Thursday, March 7, 2013

JOHN SMITH AND HIS CIRCLE: Scots in UK Politics (3)





John Smith is one of the many “might-have-beens” in British politics. Recognised as outstandingly able, he succeeded Neil Kinnock as Leader of the Labour Party in 1992, began a reform programme only to die prematurely in 1994. His Glasgow-oriented circle included his close friend Donald Dewar and his legal guru Derry Irvine, both of whom achieved substantial distinction in their own right.

John Smith 1938-94

John Smith was the son of a headmaster and was brought up in Ardrishaig, a loch-side Highland village to the south of Lochgilphead in Argyll and Bute. He went to Dunoon High School (the alma mater of Lord Mackay and George Robertson) and entered Glasgow University in 1956 to read History then moving on to Law graduating in 1962. He was a keen debater, winning the Observer Mace competition in 1962: student debating saw him befriend Donald Dewar and Derry Irvine. He practiced as a solicitor for a year but soon after joined the Scottish Bar; he eventually became a QC in 1983.

Smith had joined the Labour Party in 1956 and his rise in its ranks was meteoric. A moderate Gaitskellite, he contested two elections in the 1960s and entered Parliament representing North Lanark (later East Monklands) in 1970. Against the Party line he supported the Roy Jenkins group in voting in favour of EEC entry in 1971. Not wanting to be side-lined as a Scottish law officer, he declined the Solicitor-Generalship of Scotland offered by Wilson in 1974 instead becoming a Minister in the Department of Energy.

A more substantive office was as Minister of State in the Privy Council Office under Michael Foot in Callaghan’s government and there he piloted the controversial Devolution bills for Scotland and Wales through Parliament. His performance impressed and in 1978 he joined the cabinet as Secretary of State for Trade until Labour lost office in 1979.

In Opposition Smith took on the Shadow Energy and then Trade portfolios. At Trade he shone when Thatcher’s government in 1986 got tied in knots over helicopter orders at Westland and Smith gave offensively over-confident Leon Brittan a particularly hard time. Smith had a deceptively genial and moderate air but his tongue was scathing, as was that of his colleagues Donald Dewar and Robin Cook. Smith was not a memorable platform orator but his restrained, probing style suited the House of Commons and that was where his triumphs most resounded.

When Labour lost the 1987 election Neil Kinnock promoted Smith to Shadow Chancellor. A year later Smith ominously had a serious heart attack and was incapacitated for 3 months. He gave up rich food, cut down his alcohol, went on a diet losing more than 2 stones. He took to hill-walking in his beloved Highlands and scaled 108 of the 277 Scottish “Munros” (mountains over 3,000 feet).

As Shadow Chancellor he had a major parliamentary success in 1989 twitting his opposite number Nigel Lawson over his disagreements with Mrs Thatcher’s economic adviser Alan Walters. Smith sang a parody of the soap signature tune “Neighbours” to the amusement of the House. Both Lawson and Walters soon resigned.

After Thatcher resigned in 1990, the fortunes of the Tories revived initially under the calming leadership of John Major. Smith may have damaged Labour’s prospects by saying Labour would raise the top rate of income tax to 50%. In the event, the Tory majority of 102 was reduced to a still workable 21 at the 1992 election. Kinnock resigned and John Smith became Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition.

Donald Dewar
Derry Irvine



After the ERM debacle, he characterised Major and Lamont as “the Laurel and Hardy of British politics” and he was derisive of Major’s policies later invoking the TV comedy “Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em”. As Party Leader he abolished the trade union bloc vote and committed Labour to the introduction of a Scottish Parliament. Sadly, to the shock of the nation, Smith suddenly died in London of a heart attack in May 1994, at the age of 55. He was buried on the sacred island of Iona, his close friend Donald Dewar being a pall-bearer and the only politician invited. Smith died before his full potential could be realised but his moderate views and rational instincts did much to make Labour electable, Tony Blair reaping where John Smith had sown

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Donald Dewar (1937-2000) devoted the greater part of his career to the concerns of his native Scotland. Born in Glasgow, he was the only child of a distinguished consultant dermatologist. Secondary education at Glasgow Academy was followed by Glasgow University with an MA in History and an LLB in Law by 1962. He was very active in student debating and Labour politics and his close friendship with John Smith dates from this time. He unsuccessfully contested Aberdeen South against long-established Lady Tweedsmuir in 1964 winning the seat in 1966. He duly became PPS to Labour theoretician Anthony Crosland, but their chemistry did not gel.

