortly before the resignation of party leader James Callaghan and election of Michael Foot as successor Benn outlined what he envisaged the next Labour Government would do Within days a Labour Government would gain powers to nationalise industries control capital and implement industrial democracy within weeks all powers from Brussels would be returned to Westminster and the House of Lords would be abolished by creating one thousand new peers and then abolishing the peerage Benn received tumultuous applause 96 On 25 January 1981 Roy Jenkins David Owen Shirley Williams and Bill Rodgers known collectively as the Gang of Four launched the Council for Social Democracy which became the Social Democratic Party in March The Gang of Four left the Labour Party because of what they perceived to be the influence of the Militant tendency and the Bennite hard left within the party 97 98 Benn was highly critical of the SDP saying that Britain has had SDP governments for the past 25 years 99 Benn speaking at the Glastonbury Festival in 2008 Benn stood against Denis Healey the party s incumbent deputy leader triggering the 1981 deputy leadership election disregarding an appeal from Michael Foot to either stand for the leadership or abstain from inflaming the party s divisions Benn defended his decision insisting that it was not about personalities but about policies The result was announced on 27 September 1981 Healey retained his position by a margin of barely one per cent The decision of several soft left MPs including Neil Kinnock to abstain triggered the split of the Socialist Campaign Group from the left of the Tribune Group 1 After Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands in April 1982 Benn argued that the dispute should be settled by the United Nations and that the British Government should not send a task force to recapture the islands The task force was sent and following the Falklands War they were back in British control by mid June In a debate in the Commons just after the Falklands were recaptured Benn s demand for a full analysis of the costs in life equipment and money in this tragic and unnecessary war was rejected by Margaret Thatcher who stated that he would not enjoy the freedom of speech that he put to such excellent use unless people had been prepared to fight for it 100 For the 1983 election Benn s Bristol South East constituency was abolished by boundary changes and he lost to Michael Cocks in the selection of a candidate to stand in the new winnable seat of Bristol South Rejecting offers from the new seat of Livingston in Scotland Benn contested Bristol East losing to the Conservative s Jonathan Sayeed in June 1983 Foot resigned as leader following the defeat which reduced Labour to only 209 MPs while Healey also decided to step down as deputy leader However Benn s absence from parliament meant that he was unable to stand in the resulting leadership contest as only MPs were eligible to be candidates 101 Benn s absence from the contest was reported by The Glasgow Herald to leave Neil Kinnock as the favourite Left wing candidate 101 Ultimately Kinnock won the contest formally replacing Foot as party leader in October of that year 102 In a by election Benn was elected as the MP for Chesterfield the next Labour seat to fall vacant after Eric Varley had left the Commons to head Coalite On the day of the by election 1 March 1984 The Sun newspaper ran a hostile feature article Benn on the Couch which purported to be the opinions of an American psychiatrist 103 Newly elected to a mining seat Benn was a supporter of the 1984 85 UK miners strike which was beginning when he returned to the Commons and of his long standing friend the National Union of Mineworkers leader Arthur Scargill However some miners considered Benn s 1977 industry reforms to have caused problems during the strike firstly that they led to huge wage differences and distrust between miners of different regions and secondly that the controversy over balloting miners for these reforms made it unclear as to whether a ballot was needed for a strike or whether it could be deemed as a regional matter in the same way that the 1977 reforms had been 104 105 Benn also spoke at a Militant tendency rally held in 1984 saying The labour movement is not engaged in a personalised battle against individual cabinet ministers nor do we seek to win public support by arguing that the crisis could be ended by the election of a new and more humane team of ministers who are better qualified to administer capitalism We are working for a majority labour government elected on a socialist programme as decided by conference 106 In June 1985 three months after the miners admitted defeat and ended their strike Benn introduced the Miners Amnesty General Pardon Bill into the Commons which would have extended an amnesty to all miners imprisoned during the strike This would have included two men convicted of murder later reduced to manslaughter for the killing of David Wilkie a taxi driver driving a non striking miner to work in South Wales during the strike 107 Benn stood for election as party leader in 1988 against Neil Kinnock following Labour s third successive defeat in the 1987 general election losing by a substantial margin