Never a Yes Man: The Life and Politics of an Adopted LiverpudlianVerso, 1991 - 251 pages Eric Heffer was probably one of the most influential figures on the left of the British Labour Party. He was Member of Parliament for Walton Liverpool and in 1991 he received the Freedom of the City of Liverpool. His autobiography provides an insider's view of the politics and personalities of nearly three decades of Labour politics. A born rebel, Heffer was kicked out of the Communist party for descent, sacked from Harold Wilson's government and was a thorn in the side of Kinnock's leadership. His book contains an attack on the rightward drift of the Labour Party's present leadership, which remains crucial to the debate surrounding the future direction of the Labour Party. |
From inside the book
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Page 29
... wanted a government of national unity which included ' prog- ressive Tories like Churchill and Eden ' . I thought he was joking . He asked whether I had read the recent policy statements . When I did read them I profoundly disagreed ...
... wanted a government of national unity which included ' prog- ressive Tories like Churchill and Eden ' . I thought he was joking . He asked whether I had read the recent policy statements . When I did read them I profoundly disagreed ...
Page 59
... wanted me out of the CP when I was opposing the CP leadership , and now he wanted me out of the Labour Party for opposing the Labour leadership . I did not get on with Les Cannon or his travelling companion Frank Chapple . Although they ...
... wanted me out of the CP when I was opposing the CP leadership , and now he wanted me out of the Labour Party for opposing the Labour leadership . I did not get on with Les Cannon or his travelling companion Frank Chapple . Although they ...
Page 150
... wanted what was best for working people . One of the first things he did was to make sure that every civil servant of importance had a copy of the manifesto . There were times when I informed Sir Anthony Part and others in no uncertain ...
... wanted what was best for working people . One of the first things he did was to make sure that every civil servant of importance had a copy of the manifesto . There were times when I informed Sir Anthony Part and others in no uncertain ...
Contents
On the March | 87 |
Joining the Council | 98 |
Adopted Liverpudlian | 108 |
Copyright | |
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accepted agreed argued asked attack became believe Bessie Braddock Bevan Bill Braddock Britain British called campaign cent chairman Committee Commons Communist councillors debate decided defeat delegate democracy democratic Denis Healey despite dockers Doris election Eric Eric Heffer Europe felt fight friends Harold Wilson Heffer Hertford House Ian Mikardo industry issue Jack Jim Callaghan Labour government Labour MPs Labour Party leader leadership letter Liverpool London manifesto meeting ment Merseyside Michael Foot Mikardo Militant miners ministers movement Neil Kinnock never opposed organized Parliament Parliamentary Party Conference Party members political proposals right-wing seamen seats Secretary Shadow Cabinet ship socialism socialist Soviet Union speech spoke Stalin stewards strike struggle T&GWU Thatcher thought told Tony Benn took Tories trade union Trades Council Tribune group unemployment unity vote Walton wanted Welwyn workers working-class wrote