Solid, detailed, fair-minded and insightful biography of one of the major figures of politics in the 2nd half of last century. He was like Jeremy Corbyn in being well to the left of the Labour party and, by temperament, a protester who ended up an ill-chosen and ill-suited party leader; unlike him in that Foot was a fiery intellectual steeped in political writing and history. A successful journalist and powerful public speaker, his triumph and tragedy was to be part of Jim Callaghan's government. Triumph because, as Employment Secretary, he dealt brilliantly with truculent Trade Unions and passed several important pieces of legislation; tragedy because this made him front-runner for the party leadership. The unions were truculent because traditional industries were in decline and threatened; the party was tearing itself apart (how nothing ever changes); and his leadership was doomed. Across the Despatch Box Mrs Thatcher was tearing up the old order, of which Foot was a part, ushering in the days of yuppiedom and loadsamoney.
Ah but how I long for someone of Foot's power, integrity and caustic, witty brilliance to be on the front bench again, laying into the follies of our government.