and received only about 11 per cent of the vote In May 1989 he made an extended appearance on Channel 4 s late night discussion programme After Dark alongside among others Lord Dacre and Miles Copeland During the Gulf War Benn visited Baghdad in order to try to persuade Saddam Hussein to release the hostages who had been captured 108 Benn supported various LGBT social movements which were then known as gay liberation 109 Benn had voted in favour of decriminalisation in 1967 110 Talking about Section 28 of the 1988 Local Government Act a piece of anti gay legislation preventing the promotion of homosexuality Benn said if the sense of the word promote can be read across from describe every murder play promotes murder every war play promotes war every drama involving the eternal triangle promotes adultery and Mr Richard Branson s condom campaign promotes fornication The House had better be very careful before it gives to judges who come from a narrow section of society the power to interpret promote 110 Benn later voted for the repeal of Section 28 during the first term of Tony Blair s New Labour Government and voted in favour of equalising the age of consent 110 In 1990 he proposed a Margaret Thatcher Global Repeal Bill which he said could go through both Houses in 24 hours It would be easy to reverse the policies and replace the personalities the process has begun but the rotten values that have been propagated from the platform of political power in Britain during the past 10 years will be an infection a virulent strain of right wing capitalist thinking which it will take time to overcome 111 In 1991 with Labour still in opposition and a general election due by June 1992 he proposed the Commonwealth of Britain Bill abolishing the monarchy in favour of the United Kingdom becoming a democratic federal and secular commonwealth a republic with a written constitution It was read in Parliament a number of times until his retirement at the 2001 election but never achieved a second reading 112 He presented an account of his proposal in Common Sense A New Constitution for Britain 113 The bill included the following Abolishing the House of Lords Establishing a House of the People Lowering the voting age to 16 Establishing a national parliament for England Scotland and Wales Ending British rule in Northern Ireland The Church separated from the state Honours list reformed to recognise services to the community Confirmation of judges and election of magistrates No constitutional role for the monarchy continue to live in Buckingham Palace 114 In the same year Benn also received a Pipe Smoker of the Year award claiming in his acceptance speech that pipe smoking stopped you going to war 115 In 1991 Benn reiterated his opposition to the European Commission and highlighted an alleged democratic deficit in the institution saying Some people genuinely believe that we shall never get social justice from the British Government but we shall get it from Jacques Delors They believe that a good king is better than a bad Parliament I have never taken that view 116 117 This argument has also been used by many on the right wing Eurosceptic wing of the Conservative Party such as Daniel Hannan MEP 118 Jonathan Freedland writes in The Guardian For Tony Benn even benign rule by a monarch was worthless because the king s whim could change and there d be nothing you could do about it 119 Prior to retirement 1997 2001 EditIn 1997 the Labour Party under the leadership of Tony Blair won the general election in a landslide after 18 years of Conservative Party rule Despite later calling Labour under Blair the idea of a Conservative group who had taken over Labour 120 and saying that Blair set up a new political party New Labour 121 his political diaries Free at Last show that Benn was initially somewhat sympathetic to Blair welcoming a change of government Benn supported the introduction of the national minimum wage and welcomed the progress towards peace and security in Northern Ireland particularly under Mo Mowlam He was supportive of the extra money given to public services in the New Labour years but believed it to be under the guise of privatisation Overall his concluding judgement on New Labour is highly critical he describes its evolution as a way of retaining office by abandoning socialism and distancing the party from the trade union movement 122 adopting a presidentialist style of politics overriding the concept of the collective ministerial responsibility by reducing the power of the Cabinet eliminated any effective influence from the annual conference of the Labour Party and hinged its foreign policy on support for one of the worst presidents in US history 123 Benn strongly objected to the bombing of Iraq in December 1998 124 calling it immoral and saying Aren t Arabs terrified Aren t Iraqis terrified Don t Arab and Iraqi women weep when their children die Does bombing strengthen their determination Every Member of Parliament tonight who votes for the government motion will be consciously and deliberately accepting the responsibility for the deaths of innocent people if the war begins as I fear it will 125 Benn also opposed the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia 126 Several months