Robert Michael Maitland Stewart,
Baron Stewart of Fulham, CH, PC (6 November 1906–13 March 1990) was a British
Labour politician
and Fabian Socialist who served twice as Foreign
Secretary in the first cabinet of Harold Wilson.
Early life
The son of
Robert Wallace Stewart,
author and lecturer, and Eva Stewart née Blaxley, Stewart was born
in Bromley and educated at Brownhill Road Elementary School,
Catford
, Christ's Hospital
and St. John's College, Oxford
, where he graduated with a first class BA in philosophy
in 1929.
While at
university, Stewart was President of the Oxford Union
, and of St John's Labour Club (1929). He
began his career as an official in the Royal Household during 1931.
He worked
for a short period with the Secretariat of the League of Nations, before becoming a
schoolmaster, first at the Merchant
Taylors' School
in London, then at Coopers' Company's School,
Mile
End
, and then at Frome
, Somerset
.
During
World War II, Stewart served in
the
Middle East, joining the
Intelligence Corps in 1942, before
transferring to the Army Educational Corps in 1943. He was promoted
to captain in 1944.
On
26 July 1941 he
married
Mary
Birkinshaw, later Baroness Stewart of Alvechurch; they had no
children.
Political career
Stewart
had contested the West Lewisham
constituency in 1931 and 1935, and East Fulham
in 1936;
after the war he became MP for Fulham East 1945-55, then for Fulham
1955-74, and Hammersmith
, Fulham 1974-79. Soon after his initial
election, he was made a junior whip, then a junior minister, as
Under-Secretary of State for War (1947-51) and later as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply (May-October
1951). Following Labour's defeat in the
1951 election, Stewart
was a rising figure on the shadow front bench, serving as Shadow
Minister of Education (1955-59) and then as Shadow Minister of
Housing and Local Government (1959-64).
Stewart was Fabian Summer School Director in 1952 and Lecturer in
1954. He was Fabian New Year School lecturer in 1954-55 and
Publicist in 1956. Stewart is listed as a member of the Fabian
Society International Bureau Committee during 1957-58 and was
mentioned in Fabian News Nov-Dec 1964 as a former member of the
Fabian Executive Committee.
Government 1964-70
When
Harold Wilson became Prime
Minister in 1964, Stewart was appointed
Secretary of State
for Education and Science. He was promoted to
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in
January 1965. He was described by the press as relatively unknown
to the public but was extremely well known within Fabian Socialist
circles. He became
Secretary of State for
Economic Affairs in 1966. From 1966 to 1968, he was
First Secretary of State.
He
returned to the Foreign
Office
from 1968 to 1970. As foreign secretary, he
was instrumental in supplying arms to support the Nigerian
government's crushing of the secessionist movement in Biafra (when
up to one million people died), later saying "It would have been
quite easy for me to say: This is going to be difficult - let's cut
off all connexion with the Nigerian Government. If I'd done that I
should have known that I was encouraging in Africa the principle of
tribal secession - with all the misery that could bring to Africa
in the future."
Post-Government
A committed
pro-European, Stewart was
Leader of the Labour Delegation to the
Council of Europe in June 1970, and joint
president of the
Labour
Committee for Europe with
George Brown and
Roy Jenkins. He served as a
member of the European
Parliament from 1975 to 1976.
Stewart was made a member of the
Privy
Council in 1964.
In July 1979, he entered the House of Lords
as a life peer with the
title Baron Stewart of Fulham, of Fulham in
Greater
London
.
References
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/596712.stm
Bibliography
- The Forty Hour Week (Fabian Society), (1936)
- Bias and Education for Democracy (1937)
- The British Approach to Politics (1938)
- Modern Forms of Government (1959)
- Fabian Freeway Rose L. Martin (1966)
- Life and Labour (1980) - his autobiography
- European Security: the case against unilateral nuclear
disarmament (1981)
External links