Dudley Smith

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Sir Dudley Smith
Brentford & Chiswick
In office
8 October 1959 – 10 March 1966
Preceded byLaddie Lucas
Succeeded byMichael Barnes
Personal details
Born14 November 1926
Cambridge, England
Died14 December 2016
CitizenshipBritish
Political partyConservative
Children3
EducationChichester High School
OccupationJournalist, Politician

Sir Dudley Gordon Smith (14 November 1926 – 14 December 2016) was a British

Member of Parliament for a total of 35 years, latterly for Warwick and Leamington, which he represented for almost 30 years before he lost his seat in the Labour landslide in the 1997 general election
.

Early life and career

Smith was born on 14 November 1926 in

Sunday Express, going onto become Assistant News Editor under the Editor Sir John Junor.[4]

Political career

Eager to become a politician, Smith unsuccessfully fought Peckham in 1955, losing to incumbent Freda Corbet by 13,768.[3] He went onto serve on the Middlesex county council, becoming its youngest member. Smith served as the Conservative council's Chief Whip, alongside his parliamentary duties, until 1965.[3]

Member of Parliament for Brentford & Chiswick: 1959–1966

Dudley Smith was eventually successful in winning the Brentford & Chiswick by 2,919 votes in the 1959 general election.

Despite only being in the House for 4 years, in 1963 Smith played the leading role in opposing deportation of Anthony Enahoro to Nigeria where he would face charges of treason. The fact that he took on this challenge was largely due to Enahoro's arrest taking place in his constituency. For 2 months, he used all parliamentary means to persuade the Home Secretary, Henry Brooke, to not deport the Chief. Smith claimed that Enahoro could not be deported as he would potentially face execution. Despite this, his efforts failed, and Anthony Enahoro was deported and subsequently jailed for 15 years.[3]

Other areas that Smith took an interest in during his first parliament included sanitary concerns over the River Thames, and more radically local tax reform. Sixty Conservative MPs called for education to be funded directly by the Treasury instead of by local rates.[3]

As troubles grew for the then Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, Smith was part of a group of relatively young Tory MPs in early 1963 who called for a change in leadership.[3] Their preference was Edward Heath, the Lord Privy Seal who would subsequently become leader and prime minister, or Reginald Maudling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer over that of then favourite Rab Butler, or Iain Macleod.[5] Ultimately Lord Home was chosen as the successor.[6]

1963 also saw Smith became PPS to Robert Carr, Minister for Technical Cooperation, then as an opposition whip in 1964.[3] However, his climb in power was cut short by the Labour victory in the 1964 general election, and then Smith losing his seat in 1966 to Labour's Michael Barnes by 607 votes.[7]

Member of Parliament for Warwick & Leamington: 1968–1997

After a brief 2 years as director for public relations for the Beecham Group, Dudley Smith yet again found himself in the Commons as MP for Warwick & Leamington which he won with a majority of 21,922 in the 1968 Warwick and Leamington by-election.[4] It was triggered by the death of the former Attorney General, Sir John Hobson.[8]

As the opposition spokesman on employment and productivity, and with his former boss Robert Carr who was now Shadow Minister of Labour, Smith argued in 1969 that the Secretary of State for Employment and Productivity, Barbara Castle, should hold to her ‘In Place of Strife’ white paper which proposed to restrict the powers of the trade unions.[3] She did adhere to their advice. As a result of the Conservative Party returning to power as a result of the 1970 general election, the new prime minister, Edward Heath, put Smith under Carr as Under-Secretary for Employment.[2] He played a key role in the passage of the controversial Industrial Relations Bill.[3] 1974 saw him moved to the Ministry of Defence as Under-Secretary of State for the Army, a post he held for a mere nine weeks due to Heath's failed re-election bid in the February 1974 snap general election which saw the Prime Minister's rival, Harold Wilson, returned to power. It was not, however, an uneventful time at the MoD since Smith did visit the survivors of the 1974 IRA's M62 coach bombing in hospital.[3]

Dudley Smith never returned to government, spending his time as vice-chairman of the Select Committee on Race Relations and Immigration between 1978 and 1979.

European Democratic Group, from 1989 to 1993 as chairman of the WEU Defence Committee and finally as president of the WEU Assembly until 1997.[4]

Dudley Smith had been an early admirer of Mrs Thatcher, evidenced by his verbal support of the Public Bodies (Admission to Meetings) Act 1960, which she had drawn up and introduced her maiden speech. During the Thatcher years, Smith showed signs of being an ardent Thatcherite, indeed often being to the right of his prime minister on many social issues. Despite this, he demonstrated clear dissatisfaction with her leadership, which had been damaged by the resignation of Nigel Lawson and the Poll Tax, by using a football analogy in May 1990: “Do you sack the manager or don’t you? You may have a good manager but what if the team isn’t scoring goals?”.[4] This sentiment was felt by many Tory MPs which ultimately led to her downfall.

