Paul Dacre, the
editor in chief of The Daily Mail, questioned
the patriotism of Ed Miliband, because of the Marxism of his father, Ralph
Miliband. In the original article, Geoffrey Levy claimed that: “Quickly
learning English, he (Miliband) got a place at the London School of Economics
(LSE), which had then moved temporarily to Cambridge to avoid the bombing, and
there he was taught politics by Harold Laski, a giant of Labour's Left, whom
some Tories considered to be a dangerous Marxist revolutionary. Laski was
Miliband's mentor, his inspiration, the figure who encouraged his growing
interest in Karl Marx.”
Clearly Levy
knows nothing about the teachings of Laski as he was a left-wing opponent of
Marxism. Laski was indeed a great influence on Miliband and most of his
students. Miliband later recalled: "We did not feel overwhelmed by his
knowledge and learning, and we did not feel so because he did not know the
meaning of condescension. We never felt compelled to agree with him, because it
was so obvious that he loved a good fight and did not hide behind his years and
experience."
Miliband was
deeply influenced by Laski but the two men often clashed about politics.
Miliband went to see Laski in December, 1942: "He was very friendly with
me.... As soon as I came in he started to talk to me about the need to judge
things for myself and not only through the eyes of Karl Marx etc." He then
added: "Sorry to talk like this, but I am talking like a father; at least
that's how I feel towards you."
Ralph Miliband
clearly enjoyed studying under Laski but he was very keen to join the struggle
against fascism. Unlike, the owner of the Daily
Mail who had been sending letters of praise to Hitler concerning his
foreign policy as late as 1939, just a few weeks before the outbreak of the
war.
Miliband was volunteered
to be parachuted into Belgium
to work with the resistance. In January 1942 he passed his medical examination,
but was told that he could not "voluntarily join until authorisation was
sought from the Polish authorities (as he was not yet a Belgian
national)." Miliband now asked Harold Laski for help in joining the armed
forces. "A few days later, I had a letter from A.V. Alexander, the First
Lord of the Admiralty, telling me that he was pleased to hear from Laski about
my wish to join the Navy and advising me to go and see a vice-admiral at the
Admiralty, who would fix it up. Which he did."
Now we know what
Ed Miliband’s father did in the war, what about Paul Dacre’s father’s war
record. Peter Dacre was eligible for conscription by his birthday on 8th June
1943. Did he serve alongside Miliband in June 1944 when he was involved in the
D-Day landings in Normandy ? Miliband wrote that this was "the biggest
operation in history" and he "would not miss it for anything". No, Peter Dacre was too busy working as a show
business reporter for the Sunday Express?
Now, as far as I
know, show business reporters were not considered to be important enough in the
war effort that it was a “reserved” occupation. Probably more important was his
relationship with Lord Beaverbrook, the owner of Express Newspapers.
Beaverbrook, another newspaper baron who urged appeasement of Hitler in the
1930s, was a member of the war cabinet. Did Beaverbrook use his influence to
keep Peter Dacre out of the armed forces?
4 comments:
Paul Dacre should come clean and tell all, good or bad.
No reason why we shouldn't know the truth. After all Dacre is a very high profile, influencer of opinion in the UK. His readers and the rest of us are entitled to know the truth about his total integrity or sheer hypocrisy.
Paul - Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Commander or coward, we should know.
This is a fascinating pst and blog - I discovered in on Twitter. How do I go about following it? You don't seem to have a Friend-Connector or even an email.
Sorry about the glitches above. I'm writing this on an iPad, which has automatic correction/prediction.
Hi Sue, I have added the email follow button to my blog, thank you for pointing this out. You could also sign up to the Spartacus Newsletters http://schoolnet.us5.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=8fe4d6cf40a0290fe67b9edcd&id=1852ec9e3d
I am also on Google+ or you can follow Spartacus Educational on https://www.facebook.com/SpartacusEducational
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