I slightly knew Dewar at this time, helping his campaigns. He was a conscientious intellectual, a fine speaker and moderate in his views. In private he was an entertaining conversationalist, rather untidy sartorially and happily married to his charming wife Alison. If he had a fault it was that of many eloquent speakers: he found the sharp quip or telling phrase irresistible. I remember him mortally offending his Labour loyalist agent, who had fought in Spain, asking, all innocence “On what side did you fight?”  I recall making a snobbish remark about a Glasgow variety theatre audience and he rightly took me to task – I came under withering fire.

He lost his Aberdeen seat in 1970 and spent 8 years as a solicitor to a children’s panel in Glasgow. This was a difficult time for him as his wife left him in 1970 for Derry Irvine, taking their two children. It took 25 years and pressure from Tony Blair for him to exchange a civil word with cabinet colleague Irvine. He lived a solitary bachelor existence, steeped in his history books, becoming an authority on 18th century Jacobites and on the Disruption, the schism in the Church of Scotland in 1843 leading to the formation of the Free Church. He returned to Westminster at a 1978 by-election winning the Glasgow seat Garscadden (later Anniesland) against the resurgent SNP.

During Labour’s long wilderness years he was shadow Scottish Secretary for 9 years as the Tories lost seats in Scotland to Labour and the SNP. He championed Devolution, realising that Labour would otherwise be out-flanked by the SNP, but was a firm opponent of independence. He fought off hard-Left de-selection challenges.

When Labour lost the general election in 1992, his friend John Smith thought Dewar needed a change and gave him the Shadow Social Security brief and later he became an effective Chief Whip. Yet Scotland was his love and he was delighted to be appointed Scottish Secretary by Tony Blair when Labour swept to power in 1997.

He threw himself into the Scottish devolution legislation and piloted it through Parliament. He was appointed First Minister of Scotland in 1999 and was hugely proud when the Queen opened the first Scottish Parliament since 1707. His term in office was beset by local problem issues and complaints about the expense of the new Parliament building, but Dewar dealt with these matters in his usual competent and transparently honest manner. He had built up a deep residue of public respect.

Hard work took its toll and Dewar had heart problems. Returning to the fray too soon he had a fall followed by a fatal brain haemorrhage in October 2000. He was 63. His funeral at Glasgow Cathedral attended by Prince Charles and the entire cabinet was almost a state occasion. Some had already called him the “Father of the Nation” but Dewar himself scoffed at such hyperbole; in a rare honour his statue was erected in Glasgow’s Buchanan Street.

Donald Dewar's statue in Glasgow

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Derry Irvine (1940- ) is rather more elusive. He is the son of a roofer from Inverness and his mother was a waitress. Like his erstwhile friends John Smith and Donald Dewar, he was a keen debater at Glasgow University where he read Scots Law. He really blossomed when he went to Christ’s College, Cambridge to study English Law winning a starred degree. After lecturing at LSE, he entered the English Bar in Maurice Finer’s chambers and in 1981 set up his own chambers with barristers specialising in employment and commercial law. One of his pupil barristers was Cherie Booth (decidedly a legal star) and later Tony Blair (decidedly not a legal star): the pair were to marry in 1980.

Irvine became a legal adviser to the Labour Party, guiding it through the struggle with hard-Left Militant and changes in its relations with the unions. He became shadow Lord Chancellor, much favoured by John Smith and Tony Blair.

His tenure of the Lord Chancellorship between 1997and 2002 was notable for his introduction of the European Convention on Human Rights, the cause of many subsequent problems, and for freedom of information legislation.

Irvine had become rich from his practice at the Bar and became known for his rather effective rumbustious and haughty manner. He loved to eat and drink well and his wife Alison avidly collected paintings. There was a sharp controversy when Irvine spent £650,000 of public money redecorating the Lord Chancellor’s rooms at Westminster - £59,000 on the Pugin wallpaper alone!

Irvine's notorious Pugin wallpaper

He retired in 2003 and despite a 4-year estrangement, went back to Alison in 2009. He maintained a grand house in Smith Square and a loch-side country house in Argyll. For all his alleged pomposity, Irvine was a powerful influence on the first Blair ministry: he had come a long way from the rowdy debating sessions with Smith and Dewar at Glasgow University.

The office of Lord Chancellor has now been subsumed by the new Justice Secretary and the old conflicts of interest between judicial and political matters resolved. It is ironic that the last three holders of the ancient office in its pomp (the office of Cardinal Wolsey, Thomas More, Thurlow, Eldon, Brougham, Halsbury, Birkenhead et al) should have been Scotsmen - Lord Mackay, Lord Irvine and Lord Falconer.


SMD
7.03.13

Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2013
















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