prior to his retirement Benn was a signatory to a letter alongside Niki Adams Legal Action for Women Ian Macdonald QC Gareth Peirce and other legal professionals that was published in The Guardian newspaper on 22 February 2001 condemning raids of more than 50 brothels in the central London area of Soho At the time a police spokesman said As far as we know this is the biggest simultaneous crackdown on brothels and prostitution in this country in recent times the arrest of 28 people in an operation that involved around 110 police officers 127 The letter read In the name of protecting women from trafficking about 40 women including a woman from Iraq were arrested detained and in some cases summarily removed from Britain If any of these women have been trafficked they deserve protection and resources not punishment by expulsion Having forced women into destitution the government first criminalised those who begged Now it is trying to use prostitution as a way to make deportation of the vulnerable more acceptable We will not allow such injustice to go unchallenged 128 Retirement and final years 2001 2014 Edit Benn about to join the March 2005 anti war demonstration in London Benn chose not to seek re election at the 2001 general election saying he was leaving parliament in order to spend more time on politics 129 Along with former Prime Minister Edward Heath Benn was permitted by the Speaker to continue using the House of Commons Library and Members refreshment facilities Shortly after his retirement he became the President of the Stop the War Coalition 108 He became a leading figure of the British opposition to the War in Afghanistan from 2001 and the Iraq War and in February 2003 he travelled to Baghdad to meet Saddam Hussein The interview was broadcast on British television 130 He spoke against the war at the February 2003 protest in London organised by the Stop the War Coalition with police saying it was the biggest ever demonstration in the UK with about 750 000 marchers and the organisers estimating nearly a million people participating 131 In February 2004 and 2008 he was re elected President of the Stop the War Coalition 132 He toured with a one man stage show and appeared a few times each year in a two man show with folk singer Roy Bailey In 2003 his show with Bailey was voted Best Live Act at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards 133 134 In 2002 he opened the Left Field stage at the Glastonbury Festival He continued to speak at each subsequent festival attending one of his speeches was described as a Glastonbury rite of passage 135 In October 2003 he was a guest of British Airways on the last scheduled Concorde flight from New York to London In June 2005 he was a panellist on a special edition of BBC One s Question Time edited entirely by a school age film crew selected by a BBC competition 136 On 21 June 2005 Benn presented a programme on democracy as part of the Channel 5 series Big Ideas That Changed The World He presented a left wing view of democracy as the means to pass power from the wallet to the ballot He argued that traditional social democratic values were under threat in an increasingly globalised world in which powerful institutions such as the International Monetary Fund the World Bank and the European Commission are unelected and unaccountable to those whose lives they affect daily 137 Tony Benn and Giles Fraser speaking at Levellers Day Burford 17 May 2008 On 27 September 2005 Benn became ill while attending the annual Labour Party Conference in Brighton and was taken by ambulance to the Royal Sussex County Hospital after being treated by paramedics on the scene at the Brighton Centre Benn reportedly fell and struck his head He was kept in hospital for observation and was described as being in a comfortable condition 138 He was subsequently fitted with an artificial pacemaker to help regulate his heartbeat 139 In a list compiled by the magazine New Statesman in 2006 he was voted twelfth in the list of Heroes of our Time In September 2006 Benn joined the Time to Go demonstration in Manchester the day before the final Labour Party Conference with Tony Blair as Leader of the Labour Party with the aim of persuading the Government to withdraw troops from Iraq to refrain from attacking Iran and to reject replacing the Trident missile and submarines with a new system He spoke to the demonstrators in the rally afterwards 140 In 2007 he appeared in an extended segment in the Michael Moore film Sicko giving comments about democracy social responsibility and healthcare notably If we can find the money to kill people we can find the money to help people 141 A poll by the BBC2 The Daily Politics programme in January 2007 selected Benn as the UK s Political Hero with 38 of the vote narrowly defeating Margaret Thatcher who had 35 142 For the 2007 Labour Party leadership election Benn backed the left wing MP John McDonnell in his unsuccessful bid In September 2007 Benn called for the government to hold a referendum on the EU Reform Treaty 143 In October 2007 aged 82 and when it appeared that a general election was about to be held Benn reportedly announced that he wanted to stand having written to his local Constituency Labour Party offering himself