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John Smith (UK politician) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Smith (UK politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Right Honourable
 John Smith
John Smith (UK politician)

In office
18 July 1992 – 12 May 1994
Preceded by Neil Kinnock
Succeeded by Tony Blair

In office
12 June 1987 – 18 July 1992
Preceded by Roy Hattersley
Succeeded by Gordon Brown

In office
4 June 1978 – 3 May 1979
Preceded by Edmund Emanuel Dell
Succeeded by John Nott

Member of Parliament
for Monklands East
Lanarkshire North (1970-1983)
In office
18 June 1970 – 12 May 1994
Preceded by Margaret Herbison
Succeeded by Helen Liddell
Majority 11,747 (37.7%)

Born 13 September 1938(1938-09-13)
Ardrishaig, Argyll, Scotland
Died 12 May 1994 (aged 55)
St Bartholomew's Hospital, London, England
Political party Labour

John Smith QC (13 September 193812 May 1994) was a Scottish politician who served as leader of the Labour Party from July 1992 until his sudden death from a heart attack on 12 May 1994.

Contents

[edit] Early life

John Smith was born in Dalmally, the son of a Headmaster, and grew up in Ardrishaig in Argyll and Bute. He joined the Labour Party in 1956.

He attended Dunoon Grammar School (Dunoon, Cowal), lodging in the town with a landlady, going home only during the holidays, before enrolling at the University of Glasgow where he studied History from 1957 to 1960, and then Law, from 1960 to 1963. Having trained and indeed practised (for a year) as a solicitor, Smith was later elected to the Faculty of Advocates, and later to the United Kingdom Parliament.

While still at University, in 1962, Smith, with Donald Dewar, won The Observer Mace debating championship. After his death, this was renamed the John Smith Memorial Mace in his honour.

[edit] Member of Parliament

Smith first stood as a Labour parliamentary candidate at a by-election in 1961 in the East Fife constituency, and contested that seat again in the 1964 General Election. At the 1970 general election he was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for North Lanarkshire. He became a QC in 1983, the year that the constituency became Monklands East.

[edit] In government

In October 1974, Harold Wilson offered him the post of Solicitor General for Scotland. Smith turned it down. Instead, he was made a Under-Secretary of state at the Department of Energy. In December 1975 he was made a Minister of State. When James Callaghan became Prime Minister, Smith became a Minister of state at the Privy Council Office. He piloted the highly controversial devolution proposals for Scotland and Wales through the House of Commons. His handling of this impressed Callaghan, and in November 1978, when Edmund Dell retired, Smith was appointed as Secretary of State for Trade. He served in that post until the 1979 General Election, becoming the youngest member of the cabinet.

[edit] Shadow Cabinet

In the early 1980s Smith was Shadow Energy Secretary. He acted as Roy Hattersley's campaign manager for the party leadership election in October 1983 and after serving a year as Shadow Employment Secretary, was Shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry between 1984 and 1987.

[edit] Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer

John Smith was appointed Shadow Chancellor by Neil Kinnock in June 1987 after Party's General Election defeat. However, he suffered a heart attack whilst Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer on 9 October 1988 and was forced to spend three months away from Westminster to recover. On that occasion, he had complained of chest pains the night before, and had to be persuaded to cancel a flight to London so he could go to Hospital for a check up. He was examined at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary by an ECG. The doctor who examined him said "Whatever it is, we don't think it is your heart". Then Smith suffered a heart attack and collapsed whilst still in hospital, before leaving eleven days later and making a full recovery.

Smith made modifications to his lifestyle by going on a 1,000 calorie diet, cutting down on rich foods and fine wines, giving up smoking and taking up Munro bagging and by the time of his death he had succeeded in climbing 108 of the 277 Scottish Munros (mountains over 3,000 feet above sea level at the summit). His weight dropped from 15 stone 5 pounds (98 kg) at the time of the first heart attack, to 12 stone 10 pounds (81 kg) when he returned to Parliament on 23 January 1989.

Despite a quiet, modest manner, and his politically moderate stance, he was a witty, often scathing speaker. Smith was named as Parliamentarian of the year twice; the first time in November 1986 for his performances during the Westland controversy, during which Leon Brittan resigned and the second was in November 1989 for taking Nigel Lawson to task over the state of the economy.

[edit] Leader of the Opposition

Following the Labour's fourth successive defeat at the 1992 general election, Neil Kinnock resigned as leader and John Smith was elected Labour leader.

