- Geoffrey Hirst
Infobox MP
honorific-prefix =
name = Geoffrey Hirst
honorific-suffix = TD
constituency_MP = Shipley
predecessor =Arthur Creech Jones
successor =Marcus Fox
term_start =23 February 1950
term_end =18 June 1970
birth_date = birth date|1904|12|14
birth_place =
death_date = death date and age|1984|6|18|1904|12|14
death_place =
nationality = British
spouse =
party = Conservatives
relations =
children =
residence =
alma_mater =University of Cambridge
occupation =
profession = Industrialist
religion =
website =
footnotes =Geoffrey Audus Nicholson Hirst TD (
14 December ,1904 –18 June ,1984 ) was a British industrialist and politician who was a maverick ConservativeMember of Parliament .Early career
Hirst, from a
Yorkshire military family, was educated atCharterhouse School and St John's College,University of Cambridge . He went into industry, becoming President of the Leeds Chamber of Commerce; he was also Chairman of the East and West Ridings Yorkshire Regional Council of theFederation of British Industries .Parliament
During the
Second World War , Hirst served with theRoyal Artillery (he had been a member of theTerritorial Army before it). At the 1950 general election, Hirst was elected as Conservative Member of Parliament for Shipley. He remained on the backbenches, although he did become Chairman of the Conservative Parliamentary Trade and Industry Committee. He often raised the issue of the textiles industry.Political activities
Hirst was a right-winger and supported an aggressive policy over the
Suez Canal in 1956. When the Treasury MinistersPeter Thorneycroft ,Enoch Powell andNigel Birch resigned in 1958 after failing to win backing for spending cuts, Hirst said he was considering resigning the Conservative whip in sympathy with them. He did not go through with this idea, but his constituency association gave backing to him.In June 1963, Hirst called for "a new and younger leadership" for the government before the next general election, an indirect call for
Harold Macmillan to resign. During theAlec Douglas-Home government, Hirst objected toEdward Heath 's bill to abolish resale price controls, and jibed that the reason the negotiations for the United Kingdom to join the European Economic Community had failed was that there was no room in Europe for two de Gaulles.Resigning the whip
With Heath as Conservative Party leader after 1965, Hirst became even more disillusioned. Following the 1966 general election, he launched a single-handed campaign against the Wilson government's Prices and Incomes Bill. On
10 July ,1966 he announced that he would no longer receive the Conservative whip because the party would not vote against the Bill. He sat through the rest of the Parliament as an Independent Conservative, but did not attempt to retain his seat at the 1970 general election.References
*M. Stenton and S. Lees, "Who's Who of British MPs" Vol. IV (Harvester Press, 1981)
*"The Times".
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