as a prospective candidate for the newly drawn Kensington seat His main opponent would have been the incumbent Conservative MP for the predecessor seat of Kensington and Chelsea Malcolm Rifkind 144 145 However there was no election held in 2007 and so the boundary changes did not take effect until the eventual election in 2010 when Benn was not a candidate and the new seat was won by Rifkind Benn on the cover of Dartford Living September 2009 In early 2008 Benn appeared on Scottish singer songwriter Colin MacIntyre s album The Water reading a poem he had written himself 146 147 In September 2008 he appeared on the DVD release for the Doctor Who story The War Machines with a vignette discussing the Post Office Tower he became the second Labour politician after Roy Hattersley to appear on a Doctor Who DVD 148 At the Stop the War Conference 2009 he described the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as Imperialist war s and discussed the killing of American and allied troops by Iraqi or foreign insurgents questioning whether they were in fact freedom fighters and comparing the insurgents to a British Dad s Army saying If you are invaded you have a right to self defence and this idea that people in Iraq and Afghanistan who are resisting the invasion are militant Muslim extremists is a complete bloody lie I joined Dad s Army when I was sixteen and if the Germans had arrived I tell you I could use a bayonet a rifle a revolver and if I d seen a German officer having a meal I d have tossed a grenade through the window Would I have been a freedom fighter or a terrorist 25 In an interview published in Dartford Living in September 2009 Benn was critical of the Government s decision to delay the findings of the Iraq War Inquiry until after the general election stating that people can take into account what the inquiry has reported on but they ve deliberately pushed it beyond the election Government is responsible for explaining what it has done and I don t think we were told the truth 149 He also stated that local government was strangled by Margaret Thatcher and had not been liberated by New Labour 149 In 2009 Benn was admitted to hospital and An Evening with Tony Benn scheduled to take place at London s Cadogan Hall was cancelled He performed his show The Writing on the Wall with Roy Bailey at St Mary s Church Ashford Kent in September 2011 as part of the arts venue s first Revelation St Mary s Season 150 In July 2011 Benn was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Glamorgan Wales 151 Tony Benn speaking at the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival and Rally 2012 Benn headed the coalition of resistance a group which was opposed to the UK austerity programme 152 153 In interviews in 2010 with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now and 2013 with Afshin Rattansi on RT UK Benn claimed that the actions of New Labour in the leadup to and aftermath of the Iraq War were such that the former Prime Minister Tony Blair should be tried for war crimes 154 155 Benn also claimed in 2010 that Blair had lost the trust of the nation regarding the war in Iraq 156 In 2012 Benn was awarded an honorary degree from Goldsmiths University of London He was also the honorary president of the Goldsmiths Students Union who successfully campaigned for him to retract comments dismissing the Julian Assange rape allegations 157 158 In February 2013 Benn was among those who gave their support to the People s Assembly in a letter published by The Guardian newspaper 159 He gave a speech at the People s Assembly Conference held at Westminster Central Hall on 22 June 2013 In 2013 Benn reiterated his previous opposition to European integration Speaking to the Oxford Union on the alleged overshadowing of the EU debate by UKIP and Tory backbenchers he said I took the view that having fought Europeans in the Second World War that we should now work with them and co operate and that was my first thought about it Then how I saw how the European Union was developing it was very obvious that what they had in mind was not democratic And the way that Europe has developed is that the bankers and the multinational corporations have got very powerful positions and if you come in on their terms they will tell you what you can and cannot do And that is unacceptable My view about the European Union has always been not that I am hostile to foreigners but that I am in favour of democracy I think they re building an empire there they want us to be a part of their empire and I don t want that 160 Illness and death EditIn 1990 Benn was diagnosed with chronic lymphatic leukaemia and given three or four years to live at this time he kept the news of his leukaemia from everyone except his immediate family Benn said When you re in parliament you can t describe your medical condition People immediately start wondering what your majority is and when there will be a by election They re very brutal 161 This was revealed in 2002 with the release of his 1990 2001 diaries 161 Benn suffered a stroke in 2012 and spent much of the following year in hospital 162 He was reported to be seriously ill in hospital in February 2014 163 Benn died at home on 14 March 2014 surrounded by his family less than