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Sir David Owen (b.
Plymouth, 2 July 1938)
was British Foreign Secretary
1977 – 9, leader of
the Social Democratic Party
1983 – 8; Baron (life
peer) 1992.
David Owen studied medicine at
Cambridge and practised for a
short time. He became an MP by
winning Plymouth Sutton for
Labour in 1966. He held this
seat until February 1974 when
it was largely reorganized as
Plymouth Devonport, and
remained its MP until he
stepped down in 1992.
David Owen was given junior
posts in health in the 1974
Labour government. He served
for a year as No. 2 at the
Foreign Office in 1976 and then
succeeded Antony Crosland as
Foreign Secretary, when the
latter died suddenly in 1977.
This was an unexpected
promotion for someone aged 39.
Immediately he was talked of as
a future leader of the Labour
Party.
Owen was one of the original
"Gang of Four" which left the
Labour Party to set up the
Social Democratic Party in
1981. Owen probably had more to
lose in career terms than the
others. He was unhappy with the
direction that Labour was
taking, including the election
of the party leader by a
largely extra-parliamentary
electoral college, its growing
hostility to the European
Community (he had resigned from
the shadow Cabinet in 1972 on
this issue), and its steady
move to a unilateralist defence
policy.
He and Roy Jenkins contested
the leadership of the new
party. Owen was runner-up and
became deputy leader. He was no
admirer of Roy Jenkins and when
the latter resigned the
leadership after the 1983
general election, Owen was
elected unopposed.
Owen was a jealous guardian of
the SDP's independence during
negotiations for an alliance
with the Liberals in the 1983
parliament. The 1987 election
campaign was not a happy
experience. Far from there
being an agreed strategy
between the two Davids — Steel
of the Liberals and Owen — the
two went their own ways.
Journalists gleefully played
the game of "hunt the split".
While many Liberals talked of
the possibility of an Alliance
government, he dismissed such
talk and campaigned for a hung
parliament. He was still
strongly anti-Labour and eager
to dispel impressions that a
vote for the Alliance might
provide a backdoor entry for a
Labour government. He admired
Mrs Thatcher as a leader more
than Neil Kinnock.
Following the election there
were moves in both parties to
effect a merger. Owen resisted,
but when a ballot of SDP
members showed strong support,
he immediately resigned. He was
elected leader of the rump of
the SDP in 1988. In 1991 he met
with John Major and promised to
declare his support if the
Conservatives gave a clear run
in the next general election to
the two remaining SDP MPs. This
was not possible. In the 1992
general election Owen still
declared his support for the
Conservative Party.
As a member of the House of
Lords, Owen played a roving
role as an international
statesman. For some time he was
engaged in trying to promote
peace efforts in former
Yugoslavia.
Owen was a headstrong
character. He left the Labour
Party, helped to split the SDP,
and rejected any new merger.
The SDP soon collapsed. He had
a cross-bench mind, supporting
a strong stand on defence and
foreign policy while also
supporting social market
policies. His memoirs, Time
to Declare, were published
in 1991.
Source :
Some of the information on
this page came from a
Wikipedia
article and is
licensed under the GNU
Documentation License.
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www.geneticmatrix.com.
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