He was knighted in 1983.[3]

Smith found himself in controversy in 1995 when a Greek Cypriot claimed that a holiday home in Northern Cyprus, which Smith has leased for twelve years, had in fact been his property prior to the 1974 Turkish invasion. Smith denied the man had ever owned the property.[4]

Although previously Warwick and Leamington had been considered a safe seat, the 1997 general election saw Tony Blair’s New Labour win a landslide leading the 70-year-old Smith to losing his seat after over 35 years in parliament.[9]

Outside of parliament

Prior to the 1964 general election, Dudley Smith published a biography of Harold Wilson, the Leader of the Opposition, entitled Harold Wilson: A critical biography.[10] In 1981 he became the Chairman of the Wilderness Foundation UK.[11] In 1988, he became Deputy Lieutenant for Warwickshire. He was a Freeman of the City of London and was Chairman from 1985 to 1990 for the United and Cecil Club. He was a governor Mill Hill School for three decades.[3]

Over the latter half of his career, his business interests grew which led to criticism that he was just a voice for big drug companies in the House of Commons. In 1995 it was revealed that he was the third-highest earner for MPs with outside interests with contracts worth £55,000.[4]

Political ideology and views

Dudley Smith views could often be described as socially conservative, with him calling for tighter restrictions on pornography. He even went as far as to call for the Guardian to be prosecuted for quoting from D. H. Lawrence’s ‘explicit’ book, Lady Chatterley's Lover.[4] Despite this, he has generally promoted press freedom as a former journalist. He believed in hanging, thought life imprisonment should mean at least 25 years, was against anti-homosexual law reform and was for curbs on abortion.[4] He took a fairly sceptical view of mass immigration, calling for "a final halt to immigration as we know it” in 1979. He criticised the then Labour Home Secretary, Merlyn Rees, who he felt had “completely failed to grasp the problem” of illegal immigration.[3] Smith opposed allowing immigrant women who had British citizenship to bring in their partners.[4]

Smith's views on the European Union became increasingly Eurosceptic during the 1990s, especially after the Maastricht Treaty. In 1996, he warned that the EU was becoming too federalist, stating in an interview with Jane's Defence Weekly that “the $64,000 question is how we deal with the predatory attitude of the EU as it tries to take over defence…We’re not against the EU, but it doesn’t have to run everything”.[4] This view was to become Conservative Party policy for the next two decades with the view that Britain should be “in Europe but not run by Europe".[12]

Personal life and death

Smith was married twice, first in 1958 Anthea Higgins with whom he had three children, a son, Russell, and two daughters, Charlotte and Antonia. They divorced in 1973 following his wife's affair with her husband's fellow Conservative MP Tim Fortescue, member for Liverpool Garston, who she later married. In 1976, Smith married again, this time to a management consultant called Catherine Amos. However, this also ended in divorce in 2011.[3][4]

Dudley Smith died on the 14 December 2016 at the age of 90.[13]

References

  1. ^ Charles Roger Dod, Robert Phipps Dod (1997), Dod's parliamentary companion, vol. 165, p. 823
  2. ^ a b c "Sir Dudley Smith". UK Parliament. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  3. ^
    ISSN 0307-1235
    . Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  4. ^ . Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  5. ^ "From magic circle to one member one vote: a short history of Tory leadership contests". Conservative Home. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  6. ^ "History of Sir Alec Douglas-Home - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  7. ^ The Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1966. London: Times Books. 1966.
  8. ^ "Sir John Hobson, 55, Tory M.P. And Ex-Attorney General, Dies". The New York Times. 5 December 1967.
  9. ^ Austin, Tim (1997). The Times Guide to the House of Commons, May 1997. London: Times Books.
  10. ^ Smith, Dudley (1964). Harold Wilson: A critical biography. Great Britain: R. Hale.
  11. ^ Wood, Alan H. (1987). Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1987. 16 Golden Square, London: Times Books. p. 234.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  12. ^ "Conservatives: Europe". 17 February 2001. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  13. ^ "The ex-MPs who died in 2016 - part three". 4 January 2017. Retrieved 11 September 2019.

Further reading

  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1959
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1964
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1966
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1970
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, February 1974
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, October 1974
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1979
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1983
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1987
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1992
  • Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1997

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Percy Lucas
Member of Parliament for Brentford and Chiswick
19591966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Warwick and Leamington
19681997
Succeeded by