This book contains all the essential facts about the eminent British leftwing politician - Michael Foot (1913-2010). Kenneth Morgan (Baron), is an Oxford academic who writes extensively on the subject of British politics and Welsh history. A member of the Labour Party, he was asked by Michael Foot to compile this authorised biography of his life. Morgan sets a stunning pace from start to finish, and yet still manages to present the chronological facts of Foot's life without confusion or lose of clarity. The text engages the reader to such an extent, that it is often difficult to put the book down.
The paperback (2008) edition contains 568 numbered pages and is separated into 12 chapters that follow a Preface and a List of Illustrations. There is a concluding chapter (distinct from the rest) entitled 'Envoi: Toujours L'audace' - which translates from the French as 'Send Always The Audacitious', and serves as a retrospective and summation to Michael Foot's long life and political career. It is the entire book encapsulated in a few pages. Morgan does well to trace Foot's life from Plymouth to Parliament, and in the process makes clear the complex strands that defined Michael's political ideas. Morgan describes Foot as an 'undoctrinaire ethical socialist', who disliked the Soviet Union (despite UK rightwing media speculation that Foot was infact 'Agent Boot', working for the KGB!), who, whilst preferring a 'pacifist' stance, nevertheless backed the war against Hitler, and the later war against North Korea and China, and who, whilst being opposed to the death penalty, supported the execution of Charles I and was an admirer of Cromwell. Morgan does not hid the contradictions in Foot's life, and neither did Michael Foot. This man of the left, was part of the great 1945-51 Labour Government of the UK that created the National Health Service, the Welfare State and Universal Education, vestiges of which still survive today, some 60 years on, despite ideological attacks from the Tory rightwing.
Michael Foot was the Leader of the House in the late 1970's, and Labour Leader between 1980 and 1983, delivery some of the best speeches Parliament has ever heard. Remarkably, he contested 20 general elections between 1929 and 2005 - and started his political life as a Liberal and admirer of Lloyd George. Following time spent in Liverpool however, Foot became aware of the plight of the urban working class of Britain, and this changed him into a socialist of broad definition. He always worked for what he considered the greater good, or that policy which relieved the greater suffering in society. He supported the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), and was an early opponent of the European Economic Community (EEC). He was a friend and supporter of Sir Stafford Cripps' Socialist League - a broad leftwing organisation opposing fascism in the 1930's, and remarkably, he was also a personal friend of the rightwing media mogul, the Canadian Lord Beaverbrook - who owned the Express Newspaper group. Indeed, for a time, Michael Foot was employed by the Evening Standard as a writer, before becoming the editor of the leftwing Tribune. He retired from the House of Commons in 1992, but remained politically active until his death.
As a republican, he refused various Royal and Governmental titles, and was a member of the humanist and secular societies in the UK. It is remarkable to think that the Toryite Labour leader - Tony Blair - claims to have been inspired by the work of Foot, and that Michael Foot was apparently close friends with the openly racist Enoch Powell. As with any life story that is not contrived, apparent contradictions abound in the biography of Michael Foot - nothing is hidden or subject to New Labour 'spin'. In the latter years, Foot wrote a biography of HG Wells, whom he knew personally, and was friends with the film producer Stanley Kubrick and the former US Secretary of Defence, Robert McNamara. Rather surprisingly, for an intellectual of the Left, Michael Foot produced no significant writing about Socialism - other than his brief 1980 pamphlet entitled 'My Kind of Socialism'. He opposed the invasion of Iraq, and predicted that Blairite foreign policy would inevitably lead to terrorist attacks on the UK mainland. Despite the obvious differences between the Labour Party that Foot led, and the reconstituted 'New Labour' of Tony Blair, by and large, relations between Michael and the new generation of MPs remained good - with Foot even campaigning on behalf of a New Labour candidate in Ebbw Vale in 2005, a seat that New Labour lost. Morgan has produced a very worthwhile biography of much relevance and credit. Michael Foot obviously chose well, when he asked Kenneth Morgan to compile his life story.