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Former Tory Prime Minister Edward Heath dies
By Ann Talbot
25 July 2005
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The death of former British Prime Minister Edward Heath at
89 years of age on July 17 has been the occasion for a wave of
nostalgia on the part of the media. He held the premiership from
1970 to 1974. After this brief spell in Number 10, he spent the
rest of his long political career denouncing his successor Margaret
Thatcher from the back benches.
Heath is now seen in a more favourable light than at the height
of his career. By comparison with Thatcher and Labour Prime Minister
Tony Blair, Heath has come to be seen as a better man and a more
principled politician. His fall from power in 1974 is regarded
as unlucky, even tragic. According to this view, it was a fate
he did not deserve. The conflicts of the time have been forgotten
as this embittered old man has been apotheosised into an elder
statesman.
Labours Tony Benn recalled that at the time of the Iraq
invasion, Heath rang him and demanded to know, How are we
going to get rid of Blair? They had earlier flown out to
Iraq in an attempt to mediate.
Benn and Heath feared that Britain was being drawn into a war
that threatened the countrys national interests by making
it a satellite of the United States. It was, they knew, a war
that would seriously destabilise international relations and put
an intolerable strain on domestic political relations.
In both respects they have been proved right. Heath and Benn
represent a body of historic experience in the British political
class. Between them, they have more political experience than
Blair and all his cabinet. Individually, they are more considerable
politicians than Blair. What at another time would have been a
decisive intervention by two elder statesmen became instead a
futile expedition by two elderly parliamentarians who were made
to look ridiculous.
Their failure to avert the war or to keep the UK out of it
was not due to their personal weaknesses, but reflects the profound
decline that has taken place in UK political life. Their words
of warning had no impact on Blair, who lacked the depth of political
vision to understand what he was being told. He could not see
the dangers that they understood very well.
By the time Heath could play the role of an elder British statesman,
there was no stage left on which to play it. The entire framework
of national politics in which he had been trained and worked had
been fundamentally undermined. His warnings found no resonance
in a younger generation of politicians for whom the social relations
that had formed Heath and the political considerations that flowed
from them were like relics of a former age.
This is not to say that Heath was simply a victim of changing
times. He played his part in making those changes whose results
he came to deplore. It is easy to forget that his premiership
was one of the stormiest periods in recent British history. No
less than five states of emergency were declared. Unarmed civilians
were shot down in Northern Ireland. Workers leaders were
imprisoned. Industry was reduced to a three-day week. Power cuts
became routine. Unemployment rose to what were then unprecedented
levels. Class conflict reached such a peak that Britain was on
the brink of a revolutionary situation by the time Heath was brought
down by a massive strike wave in 1974. It was only the return
of a Labour government that averted the breakdown of parliamentary
rule.
Heaths record is inevitably coloured by the fact that
while he failed to defeat the miners in 1974, Thatcher succeeded
some 10 years later. But Thatchers victory was a decade
in the preparation and depended on the lessons that the ruling
class learnt from this earlier experience. Nor was Thatcher dealing
with the same kind of opponent. By the time she came to confront
the miners, the Trades Union Congress had reneged on any pretence
of defending their members interests or any commitment to
solidarity between one section of the working class and another.
Thatcher had the luxury of dealing with the miners in isolation.
Heath had to confront a succession of strikes by a mobilised and
militant working class whose leaders were not able to isolate
the miners as they did in 1985.
This is not to say that they did not try. Heaths biographer
John Campbell points out that when he came to power, Heath had
every expectation that the trade union leaders would back his
bill to curb the right to strike. They had assured him in private
that they welcomed the Industrial Relations Bill, although they
could not say so in public. Ray Gunther, a Labour minister of
labour, was favourable and offered Heath private advice on the
anti-union measures. Labour had attempted to introduce similar
legislation in the previous administration.
At every point, the trade union leaders showed themselves willing
to compromise, but they could not contain the anger of the working
class. In January 1972, 120,000 union members marched through
London against the Industrial Relations Act in the largest union
demonstration in British history. A series of one-day strikes
followed, and unions refused to register under the Act despite
legal penalties.
Ultimately, it was the Labour Party leaders who were to clear
the way for a decisive defeat of one of the most militant sections
of the working class.
Heath came to power on a right-wing agenda that had been defined
at a strategy meeting at Selsdon Park in January 1970. It was
Labour leader Harold Wilson who coined the phrase Selsdon
Man for the new Tory aspirant to the post of prime minister
and his programme. The Economist noted the change and commented
that the Tories now looked like the next government all
rightbut not a visibly compassionate one.
While Selsdon has been read as a decisive break with the past
and a move towards the monetarist policies that were later to
be associated with Thatcher, the shift was not as complete as
it seemed. In many respects, Heath valued the post-war politics
of consensus.
When unemployment rose to 1 million, a figure unknown since
the Great Depression, Heath and his ministers panicked. Political
experience warned them that unemployment on that scale threatened
social upheavals, the destabilisation of parliamentary rule and
even revolution. By 1972, Heath had returned to Keynesian measures
in an attempt to boost the economy and avert an open class conflict.
