John Strachey (politician)

"John St Loe Strachey" redirects here. For the journalist and newspaper proprietor, see John Strachey (journalist).
The Right Honourable
John Strachey
Secretary of State for War
In office
28 February 1950  26 October 1951
Monarch George VI
Prime Minister Clement Attlee
Preceded by Manny Shinwell
Succeeded by Anthony Head
Personal details
Born 21 October 1901 (1901-10-21)
Guildford, Surrey
Died 15 July 1963 (1963-07-16) (aged 61)
Marylebone, London
Nationality British
Political party Labour
Alma mater Magdalen College, Oxford

Evelyn John St Loe Strachey PC (21 October 1901 – 15 July 1963) was a British Labour politician and writer.

Background and education

Born in Guildford, Surrey, the son of John Strachey, editor of The Spectator, he was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford.[1] At Oxford he was editor, with his close friend Robert Boothby,[1] of the Oxford Fortnightly Review. Strachey's Oxford career was interrupted by ill-health – peritonitis – and he left after two years in 1922 without taking a degree. He later joined The Spectator.

Political career

Strachey joined the Labour Party in 1923 and was editor of the Socialist Review and The Miner. He unsuccessfully contested the Aston division of Birmingham in 1924. He was elected as Member of Parliament for Birmingham Aston in 1929, serving to 1931. He was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Oswald Mosley. He resigned from the Parliamentary Labour Party in 1931 for Mosley's New Party. Following the New Party's drift towards fascism he resigned to become a supporter of the Communist Party, contesting the Aston constituency as an independent.

Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists (BUF) organized a large rally at the Olympia hall in London in June 1934. A counter-demonstration was organized, and the rally turned into a fight in which many were injured.[2] A Committee for Coordinating Anti-Fascist Activities was formed, with Strachey as secretary, sponsored by the World Committee Against War and Fascism (Amsterdam-Pleyel). When the BUF staged another demonstration of 3,000 Fascists in Hyde Park, London on 9 September 1934, Strachey's committee organized a major counter-demonstration by 20,000 anti-Fascists.[3]

Strachey assisted the publisher Victor Gollancz in founding the Left Book Club in 1936. As the author of The Coming Struggle for Power (1932), and a series of other significant works, Strachey was one of the most prolific and widely read British Marxist-Leninist theorists of the 1930s.[4] He criticised the economics of John Maynard Keynes from a Marxist perspective before himself becoming a Keynesian.[5] He helped launch the Popular Front in December 1936.[6]

Strachey became increasing unhappy with the Communist movement following the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and the Soviet Invasion of Finland. In a letter to the New Statesman Strachey claimed the Communists "are prepared, for the sake of the..Soviet Union,to give way to Hitler to any extent, and they are utterly irresponsible as to the consequences to the British people of such unlimited giving away. So long as that remains the case I...can have nothing to do with them."[7] He broke with the CPGB in 1940 and joined the Royal Air Force in which he served as a Squadron Leader with a temporary commission.[8] He was posted to the Air Ministry as a public relations officer in the Directorate of Bombing Operations and made a reputation as an air commentator for the BBC, making official broadcasts about the men of RAF Bomber Command.

Returning to the Labour Party, he was chosen to be the Labour candidate for Dundee in 1943 and was again elected to Parliament, serving from 1945 to 1963. He served as Under-Secretary of State for Air in 1945 and is widely credited as having been responsible for ignoring Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Harris and, by implication, Bomber Command from the Victory Honours List. This may have been retaliation for Harris' request to have Strachey removed from his wartime post within the Directorate of Bombing Operations due to Strachey's changeable political persuasions, a request that was not successful as Strachey remained in the post until the end of the war.[8]

Having a reputation as a confidently facile speaker and being ultra-efficient, he was appointed as Minister of Food in 1946.[1] As such, he was involved in the abortive Tanganyika groundnut scheme. He became a Privy Counsellor in 1946. On the division of the Dundee constituency, he was elected as Labour MP for Dundee West in 1950, holding the seat until his death in 1963. He was Secretary of State for War, 1950–51. He supported Hugh Gaitskell as successor to Clement Attlee in 1955. In the 1950s Strachey devoted much of his time to writing studies of British society from a social democratic viewpoint.[9]

Personal life

His second marriage, in 1933, was to Celia Simpson. The marriage produced two recorded children: one son and one daughter.

Strachey died in Marylebone, London, in July 1963 aged 61. His death caused a by-election in his Dundee West constituency, won by Labour's Peter Doig.

Publications

  • Revolution by Reason (1925)
  • Workers' Control in the Russian Mining Industry, (1928)
  • The Coming Struggle for Power (1932)
  • Unstable Money, John Day (1933)
  • The Menace of Fascism (1933)
  • The Nature of Capitalist Crisis (1935)
  • The Theory and Practice of Socialism (1936)
  • What Are We to Do? (1938)
  • Why You Should be a Socialist (1938)
  • A Programme for Progress (1940)
  • A Faith to Fight For (1941)
  • Post D (1941/1942)
  • Arise to Conquer (1944)
  • Labour's task (1951)
  • Contemporary Capitalism (1956)
  • The End of Empire (1959)
  • The pursuit of peace (1960)
  • On the Prevention of War (1962)
  • The Strangled Cry (1962)
  • "The Challenge of Democracy" (1963)

See also

Notes

    1. 1 2 3 "Speed-up in Fishing Grants". Aberdeen Journal. 31 May 1946. Retrieved 1 February 2016 via British Newspaper Archive. (subscription required (help)).
    2. Ceplair 1987, p. 163.
    3. Ceplair 1987, p. 164.
    4. Macintyre 1972.
    5. Markwell 2006.
    6. The Liberal Party and the Popular Front, English Historical Review (2006)
    7. Michael Newman,John Strachey Manchester, UK ; New York : Manchester University Press ; New York, NY, USA ISBN 071902174X, (pp. 80-1).
    8. 1 2 Falconer 1998.
    9. David Widgery, The Left In Britain, Harmondsworth : Penguin, 1976. (p.135) ISBN 0140550992

    Sources

    Further reading

    Parliament of the United Kingdom
    Preceded by
    Evelyn Cecil
    Member of Parliament for Aston
    19291931
    Succeeded by
    Arthur Hope
    Preceded by
    Florence Horsbrugh
    Dingle Foot
    Member of Parliament for Dundee
    19451950
    With: Thomas Cook
    Constituency abolished
    New constituency Member of Parliament for Dundee West
    19501963
    Succeeded by
    Peter Doig
    Political offices
    Preceded by
    Hon. Quintin Hogg
    The Earl Beatty
    Under-Secretary of State for Air
    1945–1946
    Succeeded by
    Geoffrey de Freitas
    Preceded by
    Ben Smith
    Minister of Food
    1946–1950
    Succeeded by
    Maurice Webb
    Preceded by
    Manny Shinwell
    Secretary of State for War
    1950–1951
    Succeeded by
    Antony Head
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