Everything about Clare Short totally explained
Clare Short (born
15 February 1946) is a
British politician and a member of the British
Labour Party. She is currently the Independent
Member of Parliament for
Birmingham Ladywood, having been elected as a
Labour Party MP in 1983, and was
Secretary of State for International Development in the UK Labour government from
3 May,
1997 until her resignation on
12 May,
2003. She plans to stand down as a Member of Parliament at the next
general election.
Biography
Early life
Clare Short was born in
Birmingham,
England in 1946 to
Irish Catholic parents from
County Armagh,
Northern Ireland.
She would later be supportive of peaceful
Sinn Féin initiatives, although she was never a supporter of
IRA violence, some of the worst of which was inflicted in a 1974
bombing of her home city of
Birmingham.
Short was briefly married to a fellow student at 18 after she'd a child at 17. Their son was given up for
adoption, and didn't make contact with his birth mother until 1996. She discovered that her son was a staunch
Tory who worked in the financial sector in the
City of London, and that she was a grandmother. Her second marriage, to former Labour minister
Alex Lyon, turned to tragedy: he suffered from
Alzheimer's disease and died in 1993. Short is a cousin of Canadian-American actor/comic
Martin Short (their fathers were brothers) and of the Irish Minister for foreign affairs
Dermot Ahern. However, in 1996, Short was moved to the Overseas Development portfolio, a move which she saw as a demotion. She has been a controversial figure throughout her career, most notably when she called for the legalisation of
cannabis.
Secretary of State for International Development
After the
1997 UK general election the Overseas Development Administration was given full departmental status as the
Department for International Development, with Short as the first
cabinet-level Secretary of State for International Development. She retained this post throughout the first term of the Labour government, and beyond the
2001 UK general election into the second.
On her appointment to the DfID, journalists asked Short whether she'd be "good" (in other words, not cause embarrassment to the government). She replied "I'm going to try to be good but I can't help it, I've to be me". A few months later, the island of
Montserrat (one of the United Kingdom's few remaining overseas territories) was devastated by a
volcano eruption which rendered half the island uninhabitable; when the islanders asked for more help from the DfID, Short was reported to have remarked "they will be asking for golden elephants next", and refused to visit the island. This remark caused great offence to the Montserratians and others; Labour MP
Bernie Grant said that "She sounds like a mouthpiece for an old 19th century colonial and Conservative government".
On
6 November,
1997 Short sent a letter to Kumbirai Kangai, Minister of Agriculture in
Zimbabwe, in which she stated that "we don't accept that Britain has a special responsibility to meet the costs of land purchase in Zimbabwe". She went on to write "We are a new government from diverse backgrounds, without links to former colonial interests. My own origins are Irish and, as you know, we were colonised, not colonisers." In the same letter she did, however, offer qualified support for land reform: "We do recognise the very real issues you face over land reform... we'd be prepared to support a programme of land reform that was part of a poverty eradication strategy, but not on any other basis". This letter caused a rift with the Zimbabwean government, which asserted that the
Lancaster House Agreement of 1979 had contained a continuing pledge from the United Kingdom government to assist in
land reform.
In December 1997, Short signed the U.K. into the Ottawa Convention, banning the production, handling and use of
anti-personnel mines.
Position on the arms trade in developing countries
In 2001 Short wrote that the "ready availability of small arms has a direct and negative impact upon levels of crime and conflict in developing countries. We (the DFID) are supporting various peace building and disarmament initiatives". The following year she claimed that the UK was "committed to combating small arms availability and misuse".
Resignation following her vote in favour of Iraq war
On
9 March,
2003 Short repeatedly called
Tony Blair "reckless" in a BBC radio interview ) and threatened to resign from the Cabinet in the event of the British government going to war with
Iraq without a clear mandate from the
United Nations. This looked set to be a reprise of her previous resignation as party spokesperson during the
Gulf War of 1991 as a protest against the Labour Party's stance. However, on
18 March she announced that she'd remain in the Cabinet and support the government's resolution in the House of Commons.
Short remained in the Cabinet for two months after her decision to back the
2003 Iraq War. She resigned on
May 12.
Bugging of the UN
On
26 February,
2004 Short alleged on the
BBC Today radio programme that
British spies regularly intercept
UN communications, including those of
Kofi Annan, then
Secretary-General. The claim was made the day after the unexplained dropping of
whistleblowing charges against former
GCHQ translator
Katharine Gun. Reacting to Short's statement,
Tony Blair said "I really do regard what Clare Short has said this morning as totally irresponsible, and entirely consistent [withShort's character]." Blair also claimed that Short had put UK security, particularly the security of its spies, at risk. The same day, on the BBC's
Newsnight programme, Short called Blair's response "pompous" and said that Britain had no need to spy on
Kofi Annan. Blair didn't explicitly deny the claims but
Robin Cook, former
Foreign Secretary, wrote that in his experience he'd be surprised if the claims were true.