For Thatcher, who was increasingly drawn to the monetarist doctrines
preached by Enoch Powell, this was treachery.
The other great issue that came to distinguish Thatcher and
Heath was Europe. It was the Tory Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
who first attempted to take Britain into the European Community
(EC). He chose Heath as his emissary and it was a policy to which
Heath remained committed for the rest of his career. He finally
succeeded in winning entry in 1973.
Heath was unusual among UK prime ministers in his enthusiasm
for Europe and his indifference to Britains special
relationship with the US. But ever since Macmillan, successive
governments had pursued the goal of membership in the European
Community. It became an economic necessity as Europe recovered
from the devastation of the war and became a major market for
British industry.
Without its empire, Britain could not maintain a positive balance
of trade and needed Europe as it had never done in the past. The
decision not to join immediately after the war proved to be costly,
as Britain was forced to accept extremely unfavourable terms that
continue to poison the relationship between Britain and France
today.
To the extent that EC membership threw Britain an economic
lifeline, it was at the cost of hundreds of thousands of jobs,
as industry was restructured to compete in Europe. Cheap labour
and relaxed employment laws gave the UK a temporary advantage
in relation to its European competitors.
The economic recovery of which Thatcher boasted and Blair now
enjoys was brought about by the inward investment of US and Asian
companies that saw Britain as the ideal assembly platform for
the European market.
Thatcher always characterised herself in contrast to Heath.
In fact, they were very similar in social origin and political
orientation. Both came from a lower-middle-class background and
won their way to Oxford from grammar schools, rather than the
public schools that normally trained the political elite. They
represented a distinct change in the post-war period, as the Tory
party attempted to broaden its social base and promote the image
of a modern, capitalist party, rather than one rooted in the shires.
Heath was the first Tory leader to be elected as party head,
rather than emerge from a mysterious process of selection by the
circle of aristocratic grandees. He was the first Tory leader
since Churchill who had no independent means, and the first Tory
prime minister since Bonar Law in 1922 without his own country
house.
The rapid promotion of this group of new Tories within the
party reflected dissatisfaction with the retreat that post-war
Conservative governments had been forced to make from empire and
in relation to the working class at home, where they had been
obliged to accept the creation of the welfare state and the nationalisation
of large sections of industry. Abroad, they had lost India, had
been humiliated at Suez, and had been obliged to offer Africa
independence. By developing a new leadership that had no affiliations
with the old aristocracy, it was hoped that the party could go
on the offensive.
If Heath failed in this agenda, it was not for want of trying.
In retrospect, much has been made of his personal shortcomingshis
refusal to marry, his awkwardness in public, his coldness and
his rudenessbut his political failure cannot be attributed
to these personal characteristics. Many politicians, Thatcher
among them, have lacked charm. But Thatcher succeeded because
she and her supporters had learned the lessons of Heaths
failure.
Blair can rightly be seen as the heir of this warring couple.
No previous Labour leader has ever enjoyed such freedom of action.
He was able to transform the Labour Party and launch his government
on a right-wing trajectory more easily due to the protracted degeneration
of the labour movement, as the bureaucratic clique at its head
sought to accommodate itself more directly to the economic imperatives
heralded by Thatcher.
An appraisal of Edward Heath, therefore, necessarily takes
on the form of an obituary of a political and social formation,
although, strangely, not one to which he belonged. While the Tories
learned the lessons of Heaths failure, the working class
did not.
The period of Heaths government was the high point of
the traditional labour movement and the bringing down of that
government represented its greatest success. But it was its last
hurrah. The year 1974 marked the end not only of Heaths
political hopes, but, more significantly, the end of a protracted
historical period in which the trade unions and the Labour Party
had seemed to represent the immediate, practical interests of
the working class.
In 1974, the British working class brought down a government.
The situation had the character of a revolutionary crisis. It
was one, however, whose revolutionary potential was better understood
by the ruling elite than by the working class.
For four days Heath hung on in Number 10, trying to construct
a coalition while the threat that military force might be used
was very real. The crisis was averted when, with the blessings
of the trade union leaders, Labour was returned to power.
After another five years in which Labour drove wages down and
unemployment rose to levels that Heath would have thought politically
unsustainable, the working class was disillusioned and divided.
Better-off sections of workers were attracted by Thatchers
call to popular capitalism. The unions were unwilling to risk
finding themselves at the head of another movement like that in
1974 and refused to oppose Thatchers anti-union legislation
or countenance solidarity action. The Labour government had weakened
the sense of class solidarity that for Heath had been an insurmountable
barrier to the success of his programme.
No frontal assault by a Tory government could have done what
Labour had achieved from within the workers movement by
treachery and betrayal.
See Also:
A question and reply on the
1974 Heath government in Britain
[7 January 2005]
Former British Prime
Minister Edward Heath gives evidence to Bloody Sunday tribunal
[18 February 2003]
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