Difference between revisions of "Norman Tebbit"
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Revision as of 05:52, 5 July 2015
Norman Tebbit (politician) | |
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Being stretchered out after the 1984 Brighton bombing | |
Member of | Bruges Group, The Other Club |
Norman Beresford Tebbit, Lord Tebbit of Chingford (born 29 March 1931) is a right-wing British politician. He was a key member of the second Thatcher government and was Secretary of State for Trade and Industry from 1983 to 1985 and chairman of the Conservative Party from 1985 to 1987.[1]
On 12 October 1984, five people were killed and 31 injured in the Brighton bombing when the IRA targeted Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet who were staying at the Grand Hotel.
Norman Tebbit was among those injured as was his wife Margaret, who was left permanently disabled. When hospital staff asked Tebbit whether he was allergic to anything, he answered "bombs".[2]
Contents
Biography
Norman Tebbit worked as a journalist from 1947 to 1949 and then joined the RAF for two years before spending a period working in publishing and advertising (1951-53). From 1953 to 1970 he worked as an airline pilot. [3]
Tebbit was an active member of the Conservative Party from 1946 and in 1970 was elected Conservative MP for Epping. [4] That year he joined the Conservative Monday Club, [5] a right-wing Tory association founded in the 1960s and notable for having promoted a policy of voluntary, or assisted, repatriation for non-white immigrants. [6][7] Tebbit was MP for Chingford from 1974 to 1992 when he was given a life peerage. [8]
In the first Thatcher government Tebbit was appointed Under Secretary of State for Trade (1979-81) and then Minister of State for Industry (1981) before being appointed Secretary of State for Employment (1981-83) during the highest period of unemployment since the 1930s. [9] He was Secretary of State for Trade and Industry from 1983 to 1985.
In 1984 Tebbit was elected a member of the Other Club, a secretive dining society made up of powerful establishment figures from politics, business and to a lesser extent journalism and academia. [10] The Home Secretary Leon Brittan was also elected a member that year. [11]
In 1985 he became Chairman of the Conservative Party and was also appointed Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster by Thatcher [12] – a position involving no official responsibilities but used to keep favoured figures in government.
Tebbit took up a number of corporate appointments after leaving politics. From 1987 to 1996 he was a director of the industrial conglomerate BET plc and the telecommunications group BT plc, which the Thatcher government had privatised. He was a director of the industrial conglomerate Sears plc until 1999 when it was acquired by Philip Green, and a director of the JCB subsidiary JCB Excavators Ltd from 1987 to 1991. [13]
From 1989 Tebbit took up a number of media positions. From 1989 to 2004 was a director of The Spectator (1828) Ltd, the publisher of the right-wing weekly The Spectator. He was a political commentator for BSkyB from 1989 to 1997 and a columnist for The Sun from 1995 to 1997. [14] Both were controlled by the media tycoon Rupert Murdoch who had been supportive of Thatcher throughout the 1980s. He was columnist for the Mail on Sunday from 1997 to 2001. [15]
Attacks on the BBC
Norman Tebbit has a particular preoccupation with the media and especially the BBC, which he regards as having a left-wing bias. Tebbit has described the BBC as 'insufferable, smug, sanctimonious, naive, guilt-ridden, wet, pink orthodoxy of that sunset home of that third- rate decade, the 1960s'. [16] In 2003 he wrote that the BBC, ‘is institutionally Labourist and badly needs counselling and retraining to understand what political neutrality entails.’ [17]
Like other Tories, Tebbit was incensed with the BBC's coverage of the Falklands conflict in 1982. He recalled in his 1988 autobiography:
[The] unctuous 'impartiality' of the BBC's editorialising was a source of grief and anger. Few of us concerned will ever forgive the phrase, 'The British authorities, if they are to be believed, say ...' or the regular references to British and Argentinian forces rather than 'our forces' and 'enemy forces'. The elaborate even-handedness jarred cruelly with those whose lives were at risk, those of us who took ultimate responsibility for committing our forces, knowing the human cost of what we had to do, and with the general public. ... For me the British Broadcasting Corporation might have better called itself the Stateless Persons Broadcasting Corporation for it certainly did not reflect the mood of the British people who finance it. [18]
Tebbit’s most high profile attack on the BBC was in 1986 when he was Chairman of the Conservative Party. Tebbit attacked the BBC over its coverage of the US bombing of Libya that April, for which the Americans were controversially granted use of British air bases. Tebbit wrote in his autobiography: 'Even many reasonably minded people were uneasy, especially as they watched the misleading and unbalanced BBC coverage of the affair. [19] Years later he wrote: ‘to tell the truth, I was probably as strident as I was partly because I had reservations (which I think were justified) about the Government process which led to our involvement, and some unease (which proved unjustified) about the policy itself.’ [20] One Tebbit's most senior assistants at the time of the 1987 election later told the author and journalist Michael Cockerell that Tebbit's attacks were a deliberate and successful policy designed to cow the BBC into respectful reporting of the campaign. [21]
Tebbit’s attack was based on a document produced by Conservative Central Office, which he later described as a ‘factual dossier comparing news bulletin by news bulletin, line by line, the reports broadcast by BBC and ITN.’ [22] The BBC's 9 O'Clock News was contrasted with ITV’s News at Ten, the former of which was said to be ‘riddled with inaccuracy, innuendo and imbalance’. [23] It was claimed that:
News at Ten was able to preserve an impartial editorial stance, while the BBC took a number of editorial and journalistic decisions the effect of which was to enlist the sympathy of the audience to the Libyans and to antagonise them towards the Americans. [24]
The dossier was sent to the BBC on 30 October 1986 with a cover letter from Tebbit which read:
In the light of our evidence, you may feel that the BBC news reporting, in this instance at least, fell short of the high standards which the Corporation espouses. Indeed, you may conclude that far from being balanced, fair and impartial, the coverage was a mixture of news, views, speculation, error and uncrtiical carriage of Libyan propaganda which does serious damage to the reputation of the BBC. [25]
Affiliations
Conservative Monday Club, elected member in 1970 [26]
The Other Club, member since 1984 [27]
Resources
Glasgow University Media Group [On Norman Tebbit] 'Columnlist', The List, 14-27 November 1986
Related Quotation
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
UK Independence Party | “Unbeknown to many, UKIP too had early roots in Britain’s intelligence services.
