Edward Heath was born in 1916 in Broadstairs, Kent. His father was a
carpenter, his mother was a maid and his background was very modest. He
attended Balliol College at Oxford, where he earned a second-class
degree in philosophy, politics and economics. He got active in
Conservative Party politics while at Oxford, but opposed Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement.
He served in the military
during World War II, in the Royal Artillery. After the war, he entered
the Civil Service in the Ministry of Aviation. In 1950, he was elected
Conservative MP for Bexley. He would represent that constituency for
more than fifty years. His rise through the ranks was rapid, being
appointed a junior whip in 1951 and was promoted to Chief Whip in 1955.
He was appointed Minister of Labour in 1959. He was also appointed Lord
Privy Seal in 1960 and President of the Board of Trade in 1963.
The
Conservative Party lost the 1964 election and its leader, Alec Douglas
Home, stepped down shortly thereafter, but not after changing the
leadership election rules, which made it easier for the rank and file
to win the leadership. Edward Heath was elected leader of the
Conservative Party in 1965, being the first commoner to lead the party.
Edward Heath then went on to unexpectedly win the 1970 General Election
for the Conservative Party on the 'Selsdon Platform', calling for more
aggressive pro-growth economic policies.
Edward Heath's tenure as Prime
Minister was very turbulent. His main accomplishment was to admit
Britain into the European Community, which it joined in 1973. That was
about his only major accomplishment as Prime Minister. The rest of
Heath's time in office was not so happy. His Chancellor of the
Exchequer, Iain McLeod, died within a month of winning the election and
his successor, Tony Barber, was not nearly as capable. His Minister for
Education, Margaret Thatcher, proved extremely capable, but attracted
controversy when she abolished free milk in the schools, earning her
the name 'Margaret Thatcher, the Milk Snatcher.'
Edward Heath's efforts
to tame the power of trade unions did not match the rhetoric. The
Industrial Relations Act did not deliver on its promises to curb trade
union abuses. Northern Ireland was a source of continuing trouble.
British soldiers fired on unarmed civilians in the Londonderry Massacre
in 1972. The violence and disorder in Northern Ireland got so bad that
Heath was forced to suspend the local government there and impose
direct rule from London.
Back in Britain, the government caved before a
miner's strike in 1972, after especially violent clashes between
striking miners and police at Saltley Coke Depot; the police were
withdrawn 'for their own protection' but it was a victory for the
Miners' Union and thereafter, they had the power to make or break
governments in Britain. Britain, like the rest of the Western World,
was badly affected by the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973, but Britain was
especially hard-hit as the miners struck again. Heath put the country
on a three-day workweek to conserve energy, and break the will of
striking miners. This backfired and hurt Heath's government more.
In early 1974, Heath called an election on the question of 'Who Governs
Britain?' The electorate had lost confidence in Heath and it showed.
The election of February 1974 was inconclusive. The Conservative Party
lost its majority in Parliament. The Labour Party won the most seats,
but not a majority--therefore, it could not really form a government.
But Ted Heath was no longer Prime Minister and he handed power over to
Harold Wilson in March 1974. Because the result of the February 1974
election was so inconclusive, another election was soon called for
October.
Labour won the October 1974 election by a tiny majority. This
did not make Heath look good; he had lost three out of four elections.
The mood of the Conservative Party was intense rage. Yet none of the
Conservative Party establishment dared to cross him. However, Margaret
Thatcher, his Minister of Education did challenge Heath for the party
leadership in the next party election. On February 4, 1975, she
defeated him in the party leadership election. Heath won only 119 votes
to Margaret Thatcher's 130, but he had lost his grip on the party. He
resigned as Leader of the Conservative Party on February 11, 1975,
having handed it over to Margaret Thatcher.
From that point on, Heath
refused to serve in the Shadow Cabinet or the front benches. Heath
never recovered from his defeat, settling for being a glowering
presence on the back benches of Parliament. He remained in Parliament
for another twenty-five years. In late-1990, he flew to Iraq in an
effort to bring about a diplomatic solution to the Invasion of Kuwait
and met with Saddam Hussein; he was unable to persuade Saddam Hussein
to pull out of Kuwait, though he did return home with a handful of
British hostages.
In 1992, Edward Heath became the longest-serving MP
in Parliament and thus became Father of the House, a position he held
until he retired from Parliament in 2001 at the ripe old age of 85.
Edward Heath was a lifelong bachelor. He never married. Politics was
his main interest, but he had other hobbies which included sailing
yachts and music. His favorite instruments to play were the piano and
the organ. Edward Heath died at age 89 in 2005.