Draft:Shadow Cabinet of Hugh Gaitskell
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Shadow Cabinet of Hugh Gaitskell | |
---|---|
Shadow Cabinet of the United Kingdom | |
1955 - 1963 | |
Date formed | 14 December 1955 |
Date dissolved | 18 January 1963 |
People and organisations | |
Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Leader of the Opposition | Hugh Gaitskell |
Deputy Leader of the Opposition | Jim Griffiths George Brown |
Member party | |
Status in legislature | Official Opposition 277 / 630 (44%) (1955) 258 / 630 (41%) (1959) |
History | |
Election | 1955 Labour Party leadership election |
Legislature terms | 41st UK Parliament 42nd UK Parliament |
Predecessor | Second Shadow Cabinet of Clement Attlee |
Successor | First Shadow Cabinet of Harold Wilson |
In December 1955, Hugh Gaitskell, the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer was elected as Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Labour Party, replacing former Prime Minister Clement Attlee, the longest serving leader of the Labour Party. Attlee had stepped down as leader after having led it to a defeat in the 1955 general election, the fifth election Labour had fought under him during his 20-year long leadership.
In the subsequent leadership election, Gaitskell defeated left-wing firebrand and former Health Minister Aneurin Bevan and deputy leader Herbert Morrison (who had been serving as acting leader since Attlee's resignation).
Gaitskell was to hold this position, notwithstanding the defeat in the 1959 election until his untimely death in January 1963, whereupon his successor Harold Wilson would lead the party to victory in 1964. During the course of his tenure, he was known for his attempts at reforming the Labour Party such as the attempt to remove Clause IV. He also prevented an attempt to adopt unilateral nuclear disarmament as Labour Party policy, and stood opposed to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's attempt to lead the UK into the European Common Market.
He had played a major role in reviving the popularity of Labour among the masses following the electoral debacles of 1955 and 1959 and at the time of his demise, the Labour Party was well placed to win the next general election. Harold Wilson who succeeded him as Leader of the Opposition and Labour Leader in February 1963 would go on to win the next general election and become Prime Minister ending the party's thirteen year stint in the opposition.
Portfolio | Shadow Minister | Date of assuming office | Date of demitting office |
---|---|---|---|
Leader of the Opposition | Hugh Gaitskell | 14 December 1955 | 18 January 1963 |
Deputy Leader of the Opposition | Jim Griffiths | 2 February 1956 | 4 May 1959 |
Aneurin Bevan | 4 May 1959 | 6 July 1960 | |
George Brown | 15 July 1960 | 18 January 1963 | |
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer | Harold Wilson | 14 December 1955 | 2 November 1961 |
James Callaghan | 2 November 1961 | 18 January 1963 | |
Shadow Foreign Secretary | Alfred Robens | 14 December 1955 | 6 November 1956 |
Aneurin Bevan | 6 November 1956 | 11 October 1959 | |
Denis Healey | 11 October 1959 | 2 November 1961 | |
Harold Wilson | 2 November 1961 | 18 January 1963 | |
Shadow Home Secretary | Kenneth Younger | 14 December 1955 | 13 May 1957 |
Patrick Gordon-Walker | 13 May 1957 | 12 March 1962 | |
George Brown | 12 March 1962 | 18 January 1963 | |
Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland | Tom Fraser | 14 December 1955 | 7 December 1961 |
Willie Ross | 7 December 1961 | 18 January 1963 | |
Leader of the Opposition in the House of Lords | The Viscount Alexander of Hillsborough | 14 December 1955 | 18 January 1963 |
References
[edit]- Jones, Tudor. Remaking the Labour Party: From Gaitskell to Blair (1996)
- Williams, Philip Maynard (1985) [1979]. Hugh Gaitskell. London: Jonathan Cape Ltd.
- Dutton, David. British Politics Since 1945: The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of Consensus (2nd ed. Blackwell, 1997)