Barmy Aristocrats.

Britain has a long record of odd, slightly barmy, aristocrats being admired in the public eye, almost as mascots to show quite how silly the whole system is. It’s one of the things that makes PG Wodehouse still so revered as a writer, the Earl of Emsworth and such. The Second Viscount Stansgate fits neatly into this role:

Next year I shall be
campaigning for the election of Labour candidates, as I have in 17
general elections over the last 70 years. As a 10-year-old in
Westminster in 1935 I distributed party leaflets. In 1945, on leave
from the RAF and working in the same constituency, I saw a landslide
socialist victory that established the welfare state, the NHS, restored
trade union rights, built houses, created full employment, ratified the
UN charter and transformed our empire into a free Commonwealth.

Labour’s
years in the wilderness are routinely blamed on the left and the
unions. But the 1951 defeat was due to inflation caused by rearmament;
the IMF-enforced cuts in 1976 triggered the winter of discontent and
our 1979 defeat; while in 1981 the SDP split gravely weakened us.

One response

  1. A reasonable thing for the state to ask in return

    Bevan permitted one private house to be built for every every four local authority ones, and by the time the Labour government left office in 1951 only 18 per-cent of houses built since the war had been for private sale. In a further effort to conser…

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