a month shy of his 89th birthday 164 Benn s funeral took place on 27 March 2014 at St Margaret s Church Westminster 165 166 His body had lain in rest at St Mary Undercroft in the Palace of Westminster the night before the funeral service 167 The service ended with the singing of The Red Flag 168 His body was then cremated the ashes were expected to be buried alongside those of his wife at the family home near Steeple Essex 169 Figures from across the political spectrum praised Benn following his death 170 171 and the leaders of all three major political parties the Conservatives Labour and the Liberal Democrats in the United Kingdom paid tribute Conservative leader and Prime Minister David Cameron said he was an extraordinary man a great writer a brilliant speaker extraordinary in Parliament and a great life of public and political and parliamentary service I mean I disagreed with most of what he said But he was always engaging and interesting and you were never bored when reading or listening to him and the country a great campaigner a great writer and someone who I m sure whose words will be followed keenly for many many years to come 172 173 Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg called Benn an astonishing iconic figure and a veteran parliamentarian he was a great writer he had great warmth and he had great conviction his political life will be looked back on with affection and admiration 173 Leader of the Opposition and Labour leader Ed Miliband who knew Benn personally as a family friend said I think Tony Benn will be remembered as a champion of the powerless as a conviction politician as somebody of deep principle and integrity The thing about Tony Benn is that you always knew what he stood for and who he stood up for And I think that s why he was admired right across the political spectrum There are people who agreed with him and disagreed with him including in my own party but I think people admired that sense of conviction and integrity that shone through from Tony Benn 172 173 Diaries and biographies EditExternal video Interview with Benn on his diaries July 13 1994 C SPANBenn was a prolific diarist 174 Nine volumes of his diaries have been published The final volume was published in 2013 175 Collections of his speeches and writings were published as Arguments for Socialism 1979 Arguments for Democracy 1981 both edited by Chris Mullin Fighting Back 1988 and with Andrew Hood Common Sense 1993 as well as Free Radical New Century Essays 2004 In August 2003 London DJ Charles Bailey created an album of Benn s speeches ISBN 1 904734 03 0 set to ambient groove He made public several episodes of audio diaries he made during his time in Parliament and after retirement entitled The Benn Tapes broadcast originally on BBC Radio 4 Short series have been played periodically on BBC Radio 4 Extra 176 A major biography was written by Jad Adams and published by Macmillan in 1992 it was updated to cover the intervening 20 years and reissued by Biteback Publishing in 2011 Tony Benn A Biography ISBN 0 333 52558 2 A more recent semi authorised biography with a foreword by Benn was published in 2001 David Powell Tony Benn A Political Life Continuum Books ISBN 978 0826464156 An autobiography Dare to be a Daniel Then and Now Hutchinson ISBN 978 0099471530 a reference to the Old Testament prophet in the lions den was published in 2004 177 There are substantial essays on Benn in the Dictionary of Labour Biography by Phillip Whitehead Greg Rosen eds Politicos Publishing 2001 ISBN 978 1902301181 and in Labour Forces From Ernie Bevin to Gordon Brown Kevin Jefferys ed I B Tauris Publishing 2002 ISBN 978 1860647437 American Michael Moore dedicates his book Mike s Election Guide 2008 ISBN 978 0141039817 to Benn with the words For Tony Benn keep teaching us 178 On 5 March 2019 it was announced that a large political archive of Benn s speeches diaries letters pamphlets recordings and ephemera had been accepted in lieu of 210 000 inheritance tax and allocated to the British Library The audio recordings total to thousands of hours of content 179 Plaques EditDuring his final years in Parliament Benn placed three plaques within the Houses of Parliament Two are in a room between the Central Lobby and Strangers Gallery that holds a permanent display about the suffragettes 180 The first was placed in 1995 The second was placed in 1996 and is dedicated to all who work within the Houses of Parliament The third is dedicated to Emily Wilding Davison who died for the cause of Votes for women and was placed in the broom cupboard next to the Undercroft Chapel where Davison is said to have hidden during the night of the 1911 census in order to establish her address as the House of Commons 181 182 In 2011 Benn unveiled a plaque in Highbury North London to commemorate the Peasants Revolt of 1381 183 Legacy EditIn Bristol where Benn first served as a member of parliament a number of tributes exist in his honour A bust of him was unveiled in Bristol s City Hall in 2005 184 185 In 2012 Transport House on Victoria Street headquarters of Unite the Union s regional office was officially renamed Tony Benn House and opened by Benn himself 186 As of 2015 he appears alongside other famous people associated