John Strachey



 

 

 

 

 


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John Strachey was born in 1901. Educated at Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford, he became a Labour MP at the 1929 General Election. By 1931 Strachey resigned from the Labour Party. and joined the New Party, an organisation founded by Oswald Mosley, but in the 1931 General Election none of the New Party's candidates were elected.

In January 1932 Oswald Mosley met
Benito Mussolini in Italy. Mosley was impressed by Mussolini's achievements and when he returned to England he dispanded the New Party and replaced it with the British Union of Fascists (NUF). Strachey, a strong opponent of the emergence of right-wing totalitarian governments in Europe, did not join the NUF. Strachey wrote two important books during this period, The Menace of Fascism (1933) and The Theory and Practice of Socialism (1936).

In 1936 he joined with Victor Gollancz and Harold Laski, to form the Left Book Club. The main aim was to spread socialist ideas and to resist the rise of Fascism in Britain. Beginning with a membership of 10,000, numbers rose to 50,000 by 1939. The most important book published by the Left Book Club, was The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell in 1937.

Strachey served in the RAF during the Second World War and after the 1945 General Election returned to the House of Commons as a Labour MP. He served under Clement Attlee as Under-Secretary for Air (1945-46), Minister of Food (1946-50) and Secretary of State for War (1950-51). John Strachey died in 1963.

 


 

(1) In her book My Life With Nye, Jennie Lee explained her views on John Strachey.

John Strachey was a brilliant expositor and in his work for the Left Book Club made an imposing contribution to the political education of a great many people on both sides of the Atlantic. The trouble was that he had no compass on his ship. He was all over the place; he lived entirely in a world of abstract concepts. When his pro-Mosley association ended, he was as contemptuous as ever of the broadly based Labour movement, and found a new role for himself as a leading exponent of Communist theory and practice.

 

(2) John Strachey, Post D (1941)

Its basis certainly came from the torn, wounded, dismembered houses; from the gritty dust of dissolved brickwork, masonry and joinery. But there was more to it than that. For several hours there was an acrid overtone from the high explosive which the bomb itself had contained; a fiery constituent of the smell. Almost invariably, too, there was the mean little stink of domestic gas, seeping up from broken pipes and leads. But the whole of the smell was greater than the sum of its parts. It was the smell of violent death itself.

 

(3) Harold Wilson, Memoirs: 1916-1964 (1986)

There is a little-known Attlee story concerning John Strachey, at that time Minister of Food. A Cabinet rule in the manual
Questions of Procedure for Ministers forbids any minister from publishing written work, such as a book or press article, without the specific authority of the Prime Minister. This is not usually withheld for a literary or historic work, such as lan MacLeod's Neville Chamberlain. Strachey telephoned the Prime Minister - he should have gone to see him - "Prime Minister," he said, I see that under the rules I have to get your permission to publish a book. I have written a small collection of poems; there is nothing political or controversial in them. I take it you will agree to my publishing them."

Attlee would have none of it: "Better send them to me." A fortnight later, Strachey had not heard from him, which was unusual since Attlee normally completed his boxes every night and never deferred any correspondence. So Strachey phoned again: "Clem, I take it you've no objection to letting me go ahead and publish those poems I sent you." "Can't publish," said Attlee, and when Strachey asked for his reason: "Don't rhyme, don't scan."

 

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