Thursday, 28 June 2018
1953 Isaac Foot
Constituency : Bodmin 1922-24, 1929-35
Isaac's victory was the final gain for the Asquithian faction in the 1918-22 Parliament. He defeated the Coalition Unionist in a straight fight. It was his third attempt
Isaac was the son of a carpenter from Plymouth. He was educated at Plymouth Public School and the Hoe Grammar School. He worked for the Admiralty for a while before training as a solicitor. He was a Plymouth city councillor. He contested Totnes in January 1910. He contested Bodmin in December 1910 failing by just 41 votes.In 1918 he finished further behind the couponed Tory. In 1919 he came a poor third in the Plymouth Sutton by-election. He became a lifelong friend of the victor, Nancy Astor. In 1920 he went to America as Deputy Mayor of Plymouth for the Mayflower tercentenary. He was a staunch Methodist and a noted orator.
Isaac opposed the perpetual state pension going to Nelson's descendants.
Isaac had two tight victories in 1922 and 1923 then a narrow defeat in 1924. In 1929 he recovered the seat despite Labour's intervention. Despite his dislike of Lloyd George he campaigned vigorously for the policies in the Liberal Yellow Book.
Isaac was unopposed in 1931; he rejected Simon and Hore-Belisha's suggestion of a pledge of unqualified support for the National Government. In 1935, he was defeated by a Tory with the active aid of Simon, Hore-Belisha and Runciman.
Isaac served on the Round Table Conference on India in 1930-31 and became known for his championing of the underclasses. He became Secretary for Mines in the National Government in 1931 but resigned in 1932 over the Ottawa Agreements.
Isaac fought St Ives in 1937 on an anti-appeasement platform. falling short by just 210 votes of the Liberal National candidate. Labour stood aside for him.In 1945, he fought Tavistock and came second. He supported Peter Bessell and Jeremy Thorpe in their electoral ambitions.
Isaac held positions on various Liberal bodies and was Vice-President of the Methodist Conference in 1937-38. He was Lord Mayor of Plymouth in 1945.
Isaac was a bibliophile with over 70,000 books. He taught himself Greek in old age to read the New Testament in the original.
He died in 1960 aged 80. Most of his sons followed him into public life and the youngest, Michael was leader of the Labour party from 1980 to 1983.
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