with the city on the reverse of the Bristol pound s B5 banknote 187 Benn told the Socialist Review in 2007 I d like to have on my gravestone He encouraged us I m proud to have been in the parliament that introduced the health service the welfare state and voted against means testing I did my maiden speech on nationalising the steel industry put down the first motion for the boycott of South African goods and resigned from the shadow cabinet in 1958 because of their support for nuclear weapons I think you do plant a few acorns and I have lived to see one or two trees growing gay rights freedom of information CND I m not claiming them for myself but you feel you have encouraged other people and see the arguments developing I m not ashamed of making mistakes I ve made a million mistakes and they re all in the diary When we edit the diary which is cut to around 10 per cent every mistake has to be printed because people look to see if you do I would be ashamed if I thought I d ever said anything I didn t believe to get on but making mistakes is part of life isn t it 188 Benn was widely seen as a key proponent of democratic socialism 189 He was described as one of the few UK politicians to have become more left wing after holding ministerial office 190 Harold Wilson his former boss maintained that Benn was the only man he knew who immatures with age 191 He has been cited as being a key mentor to future leader of the Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn with his Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell commenting that they would discuss everything under the sun Jeremy was very close to Tony right up until the end 192 Corbyn was elected as leader of the Labour Party a little over a year after Benn s death an act which Hilary Benn said would have made his father feel thrilled 193 Styles EditAnthony Wedgwood Benn Esq 1925 12 January 1942 The Hon Anthony Wedgwood Benn 12 January 1942 30 November 1950 The Hon Anthony Wedgwood Benn MP 30 November 1950 17 November 1960 The Rt Hon The Viscount Stansgate 17 November 1960 31 July 1963 Anthony Wedgwood Benn Esq 31 July 20 August 1963 Anthony Wedgwood Benn Esq MP 20 August 1963 1964 The Rt Hon Anthony Wedgwood Benn MP 1964 October 1973 The Rt Hon Tony Benn MP October 1973 9 June 1983 The Rt Hon Tony Benn 9 June 1983 1 March 1984 The Rt Hon Tony Benn MP 1 March 1984 14 May 2001 The Rt Hon Tony Benn 14 May 2001 14 March 2014 Bibliography EditMarr Andrew 2007 A History of Modern Britain Macmillan ISBN 978 0 330 51147 6 Speeches Spokesman Books 1974 ISBN 0851240917 Levellers and the English Democratic Tradition Spokesman Books 1976 ISBN 978 0 85124 633 8 Why America Needs Democratic Socialism Spokesman Books 1978 ISBN 978 0 85124 266 8 Prospects Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers Technical Administrative and Supervisory Section 1979 Case for Constitutional Civil Service Institute for Workers Control 1980 ISBN 978 0 901740 67 0 Case for Party Democracy Institute for Workers Control 1980 ISBN 978 0 901740 70 0 Arguments for Socialism Penguin Books 1980 ISBN 978 0 14 005489 7 amp Chris Mullin Arguments for Democracy Jonathan Cape 1981 ISBN 978 0 224 01878 4 European Unity A New Perspective Spokesman Books 1981 ISBN 978 0 85124 326 9 Parliament and Power Agenda for a Free Society Verso Books 1982 ISBN 978 0 86091 057 2 amp Andrew Hood Common Sense New Constitution for Britain Hutchinson 1993 Free Radical New Century Essays Continuum International Publishing 2004 ISBN 978 0 8264 7400 1 Dare to Be a Daniel Then and Now Hutchinson 2004 ISBN 978 0 09 179999 1 Letters to my Grandchildren Thoughts on the Future Arrow Books 2010 ISBN 978 0 09 953909 4Diaries Edit Out of the Wilderness Diaries 1963 67 Hutchinson 1987 ISBN 978 0 09 170660 9 Office Without Power Diaries 1968 72 Hutchinson 1988 ISBN 978 0 09 173647 7 Against the Tide Diaries 1973 76 Hutchinson 1989 ISBN 978 0 09 173775 7 Conflicts of Interest Diaries 1977 80 Hutchinson 1990 ISBN 978 0 09 174321 5 The End of an Era Diaries 1980 90 Hutchinson 1992 ISBN 978 0 09 174857 9 Years of Hope Diaries 1940 62 Hutchinson 1994 ISBN 978 0 09 178534 5 The Benn Diaries Single Volume Edition 1940 90 Hutchinson 1995 ISBN 978 0 09 179223 7 Free at Last Diaries 1991 2001 Hutchinson 2002 ISBN 978 0 09 179352 4 More Time for Politics Diaries 2001 2007 Hutchinson 2007 ISBN 978 0 09 951705 4 A Blaze of Autumn Sunshine The Last Diaries Hutchinson 2013 ISBN 978 0 09 194387 5See also EditLabour Representation Committee 2004 Republicanism in the United Kingdom Socialist Campaign GroupReferences Edit a b Seyd Patrick 1987 The Rise and Fall of the Labour Left Macmillan Education p 165 ISBN 978 0 333 44748 2 White Michael 14 March 2014 Tony Benn the establishment insider turned leftwing outsider The Guardian Retrieved 22 September 2022 Rush Martyn 26 February 2021 Tony Benn s Plan to Democratise Britain and Abolish the Monarchy Tribune Retrieved 22 September 2022 Oxford National Biography Tony Benn Official Website tonybenn com Archived from the original on 7 February 2003 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Webb Alban 1 March 2017 David Wedgwood Benn obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 1 March 2017 Retrieved 2 March 2017 The youngest of his