Ten
years ago on this month, 5 January 2003, one of my most hated leftist
politician, Roy Jenkins, aged 82, died after suffering a heart attack at his home at
East Hendred,
in Oxfordshire.
Roy Harris Jenkins, Baron Jenkins of Hillhead, OM, PC (11 November 1920 – 5 January
2003) was a British politician.
The
son of a Welsh coal miner who later became a union official and Labour MP, Roy
Jenkins served with distinction in World War II. Elected to Parliament as a Labour
member in 1948, he served in several major posts in Harold Wilson's First
Government. As Home Secretary from 1965–1967, he sought to build what he
described as "a civilized society", with measures such as the
effective abolition in Britain of capital punishment and theatre censorship,
the decriminalisation of homosexuality, relaxing of divorce law, suspension of birching
and the legalisation of abortion. As Chancellor of the Exchequer from
1967–1970, he pursued a tight fiscal policy later praised by Margaret Thatcher.
On 8 July 1970, he was elected Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, but resigned
in 1972 because he supported entry to the Common Market, while the party
opposed it.
When
Wilson re-entered government in 1974 Jenkins returned to the Home Office, but,
increasingly disenchanted by the swing to the left of the Labour Party, he
chose to leave British politics in 1976 and was appointed President of the
European Commission in 1977, serving until 1981: he was the first and to date
only British holder of this office. In 1981, dismayed with the Labour Party's
continuing leftward drift, he was one of the "Gang of Four" - Labour
moderates who formed the Social Democratic Party (SDP). In 1982 he won a famous
by-election in a Conservative seat and returned to parliament; but after
disappointment with the performance of the SDP in the 1983 election he resigned
as SDP leader.
In
1987, Jenkins was elected to succeed Harold Macmillan as Chancellor of the
University of Oxford following the latter's death; he held this position until
his death. A few months after becoming Chancellor, Jenkins was defeated in his Hillhead
constituency by then-Labour politician George Galloway. He accepted a life
peerage and sat as a Liberal Democrat. In the late 1990s, he was an adviser to Tony
Blair and chaired the Jenkins Commission on electoral reform. Roy Jenkins died
in 2003, aged 82.
In
addition to his political career, he was also a noted historian and writer.
To find out more, click on my previous blog post.
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