Harold Laski Explained

Harold Laski
Birth Name:Harold Joseph Laski
Birth Date:1893 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Manchester, England
Death Place:London, England
Party:Labour
Module:
Child:yes
Alma Mater:University College London
New College, Oxford
School Tradition:Marxism
Workplaces:London School of Economics
Notable Works:A Grammar of Politics (1925)

Harold Joseph Laski (30 June 1893 – 24 March 1950) was an English political theorist and economist. He was active in politics and served as the chairman of the British Labour Party from 1945 to 1946 and was a professor at the London School of Economics from 1926 to 1950. He first promoted pluralism by emphasising the importance of local voluntary communities such as trade unions. After 1930, he began to emphasize the need for a workers' revolution, which he hinted might be violent.[1] Laski's position angered Labour leaders who promised a nonviolent democratic transformation. Laski's position on democracy-threatening violence came under further attack from Prime Minister Winston Churchill in the 1945 general election, and the Labour Party had to disavow Laski, its own chairman.[2]

Laski was one of Britain's most influential intellectual spokesmen for Marxism in the interwar years. In particular, his teaching greatly inspired students, some of whom later became leaders of the newly independent nations in Asia and Africa. He was perhaps the most prominent intellectual in the Labour Party, especially for those on the hard left who shared his trust and hope in Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union.[3] However, he was distrusted by the moderate Labour politicians, who were in charge such as Prime Minister Clement Attlee, and he was never given a major government position or a peerage.

Born to a Jewish family, Laski was also a supporter of Zionism and supported the creation of a Jewish state.

Early life

He was born in Manchester on 30 June 1893 to Nathan and Sarah Laski. Nathan Laski was a Lithuanian Jewish cotton merchant from Brest-Litovsk in what is now Belarus[4] and a local leader of the Liberal Party, while his mother was born in Manchester to Polish Jewish parents.[5] He had a disabled sister, Mabel, who was one year younger. His elder brother was Neville Laski (the father of Marghanita Laski), and his cousin Neville Blond was the founder of the Royal Court Theatre and the father of the author and publisher Anthony Blond.[6]

Harold attended the Manchester Grammar School. In 1911, he studied eugenics under Karl Pearson for six months at University College London (UCL). The same year, he met and married Frida Kerry, a lecturer of eugenics. His marriage to Frida, a Gentile and eight years his senior, antagonised his family. He also repudiated his faith in Judaism by claiming that reason prevented him from believing in God. After studying for a degree in history at New College, Oxford, he graduated in 1914. He was awarded the Beit memorial prize during his time at New College.[7] In April 1913, in the cause of women's suffrage, he and a friend planted an explosive device in the men's lavatory at Oxted railway station, Surrey: it exploded, but caused only slight damage.[8]

Laski failed his medical eligibility tests and so missed fighting in World War I. After graduation, he worked briefly at the Daily Herald under George Lansbury. His daughter Diana was born in 1916.[7]

Career

Academic career

In 1916, Laski was appointed as a lecturer of modern history at McGill University in Montreal and began to lecture at Harvard University. He also lectured at Yale in 1919 to 1920. For his outspoken support of the Boston Police Strike of 1919, Laski received severe criticism. He was briefly involved with the founding of The New School for Social Research in 1919,[9] where he also lectured.[10]

Laski cultivated a large network of American friends centred at Harvard, whose law review he had edited. He was often invited to lecture in America and wrote for The New Republic. He became friends with Felix Frankfurter, Herbert Croly, Walter Lippmann, Edmund Wilson, and Charles A. Beard. His long friendship with Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. was cemented by weekly letters, which were later published.[11] He knew many powerful figures and claimed to know many more. Critics have often commented on Laski's repeated exaggerations and self-promotion, which Holmes tolerated. His wife commented that he was "half-man, half-child, all his life".[12] Laski returned to England in 1920 and began teaching government at the London School of Economics (LSE). In 1926, he was made professor of political science at the LSE. Laski was an executive member of the socialist Fabian Society from 1922 to 1936. In 1936, he co-founded the Left Book Club along with Victor Gollancz and John Strachey. He was a prolific writer and produced a number of books and essays throughout the 1920s and the 1930s.[13]

At the LSE in the 1930s, Laski developed a connection with scholars from the Institute for Social Research, now more commonly known as the Frankfurt School. In 1933, with almost all the Institute's members in exile, Laski was among a number of British socialists, including Sidney Webb and RH Tawney, who arranged for the establishment of a London office for the Institute's use. After the Institute moved to Columbia University in 1934, Laski was one of its sponsored guest lecturers invited to New York.[14] Laski also played a role in bringing Franz Neumann to join the Institute. After fleeing Germany almost immediately after Adolf Hitler's rise to power, Neumann did graduate work in political science under Laski and Karl Mannheim at the LSE and wrote his dissertation on the rise and fall of the rule of law. It was on Laski's recommendation that Neumann was then invited to join the Institute in 1936.[15]

