Desmond Banks, Baron Banks Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Banks
Office1:Chairman of the Liberal Party
Leader1:Jeremy Thorpe
Term Start1:1969
Term End1:1970
Predecessor1:Michael Eden
Successor1:Richard Wainwright
Office2:President of the Liberal Party
Leader2:Jeremy Thorpe
Term Start2:1968
Term End2:1969
Predecessor2:Donald Wade
Successor2:Timothy Beaumont
Birthname:Desmond Anderson Harvie Banks
Birth Date:23 October 1918
Birth Place:Ascot, Berkshire, England
Party:Liberal
Occupation:Politician

Desmond Anderson Harvie Banks, Baron Banks, CBE (23 October 1918 – 15 June 1997) was a British Liberal Party politician.

Banks was born in Ascot, Berkshire. He was educated at prep school in Harrow and University College School in Hampstead. During the Second World War he served as an officer in the Royal Artillery. In 1948 he married Barbara Wells who in 1987 was awarded the OBE for services to the Women's Liberal Federation. They had two sons, Alistair Richard Harvie Banks (b. 1950) and Graham Thornton Harvie Banks (b. 1953). Banks was a life insurance broker and pensions consultant.

He was Chairman of the Liberal Party Executive from 1961 to 1963 and from 1969 to 1970, and President of the Liberal Party from 1968 to 1969. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for political service in the 1972 New Year Honours.[1] He was created a life peer on 7 January 1975 as Baron Banks, of Kenton in Greater London. In the House of Lords he was Liberal Deputy Chief Whip from 1977 to 1983.

Banks had joined the Liberals while at school. He joined the staff at Liberal Party HQ in 1949 and was at one time editor of the party newspaper Liberal News. He first stood as a parliamentary candidate in the 1950 election in Harrow East,[2] then in St Ives in 1955 election[3] and Hertfordshire South West in the 1959 election.[4] He was sometime speechwriter for Jo Grimond and a frequent contributor to Liberal News as well as author of many pamphlets and policy papers.[5]

In 1952, together with Peter Grafton who had been Liberal parliamentary candidate in Bromley in 1950 in opposition to Harold Macmillan, Banks co-founded the Radical Reform Group, a social liberal pressure group within the Liberal Party to prevent what many saw as a rightward drift by the party, and its potential capture by the economic liberals. The Group campaigned under the slogan 'social reform without socialism'.

Banks was a strong pro-European, a founder member and one time chairman of the Liberal European Action Group and was President of the British Council of the European Movement from 1986 to 1994.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. The Times, 1.1.72
  2. The Times, 11.2.50
  3. G Tregigda, The Liberal Party in South West Britain since 1918, p.154
  4. The Times, 7.10.59
  5. The Political Insight of Elliott Dodds, author information