Synopses & Reviews
David Powell's fascinating biography traces Tony Benn's extraordinary fifty-year political career from the day he first entered the House of Commons in 1950. Benn has always been a controversial figure. Nonetheless many of the policies he championed, including some for which he was widely belittled, have since entered the statute books. Indeed, if history is a chronicle of ironies, there can have been little more ironic than when, following Benn's valedictory speech in the Commons in 2001, a Tory backbencher commended him to fellow MPs as Britain's ‘greatest living Parliamentarian.'>
Synopsis
David Powell s fascinating biography traces Tony Benn s extraordinary fifty-year political career from the day he first entered the House of Commons in 1950. Benn has always been a controversial figure. Nonetheless many of the policies he championed, including some for which he was widely belittled, have since entered the statute books. Indeed, if history is a chronicle of ironies, there can have been little more ironic than when, following Benn s valedictory speech in the Commons in 2001, a Tory backbencher commended him to fellow MPs as Britain s greatest living Parliamentarian. >
Table of Contents
o Prefaceo Common Sense o In Place of Strife o The Great Schism o New Labour: 'A little bit of Leninism' o The Enemy Within o A Special Relationship: The Last Colony o Interview