In 2001, former Conservative Party chairman Norman Tebbit called for an independent inquiry into revelations that UKIP had been infiltrated by MI5. In a televised interview on BBC News, Tebbit said: “A chap came to me and said UKIP had been infiltrated by the British intelligence services and then he gave me two names of people and from various ways I came to the conclusion that I was absolutely and completely certain that these people — although they had left the service and the Foreign Office some years earlier — in fact had been intelligence agents.” As Tebbit explained in a Spectator article that even Douglas Murray recently endorsed, he “half-heartedly” made his “own inquiries” after a source inside UKIP raised the concerns with him, “and unexpectedly struck gold... I am perfectly sure that the individuals had been active agents, although both would claim to have retired some years ago.” Tebbit had not suggested that UKIP’s leadership was aware of the intelligence operation. At the time, Nigel Farage admitted that he could not discount Tebbit’s allegations.” | Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed | 11 May 2015 |
Event Participated in
Event | Start | End | Location(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bilderberg/1985 | 10 May 1985 | 12 May 1985 | New York US Arrowwood of Westchester Rye Brook | The 33rd Bilderberg, held in Canada |
References
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ "30 years ago tonight, the IRA tried to murder Margaret Thatcher"
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ ‘TEBBIT’, Who's Who 2010, A & C Black, 2010; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2009; online edn, Nov 2009 [Accessed 11 Jan 2010]
- ↑ Copping, Robert, The Story of The Monday Club - The First Decade (London: Current Affairs Information Unit, April 1972) p.21
- ↑ Nicholas Watt, 'Tories cut Monday Club link over race policies', The Guardian, 19 October 2001
- ↑ Marie Woolf 'Five more names go in purge of Tory right', Independent, 29 August 2001
- ↑ Ibid.
- ↑ BBC - On This Day 1950 - 2005 1982: UK unemployment tops three million, 26 January 1982
- ↑ John Lloyd. 'Secret members of the Other Club', The Times, 29 July 1997; p.13
- ↑ Ibid.
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ Debrett's People of Today, The Rt Hon Lord Tebbit, CH, PC, [Accessed 5 January 2009]
- ↑ quoted in Louise Jury, BBC row: Elite's favourite show takes the flak from politicians, Independent, 13 December 1997
- ↑ Norman Tebbit, ‘The BBC doesn't invent lies against the Government’, Independent, 30 June 2003
- ↑ Norman Tebbit, Upwardly Mobile (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988) p.196
- ↑ Norman Tebbit, Upwardly Mobile (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988) p.249
- ↑ Norman Tebbit, ‘The BBC doesn't invent lies against the Government’, Independent, 30 June 2003
- ↑ Michael Cockerell, 'Broadcasters caught in crossfire of politics', Manchester Guardian Weekly, 2 April 1995
- ↑ Norman Tebbit, ‘The BBC doesn't invent lies against the Government’, Independent, 30 June 2003
- ↑ The BBC Story – The Libyan Bombing 1986 [Accessed 7 January 2009]
- ↑ cited in Alisdair Milne, DG: The Memoirs of a British Broadcaster (Hodder and Stoughton, 1989) p.253
- ↑ cited in Alisdair Milne, DG: The Memoirs of a British Broadcaster (Hodder and Stoughton, 1989) p.252
- ↑ Copping, Robert, The Story of The Monday Club - The First Decade (London: Current Affairs Information Unit, April 1972) p.21
- ↑ John Lloyd. 'Secret members of the Other Club', The Times, 29 July 1997; p.13