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Oliver Stutchbury

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oliver Piers Stutchbury (January 1927 – February 2011) was a British politician.

Born in Sussex, Stutchbury was educated at Radley College. During World War II, he served with the Grenadier Guards, becoming a lieutenant, then he attended King's College, Cambridge. He became a solicitor's clerk, and joined the Conservative Party. He stood in Rhondda East at the 1951 United Kingdom general election, taking second place but only 10.3% of the vote.[1][2]

Later in the 1950s, Stutchbury became concerned about nuclear proliferation. He left the Conservatives and joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament; by the 1960s, he had also joined the Labour Party. He worked at the Save and Prosper unit trust fund, the largest in the City of London, became its chief executive, and wrote The Management of Unit Trusts, an influential textbook.[1] However, he resigned from his job in 1966 to work as a volunteer fundraising adviser to the Labour Party,[3] also completing a PhD at King's College. This was soon published as Use of Principle, in which he argued that all lies were unethical.[1]

In 1970, Stutchbury resigned from his fundraising role, complaining that his ideas were not being taken up,[1] and instead sought a winnable Parliamentary seat. He failed to be selected, and although he was shortlisted for the post of General Secretary of the Labour Party in 1972, he also failed to be selected for that post.[4] Instead, in 1973, he stood in the 1973 Greater London Council election, in Ealing.[5] Although narrowly defeated, he was appointed as an alderman. However, he decided that the council was ineffective, resigned and published Too Much Government? A Political Aeneid.[1] He launched the GLC Abolitionist Campaign, which attracted defectors from parties as diverse as the Communist Party of Great Britain and the National Front.[6] It stood 31 candidates in the 1977 Greater London Council election,[7] but attracted few votes.[8]

Stutchbury moved to Devon, where he ran a business. In 1980, he was linked to the formation of the Association of Democratic Groups, led by Colin Phipps.[9] This achieved little, and the Abolitionist Campaign was revived as "Abolish the GLC" with 7 candidates standing in the 1981 Greater London Council election.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "[1]", The Guardian, 28 February 2011
  2. ^ The Times House of Commons 1951, p.176
  3. ^ "Languishing unprofitably", The Guardian, 3 June 1967
  4. ^ "Five hats in the ring", The Guardian, 21 March 1972
  5. ^ United Kingdom Election Results, "Greater London Council results: Ealing"
  6. ^ "Action plan to topple the GLC giant", The Guardian, 1 April 1977
  7. ^ Laurence Marks, "What Tories promise for Londoners", The Guardian, 1 May 1977
  8. ^ Jerry White, "The Greater London Council, 1965–1986"
  9. ^ Lindsay Mackie, "Centre party 'plans' revealed", The Guardian, 25 September 1980
This page was last edited on 25 June 2024, at 20:36
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