Teacher

Laski was regarded as a gifted lecturer, but he would alienate his audience by humiliating those who asked questions. However, he was liked by his students, and was especially influential among the Asian and African students who attended the LSE.[12] Describing Laski's approach, Kingsley Martin wrote in 1968:

Ralph Miliband, another of Laski's student, praised his teaching:

Ideology and political convictions

Laski's early work promoted pluralism, especially in the essays collected in Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty (1917), Authority in the Modern State (1919), and The Foundations of Sovereignty (1921). He argued that the state should not be considered supreme since people could and should have loyalties to local organisations, clubs, labour unions and societies. The state should respect those allegiances and promote pluralism and decentralisation.[16]

Laski became a proponent of Marxism and believed in a planned economy based on the public ownership of the means of production. Instead of, as he saw it, a coercive state, Laski believed in the evolution of co-operative states that were internationally bound and stressed social welfare.[17] He also believed that since the capitalist class would not acquiesce in its own liquidation, the co-operative commonwealth was not likely to be attained without violence. However, he also had a commitment to civil liberties, free speech and association and representative democracy.[18] Initially, he believed that the League of Nations would bring about an "international democratic system". However, from the late 1920s, his political beliefs became radicalised, and he believed that it was necessary to go beyond capitalism to "transcend the existing system of sovereign states". Laski was dismayed by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939 and wrote a preface to the Left Book Club collection criticising it, titled Betrayal of the Left.[19]

Between the beginning of World War II in 1939 and the Attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, which drew the United States into the war, Laski was a prominent voice advocating American support for the Allies, became a prolific author of articles in the American press, frequently undertook lecture tours in the US and influenced prominent American friends including Felix Frankfurter, Edward R. Murrow, Max Lerner, and Eric Sevareid.[20] In his last years, he was disillusioned by the Cold War and the 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état.[7] [13] [18] George Orwell described him thus: "A socialist by allegiance, and a liberal by temperament".[12]

Laski tried to mobilise Britain's academics, teachers and intellectuals behind the socialist cause, the Socialist League being one effort. He had some success but that element typically found itself marginalised in the Labour Party.[21]

Zionism and anti-Catholicism

Laski was always a Zionist at heart and always felt himself a part of the Jewish nation, but he viewed traditional Jewish religion as restrictive.[22] In 1946, Laski said in a radio address that the Catholic Church opposed democracy,[23] and said that "it is impossible to make peace with the Roman Catholic Church. It is one of the permanent enemies of all that is decent in the human spirit".[24]

In his final years he became critical of what he saw as extremism in Israel at the outbreak of the 1947-48 Civil War, arguing that they had not prevailed "upon an indefensible group among them to desist from using indefensible means for an end to which they were never proportionate."[25]

Political career

Laski's main political role came as a writer and lecturer on every topic of concern to the left at that time, including socialism, capitalism, working conditions, eugenics,[26] women's suffrage, imperialism, decolonisation, disarmament, human rights, worker education and Zionism. He was tireless in his speeches and pamphleteering and was always on call to help a Labour candidate. In between, he served on scores of committees and carried a full load as a professor and advisor to students.[27]

Laski plunged into Labour Party politics on his return to London in 1920. In 1923, he turned down the offer of a Parliament seat and cabinet position by Ramsay MacDonald and also a seat in the Lords. He felt betrayed by MacDonald in the crisis of 1931 and decided that a peaceful, democratic transition to socialism would be blocked by the violence of the opposition. In 1932, Laski joined the Socialist League, a left-wing faction of the Labour Party.[28] In 1937, he was involved in the failed attempt by the Socialist League in co-operation with the Independent Labour Party (ILP) and the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) to form a Popular Front to bring down the Conservative government of Neville Chamberlain. In 1934 to 1945, he served as an alderman in the Fulham Borough Council and also the chairman of the libraries committee.