A few days later (on
29 February,
2004) Short appeared on
ITV's
Jonathan Dimbleby programme. She revealed that she'd been written to by
Britain's senior civil servant,
Cabinet Secretary Andrew Turnbull. Turnbull's confidential letter (which Short showed to Dimbleby, and which was quoted on the programme) formally admonished her for discussing intelligence matters in the media, and threatened "further action" if she didn't desist from giving interviews on the issue. Turnbull wrote that she'd made claims "which damage the interests of the
United Kingdom", and that he was "extremely disappointed". The "further action" referred to in the letter has been interpreted as threatening either the removal of Short's status as a
Privy Counsellor or to legal action under the Official Secrets Act. Either course of action would be without recent precedent; the last time a Privy Counsellor's status was revoked was in 1921 when Sir
Edgar Speyer was accused of collaborating with the Germans during the
First World War. However, on
1 March,
2004, Tony Blair's official spokesman refused to rule out such a step.
However in the same interview on the
Jonathan Dimbleby programme, Short backtracked on her claim about British agents bugging Mr Annan. She admitted that the transcripts she saw of Mr Annan's private conversations might have related to Africa and not to Iraq.
Asked whether she could confirm that the transcripts related to Iraq, she said: "I can't, but there might well have been ... I can't remember a specific transcript in relation, it doesn't mean it wasn't there." Short also admitted that her original claim, on the
Today programme, that Britain had eavesdropped on Mr Annan may have been inaccurate. Asked whether the material could have passed to the British by the Americans, she said: "It could. But it normally indicates that. But I can't remember that."
Backbenches
Clare Short's book,
An Honourable Deception?: New Labour, Iraq, and the Misuse of Power, was released on
1 November,
2004. It is an account of her career in New Labour, most notably her relationship with Tony Blair, the relationship between Blair and
Gordon Brown and the build up to the
2003 invasion of Iraq.
In December, 2004, Short was reportedly critical of U.S. efforts to dispense aid to countries devastated by a tsunami caused by a massive earthquake in the Indian Ocean. She is quoted as stating that the formation of a group of countries led by the United States for this purpose was a challenge to the role of the United Nations, which she believed was uniquely qualified for the task.
Announced retirement
On
12 September 2006, Short announced that she wouldn't be standing at the next general election. In a brief statement, Short said she was "ashamed" of Tony Blair's government and backed
proportional representation, which she hoped would be achieved through a
hung parliament. The Labour Party
Chief Whip referred the matter to the Labour Party National Executive Committee to consider disciplinary action.. On Friday
20 October, Short resigned the Labour
whip and announced that she'll sit as an Independent Labour MP. Short received a written reprimand from Labour's
Chief Whip shortly before the news of her resignation of the party whip was announced.
After
Gordon Brown succeeded Tony Blair as Prime Minister, Short said that the change offered "a new beginning", and hinted that she might re-join the parliamentary Labour party if Brown changed the policies that had caused her to leave..
Statements on Israel
Short has condemned Israel as being guilty of "bloody, brutal and systematic annexation of land, destruction of homes and the deliberate creation of an apartheid system." She has also stated that "the EU and Britain are colluding in this operation and the building of a new apartheid regime" because they give Israel privileged trade access.
Short has stated her support for a boycott of Israel, stating at a 2007 UN conference that "The boycott worked for South Africa, it's time to do it again." Short has also stated that Israel is actually "much worse than the original apartheid state."
The Ebor Lectures - 2008 Series
On
21 May 2008, Short gave a lecture as part of the
Ebor Lectures 2008 Series on entitled 'Apocalypse Now – Global Equity and Sustainable Living, the Preconditions for Human Survival.' The lecture took place at
York Minster and Short was introduced by the
Dean of York, the Very Revd.
Keith Jones.
In her lecture, Short emphasised the need for the end of our current 'throw away' society. She considered the changing conception of the world since the 1960s and emphasised the need for us to consider the consequences of today's environmental concerns for the generations of the future. Short also introduced the subject of
Transition Towns, speaking about the first of such towns in
Totnes,
Devon,
UK. These towns aim to create a "community" for the future which "addresses the twin challenges of diminishing oil and gas supplies and climate change, and creates the kind of community that we'd all want to be part of." Short was particularly excited about the prospect of a Transition Town movement in
Birmingham where her
constituency is located.
Works
- Short, Clare (2004). An Honourable Deception? New Labour, Iraq, and the Misuse of Power Free Press, ISBN 0-7432-6392-8
- Short, Clare (speech, 2001) Making Globalisation Work for the Poor: A Role for the United Nations Department for International Development, ISBN 1-86192-335-X
- Short, Clare (1999) Debt Relief for Poverty Reduction Department for International Development, ISBN 1-86192-100-4
- edited by Short, Clare, K. Tunks, D. Hutchinson (1991) Dear Clare...This Is What Women Feel About Page 3 Radius, ISBN 0-09-174915-8
Styles
Miss Clare Short (1946-1981)
Mrs Clare Lyon (1981-)
Clare Short MP (1983-1997)
The Rt. Hon. Clare Short MP (1997-)Further Information
Get more info on 'Clare Short'.
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