In September 1992, he made his maiden speech as party leader, about the Government's ERM debacle eight days earlier, saying that John Major was "The devalued Prime Minister of a devalued Government".

In a June 1993 debate, Smith again savaged the Conservative Government, saying that under John Major's premiership, "The man with the non-midas touch is in charge. It is no wonder that we live in a country where the Grand National does not start and hotels fall into the sea". During the same debate, Smith referred to a recent Government defeat in the Newbury by-election, a poor showing in the local elections, and a subsequent Cabinet reshuffle by saying that "If we were to offer that tale of events to the BBC light entertainment department as a script for a programme, I think that the producers of Yes Minister would have turned it down as hopelessly over the top. It might have even been too much for "Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em"".

Despite his despatch box successes, (Smith was always more effective in the House of Commons than on Platforms), Tony Blair and Gordon Brown were, under Smith's leadership, restless and anxious in private that the party had adopted a "one more heave" approach and was overly cautious in tackling the legacy of "tax and spend". During his brief time as leader of the Labour Party he abolished the trade union block vote at Labour party conferences, and replaced it with "one member one vote" at the 1993 party conference and committed a future Labour government to establishing a Scottish Parliament, a policy which was followed through by his successors (most notably his close friend Donald Dewar) after his death. It was also during his time as leader, that the Labour party gained a significant lead in the polls over the Conservatives.

[edit] Death

On the evening of 11 May 1994, John Smith made a speech at a fundraising dinner at Park Lane Hotel with around 500 people present, saying famously "The opportunity to serve our country - that is all we ask". The following morning, at 8.05am, whilst in his Barbican flat, Smith suffered a massive heart attack. His wife phoned an ambulance and he was rushed to Saint Bartholomew's Hospital where he died at 9.15am on 12 May 1994 having never regained consciousness. Only two weeks before his death, on 28 April, Smith had visited the same accident and emergency department to campaign against its proposed closure. The very doctor who served as his tour guide Mike Besser, two weeks later tried, desperately and unsuccessfully, to save Smith's life. His death came at a turbulent time politically, and it was entirely possible that he may otherwise have become Prime Minister. In response to his death, John Major made a fitting tribute in the House of Commons to Smith, culminating in the now well known line, that John Smith "sometimes drank tea and sometimes he didn't".[1]

On 20 May, after a funeral in Cluny Parish Church, Edinburgh attended by 900 people and after which people lined the streets, John Smith was buried on the island of Iona, in a private family funeral. On 14 July his memorial service was attended in Westminster Abbey by over 2,000 people.

Following Smith's death, the Labour Party renamed its party headquarters in Walworth Road John Smith House in his memory.

In the years following his death, John Smith has become iconic for Labour's left-wing because of his perceived traditionalist approach and the contrasts between his leadership and those of Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair.

John Smith's biographer, Mark Stuart, claimed that Smith could have won Labour a Parliamentary victory in 1997 on a similar scale to that achieved by Tony Blair due to the combination of the Black Wednesday debacle and ongoing Conservative divisions over Europe between 1992 and 1997; however, Stuart argues that the lack of a Blair effect would have meant that the Conservative Party would have held slightly over 200 seats in the House of Commons, leaving the Conservatives in a position closer to Labour in 1983 than to the actual Conservative result in 1997.[2]

[edit] Personal life

John Smith married Elizabeth Bennett in July 1967. They had three daughters. Elizabeth Smith was created Baroness Smith of Gilmorehill in 1995. His daughter, Sarah Smith, is Washington correspondent for Channel 4 news.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] References

  1. ^ YouTube - Labour leader John Smith Dies, May 1994
  2. ^ Stuart, M. in Brack, D. and I. Dale (editors) (2003)Prime Minister Portillo and other things that never happened, Politico's Publishing
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Margaret Herbison
Member of Parliament for Lanarkshire North
19701983
Succeeded by
(constituency abolished)
Preceded by
(constituency created)
Member of Parliament for Monklands East
19831994
Succeeded by
Helen Liddell
Political offices
Preceded by
Edmund Emanuel Dell
Secretary of State for Trade
1978–1979
Succeeded by
John Nott
Preceded by
Roy Hattersley
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
1987–1992
Succeeded by
Gordon Brown
Preceded by
Neil Kinnock
Leader of the British Labour Party
1992–1994
Succeeded by
Margaret Beckett
Leader of the Opposition
1992–1994


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