Wednesday, 31 January 2018
1810 Hastings Lees-Smith
Constituency : Northampton 1910-18, Keighley 1922-3, 1924-31,1935-41 ( Labour )
Hastings was the other Liberal victor at Northampton.
Hastings's father was an army major and he was born in India. He was educated at Aldenham School and Oxford. He became a lecturer in public administration at the London School of Economics. He also lectured in Bristol and Bombay. He was involved in Ruskin College but often in conflict with other tutors there over economic policy.
Hastings supported nationalisation of the railways, land reform and a minimum wage in some industries.
Hastings opposed British entry into the war and was one of the founders of the Union Of Democratic Control.
Hastings served in a territorial regiment as a corporal n 1915. He opposed conscription in 1916 whilst wearing his uniform in the Commons. He was wounded while carrying a stretcher. He was invalided out of the army in 1917. He read out Siegfried Sassoon's statement against the war in Parliament.
Hastings held aloof from Lloyd George. In 1918 he left Northampton to McCurdy and contested Don Valley where he came second to the NDP candidate. Although he had the support of the local Liberal Association he stood as an "Independent Radical".
In 1919 Hastings joined Labour and wrote a letter of support to Asquith's opponent in the 1920 Paisley by-election. He won Keighley for Labour in 1922. In 1923 the Tories stood down allowing him to be defeated by Robert Pilkington but he regained the seat in 1924.
Hastings was a front bencher noted for his contributions on banking ad the House of Lords. He became Postmaster -General in 1929 and briefly, President of the Board of Education in 1931. He was at odds with MacDonald over continued support for the capital levy which MacDonald regarded as an electoral liability. He was defeated by the Tories in 1931 but won the seat back in 1935.
In 1938 Hastings helped a number of German Jews emigrate by isssuing them with British passports.
Hastings was not invited into Churchill's coalition government and became token Leader of the Opposition and leader of the parliamentary Labour party.
Hastings published books on Indian economics and reform of the Lords
He died of influenza in 1941 aged 63.
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