brothers Jeremy was still born Tony Benn A biography Jad Adams p 8 William Wedgwood Benn MP and war hero Great War London 14 July 2014 Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 Hale Leslie Potter Mark January 2008 Benn William Wedgwood Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30705 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Subscription or UK public library membership required Watts Robert 12 May 2007 The Benn dynasty Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 Benn Tony 2003 Free Radical Continuum p 226 ISBN 978 0 8264 6596 2 The Forgotten World of Christian Socialism History Today www historytoday com a b Tony Benn on Jesus YouTube video YouTube Channel 4 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Higgins Sydney 1984 The Benn Inheritance The Story of a Radical Family Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 78524 8 Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 8 October 2016 Quoted in Brown Rob 27 September 1984 Vital key to the real Tony Benn The Glasgow Herald p 8 Retrieved 4 May 2016 a b Tony Benn Peter Wilby reads the diaries The Guardian 22 March 2014 Tony Benn leaves life to spend less time on politics www churchtimes co uk Kenny Mary 14 March 2014 Tony Benn 1925 2014 a politician shaped by Christianity The Catholic Herald Archived from the original on 4 February 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Wilby Peter 27 March 2014 Tony Benn s banana diet lapsed Christians and ignoring no smoking signs New Statesman Archived from the original on 2 February 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Benn Tony 2 July 2015 The Best of Benn Cornerstone p 118 ISBN 978 1 78475 032 9 Archived from the original on 24 December 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Wilby Peter 22 March 2014 Tony Benn Peter Wilby reads the diaries The Guardian Archived from the original on 3 April 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Brodie Marc January 2008 Benn Sir John Williams Oxford National Dictionary of Biography Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 2 May 2010 Stearn Roger T 2004 Benn Margaret Eadie Wedgwood Oxford National Dictionary of Biography Online Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Engel Matthew 14 March 2014 The paradox of Tony Benn Financial Times Archived from the original on 3 July 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 McSmith Andy Dalyell Tam 14 March 2014 Tony Benn obituary Politician who embodied the soul of the Labour Party and came to be admired even by his rivals The Independent Archived from the original on 10 April 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2016 a b Jesse Oldershaw camera Andy Cousins editor 25 April 2009 Tony Benn Stop the War Conference 2009 Stop the War Coalition Event occurs at 3 06 Archived from the original on 15 June 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2015 A fuller transcript of that speech in which he called the Home Guard Dad s Army is given in the section Retirement and final years Tony Benn The Biography Channel Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 2 April 2007 No 37124 The London Gazette Supplement 8 June 1945 p 3077 Clark Raymond 1 October 2013 To the End They Remain Thoughts on War Peace and Reconciliation History Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 7509 5308 5 Approximate latitude longitude from Google Maps and Earth 19 31 21 8 S 29 55 58 7 E Tony Benn First Solo in High Flyers 30 Reminiscences to Celebrate the 75th Anniversary of the Royal Air Force Michael Fopp ed Greenhill Books in Association with the Royal Air Force Museum London 1993 p 39 No 37327 The London Gazette Supplement 26 October 1945 p 5276 Benn Tony 2004 Dare to Be a Daniel United Kingdom Hutchinson p 95 ISBN 9780091799991 Brivati Brian 14 March 2014 Tony Benn obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 a b c d e f Turner Alwyn W 19 March 2009 Crisis What Crisis Britain in the 1970s Aurum Press pp 43 44 ISBN 978 1 84513 851 6 Mr Benn wipes away his past The Times Diary Times Newspapers 18 March 1976 Not Out The Times Diary 4 April 1977 Sandbrook Dominic 19 April 2012 Seasons in the Sun The Battle for Britain 1974 1979 Penguin Books 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Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 Happy Birthday Tony Benn 87 Archived 15 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Times 3 April 2012 BBC Radio 7 Programmes The Benn Tapes BBC 16 March 2009 Archived from the original on 19 October 2010 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Tony Benn a Biography www newstatesman com Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 Goodman Amy 1 November 2008 Michael Moore on the Election the Bailout Healthcare and 10 Proposals for the Next President by Michael Moore Democracy Now ZCommunications Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Retrieved 3 May 2010 via the Wayback Machine Brown Mark 5 March 2019 The most tremendous result how Tony Benn celebrated losing to Denis Healey The Guardian Archived from the original on 8 March 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Suffragettes display www parliament uk UK Parliament Archived from the original