John St Loe Strachey

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For other individuals with the same name, please see Strachey

The Rt. Hon. (Evelyn) John (St Loe) Strachey (21 October 190115 July 1963) was a British Labour politician and writer.

The son of John St. Loe Strachey, editor of The Spectator, he was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford. At Oxford, he was editor, with Robert Boothby, of the Oxford Fortnightly Review. He later joined staff of the Spectator.

He joined the Labour party in 1923 and was editor of the Socialist Review and the Miner.

He unsuccessfully contested the Aston Manor Division of Birmingham in 1924 and was elected as Member of Parliament for Aston from 1929-31 and was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Oswald Mosley. He resigned from the Parliamentary Labour Party in 1931 and supported the Communist Party, contesting the Aston constituency as an independent. He assisted Victor Gollancz in founding the Left Book Club in 1936.

He broke with the Communists in 1940 and joined the Royal Air Force. He transferred to the Air Ministry and made a reputation as an air commentator for the BBC. He was adopted as Labour Candidate for Dundee in 1943 and was again elected to Parliament as Labour MP for Dundee from 1945-50. He served as Under-Secretary of State for Air in 1945, and is widely credited as having been responsible for the ignoble gesture of 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. As Minister of Food in 1946; he was involved in the abortive Tanganyika groundnut scheme in 1949. 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 1963. He was Secretary of State for War, 1950-51. He supported Hugh Gaitskell as successor to Clement Attlee in 1955.

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

[edit] Publications

  • Revolution by Reason (1925)
  • Workers' Control in the Russian Mining Industry, (1928)
  • The Coming Struggle for Power (1932)
  • 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)
  • Contemporary Capitalism (1956)
  • The End of Empire (1959)
  • On the Prevention of War (1962)
  • The Strangled Cry (1962)

[edit] References

Political offices
Preceded by
Ben Smith
Minister of Food
1946–1950
Succeeded by
Maurice Webb
Preceded by
Emanuel Shinwell
War Secretary
1950–1951
Succeeded by
Anthony Head