Book description
When veteran Labour MP Tam Dalyell retired as Father of the House
in 2005, the Commons lost not only one of its most colourful and
outspoken politicians, but also one of its most deeply principled
members. In a parliamentary career that spanned 43 years and the
administrations of eight Prime Ministers (from Macmillan to Blair),
Dalyell was never a stranger to controversy. His vehemently
independent and firmly-held views might have denied him a career on
the front bench, but have ensured that his name has seldom been out of
the headlines. An outspoken critic of both Margaret Thatcher and Tony
Blair, he famously harried the former over the sinking of the Belgrano
during the Falklands conflict, and argued fiercely against the Gulf
War of 1990 and the invasion of Iraq in 2003. He also spoke out
against military action in Kosovo, and has been a leading figure in
the attempt to uncover the truth about the Lockerbie bombing. In this
memoir, based on personal papers as well as official documents Â- many
of them only recently declassified Â- he looks back over a lifetime of
dedicated service as MP for West Lothian and Linlithgow and talks of
his family connections to the area: the Dalyells have lived at the
historic House of the Binns, near Linlithgow, for almost 400 years.
Insightful, witty and urbane, this is a fascinating book which offers
a unique perspective on many of the key moments in Britain's political
life over the last fifty years.
Tam Dalyell retired as Father of the House in 2005 after more than
fifty years of political life. He lives in the historic House of the
Binns, near Linlithgow.