on 15 October 2013 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Benn s secret tribute to suffragette martyr BBC News 17 March 1999 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Plaque to Emily Wilding Davison www parliament uk Uk Parliament Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Horrocks Caroline 2 June 2011 Tony Benn to unveil Islington People s Plaque commemorating the Peasants Revolt Islington Borough Council Archived from the original on 13 January 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Bust celebrates politician s work BBC News 16 October 2005 Retrieved 4 July 2015 Galloway Simon 14 March 2014 Tony Benn remembered 1925 2014 Bristol Post Archived from the original on 14 July 2015 Former Bristol Labour MP Tony Benn opens union HQ BBC News 31 October 2012 Archived from the original on 4 September 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2015 New Bristol Pounds Bristol Pound Archived from the original on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2015 Benn Tony German Lindsey Orr Judith September 2007 Interview No 317 Archived from the original on 6 February 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2016 White Michael 14 March 2014 Tony Benn the establishment insider turned leftwing outsider The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 April 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Collection The Rt Hon Tony Benn MP Art in Parliament UK Parliament Archived from the original on 13 October 2010 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Leading the way Microsite guardian co uk www theguardian com Boffey Daniel 15 August 2015 Jeremy Corbyn s world his friends supporters mentors and influences The Guardian Archived from the original on 13 September 2015 Retrieved 12 June 2017 Murphy Joe 25 September 2015 Hilary Benn Dad would ve been thrilled by Jeremy Corbyn s win London Evening Standard Archived from the original on 8 June 2017 Retrieved 12 June 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tony Benn Wikiquote has quotations related to Tony Benn By date Contributions in Parliament by Tony Benn Hansard 1925 2005 Late Developer Review of Against the Tide Diaries 1973 1976 by Tony Benn Author Paul Foot 1985 Andrew Roth Tony Benn Chesterfield and Bristol South East MP The Guardian 25 March 2001 The Guardian web guide to Benn 6 June 2002 Face to Face with Tony Benn Freeview video interview by the Vega Science Trust Recorded in 2005 Benn Tony Exclusive Interview Glastonbury Festival Archived from the original on 24 May 2005 Retrieved 5 May 2016 via the Wayback Machine Tony Benn Atomic hypocrisy West is not in a position to take a high moral line The Guardian 30 November 2005 Interview with Tony Benn Radio France Internationale 28 March 2008 6 minute audio Ahead of G20 marches London Tony Benn on Tony Blair He Is Guilty of a War Crime Video report by Democracy Now 21 September 2010 Obituary Tony Benn BBC News 14 March 2014 Tony Benn a stalwart of the peace and anti nuclear movement Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament 14 March 2014 Allegretti Aubrey 12 July 2021 Tony Benn s son takes House of Lords seat renounced by his father The Guardian Retrieved 8 November 2021 Other Audio interview with The Guardian His Address to the College Historical Society of Trinity College Private Eye depictions of Benn Most Dangerous Man in Britain Labour United Benn s Triumph Foot amp Benn Disease Would You Buy a New Car From This Man Tony Benn on Modern Liberty Tony Benn speaking for The Convention on Modern Liberty YouTube 23 February 2009 Works by or about Tony Benn at Internet Archive Works by Tony Benn at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Tony Benn on The Guardian Appearances on C SPAN Portraits of Tony Benn at the National Portrait Gallery London Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded byStafford Cripps MP for Bristol South East1950 1960 Succeeded byMalcolm St ClairPreceded byPeter Baker Baby of the House1950 Succeeded byThomas TeevanPreceded byThomas Teevan Baby of the House1951 1954 Succeeded byJohn EdenPreceded byMalcolm St Clair MP for Bristol South East1963 1983 Constituency abolishedPreceded byEric Varley MP for Chesterfield1984 2001 Succeeded byPaul HolmesPolitical officesPreceded byReginald Bevins Postmaster General1964 1966 Succeeded byEdward ShortPreceded byFrank Cousins Minister of Technology1966 1970 Succeeded byGeoffrey RipponPreceded byPeter Walker Secretary of State for Industry1974 1975 Succeeded byEric VarleyPreceded byEric Varley Secretary of State for Energy1975 1979 Succeeded byDavid HowellParty political officesPreceded byBrian Abel Smith Chair of the Fabian Society1964 1965 Succeeded byPeter TownsendPreceded byIan Mikardo Chairman of the Labour Party1971 1972 Succeeded byWilliam SimpsonNon profit organisation positionsNew office President of theStop the War Coalition2001 2014 Succeeded byBrian EnoPeerage of the United KingdomPreceded byWilliam Wedgwood Benn Viscount Stansgate1960 1963 DisclaimedTitle next held byStephen Benn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tony Benn amp oldid 1141388830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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