Monday 17 October 2016

519 Labour Party Conference 1981


First  viewed  : 27  September  1981

I  wouldn't  normally  be  watching  a  party  conference  at  the  tender  age  of  16  but  this  one  was different. The  whole  family  were  in  the  room  to  watch  one  of  the  most  pivotal  moments  in  recent  political  history.

Ever  since  Labour's  defeat  to  Margaret  Thatcher in  1979  one  figure  had  dominated  debate within  the  party, our  friend  Anthony  Wedgewood  Benn. He  had  led  the  movement  to  change the  rules  under  which  the  party  leader  was  elected  in  1980. Jim  Callaghan  promptly  resigned to  allow  his  succcessor  - Dennis  Healey  he  hoped -  to  be  elected  before  the  changes  came into  effect. Having  been  heavily  defeated  in  the  leadership  contest  of  1976  Benn  decided  to bide  his  time  and  support  venerable  old  leftie  Michael  Foot  instead. Foot  won  and  Healey had to  settle  for  the deputy  leadership , a  very  poor  consolation  prize. Who  now  remembers   Edward  Short, Harold  Wilson's  deputy  from  1972 to  1976 ?

Nevertheless  once  the  new  rules  were  in  place  in  1981, Benn  made  the  momentous  decision to  challenge  Healey, ignoring  an  invitation  from  an  incandescent  Foot  to  directly  challenge him  instead.  That  set  the  stage  for  a  furious  internecine  contest  out  of  all  proportion  to  the paltry  prize  on  offer. Healey  had  the support  of  most  of  the  MPs  and  Benn  was  the  darling of  the  activists  so  both  men  went  after the  third  part  of  the  electoral  troika, the  unions'  block votes,  to  decide  the  winner  and  as  many  saw it  the  fate  of  the  party. A  third  candidate, the obnoxious  John  Silkin  , threw  his  hat  into  the  ring  but  was  never  a  serious  contender.

With  excitement  at  fever  pitch,  the  NEC  decided  to  start  the  Party  Conference  a  day  early  and  get  the  count  and  announcement  of  the  result  out  of  the  way  before  the Conference  proper  began. The  Newsnight  team   moved  in  to  cover  the  declaration  live  on  BBC2  that  Sunday  evening.

In  an  atmosphere  of   unbearable  tension  the  chairman  ground  his  way  through  the  figures  to  announce  the  narrowest  of  wins  - less  than  one  percentage  point - for  Healey. What had  made  the  difference  was  the  decision  of  a  number of  Labour  MPs   on  the  so-called  "soft"  Left  to  abstain , most  notably  everyone's  tip  as  heir  apparent, Neil  Kinnock.  Far  closer to  Benn  on  policy,  they  had  walked  to  the  brink  of  the  abyss   with  him  and   then  drawn  back.

Benn  was  finished  and  he  knew  it  immediately. You  can  see  it  in  that  extraordinary  grimace as  the  result  was  announced. He'd  taken  a  high  stakes gamble  and  lost. His  influence  in  the party  didn't  vanish  overnight  but  thereafter  he  was  always  fighting  a  rearguard  action. He suffered  a  further  blow  18  months  later  when boundary  changes  meant  he  wet  down  in Labour's  rout  at  the  1983  General  Election. Without  a   seat  in  Parliament  he  had  little influence  in  the  leadership  contest that  year  which  brought  his  assassin  Kinnock  to  power. He got  back  in  at  Chesterfield  6  months  later  ( I  played  a  very  minor  part  in  the  Liberals'  by-election  campaign )  but  a  front  bench  role  under  Kinnock  was  unthinkable. Instead  his championship  of  Arthur  Scargill  and  the  Militant  Tendency  simply  pushed  him  further  to  the margins. In  1988, dismayed  by   Kinnock's  rightward  drift  , he  launched  a  last  desperate  bid for the  leadership  against  the advice  of  all  his  former acolytes  and  was  thoroughly  trounced. He remained  an  impotent   backbencher  right  through  to  Tony  Blair's  first  term  before  retiring  in  2001  "to  spend  more  time  on  politics". This  witty  epigram  was  actually  suggested  by  his dying  wife  as  cover  for  his  real  wish  to  be  with  her  throughout  her  last  days.  After  her death,  the  great  bogeyman  became  a  sort  of  cuddly  uncle  figure , still   doggedly   preaching   his   romanticised   version  of  socialism  on  lecture  tours. It  became  hard  to  recall  how   terrifying   he'd  seemed  back  in  the  day. He  died  a  couple of  years  ago  aged  88.        


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