In 1937, the Socialist League was rejected by the Labour Party and folded. He was elected as a member of the Labour Party's National Executive Committee and he remained a member until 1949. In 1944, he chaired the Labour Party Conference and served as the party's chair in 1945 to 1946.[16]

Declining role

During the war, he supported Prime Minister Winston Churchill's coalition government and gave countless speeches to encourage the battle against Nazi Germany. He suffered a nervous breakdown brought about by overwork. During the war, he repeatedly feuded with other Labour figures and with Churchill on matters great and small. He steadily lost his influence.[29]

In 1942, he drafted the Labour Party pamphlet The Old World and the New Society calling for the transformation of Britain into a socialist state by allowing its government to retain wartime central economic planning and price controls into the postwar era.[30]

In the 1945 general election campaign, Churchill warned that Laski, as the Labour Party chairman, would be the power behind the throne in an Attlee government. While speaking for the Labour candidate in Nottinghamshire on 16 June 1945, Laski said, "If Labour did not obtain what it needed by general consent, we shall have to use violence even if it means revolution". The next day, accounts of Laski's speech appeared, and the Conservatives attacked the Labour Party for its chairman's advocacy of violence. Laski filed a libel suit against the Daily Express newspaper, which backed the Conservatives. The defence showed that over the years Laski had often bandied about loose threats of "revolution". The jury found for the newspaper within forty minutes of deliberations.[31]

Attlee gave Laski no role in the new Labour government. Even before the libel trial, Laski's relationship with Attlee had been strained. Laski had once called Attlee "uninteresting and uninspired" in the American press and even tried to remove him by asking for Attlee's resignation in an open letter. He tried to delay the Potsdam Conference until after Attlee's position was clarified. He tried to bypass Attlee by directly dealing with Churchill.[13] Laski tried to pre-empt foreign policy decisions by laying down guidelines for the new Labour government. Attlee rebuked him:

Though he continued to work for the Labour Party until he died, he never regained political influence. His pessimism deepened as he disagreed with the anti-Soviet policies of the Attlee government in the emerging Cold War, and he was profoundly disillusioned with the anti-Soviet direction of American foreign policy.[16]

Death

Laski contracted influenza and died in London on 24 March 1950, aged 56.[16]

Legacy

Laski's biographer Michael Newman wrote:

Columbia professor Herbert A. Deane has identified five distinct phases of Laski's thought that he never integrated. The first three were pluralist (1914–1924), Fabian (1925–1931), and Marxian (1932–1939). There followed a 'popular-front' approach (1940–1945), and in the last years (1946–1950) near-incoherence and multiple contradictions.[32] Laski's long-term impact on Britain is hard to quantify. Newman notes that "It has been widely held that his early books were the most profound and that he subsequently wrote far too much, with polemics displacing serious analysis."[16] In an essay published a few years after Laski's death, Professor Alfred Cobban of University College London observed:

Laski had a major long-term impact on support for socialism in India and other countries in Asia and Africa. He taught generations of future leaders at the LSE, including India's Jawaharlal Nehru. According to John Kenneth Galbraith, "the centre of Nehru's thinking was Laski" and "India the country most influenced by Laski's ideas".[18] It is mainly due to his influence that the LSE has a semi-mythological status in India. He was steady in his unremitting advocacy of the independence of India. He was a revered figure to Indian students at the LSE. One Prime Minister of India said "in every meeting of the Indian Cabinet there is a chair reserved for the ghost of Professor Harold Laski".[33] [34] His recommendation of K. R. Narayanan (later President of India) to Nehru (then Prime Minister of India), resulted in Nehru appointing Narayanan to the Indian Foreign Service.[35] In his memory, the Indian government established The Harold Laski Institute of Political Science in 1954 at Ahmedabad.[16]

Speaking at a meeting organised in Laski's memory by the Indian League at London on 3 May 1950, Nehru praised him as follows:

Laski also educated the outspoken Chinese intellectual and journalist Chu Anping at LSE. Anping was later prosecuted by the Chinese Communist regime of the 1960s.[36]

Laski was an inspiration for Ellsworth Toohey, the antagonist in Ayn Rand's novel The Fountainhead (1943).[37] The posthumously published Journals of Ayn Rand, edited by David Harriman, include a detailed description of Rand attending a New York lecture by Laski, as part of gathering material for her novel, following which she changed the physical appearance of the fictional Toohey to fit that of the actual Laski.[38]

George Orwell, in his 1946 essay "Politics and the English Language" cited, as his first example of poor writing, a 53-word sentence with five negatives from Laski's "Essay in Freedom of Expression": "I am not, indeed, sure whether it is not true to say that the Milton who once seemed not unlike a seventeenth-century Shelley had not become, out of an experience ever more bitter in each year, more alien (sic) to the founder of that Jesuit sect which nothing could induce him to tolerate." (Orwell parodied it with " A not unblack dog was chasing a not unsmall rabbit across a not ungreen field.") However, 67 of the Labour MPs elected in 1945 had been taught by Laski as university students, at Workers' Educational Association classes or on courses for wartime officers.[39] When Laski died, the Labour MP Ian Mikardo commented: "His mission in life was to translate the religion of the universal brotherhood of man into the language of political economy."[40]

Partial bibliography

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bill Jones. The Russia Complex: The British Labour Party and the Soviet Union. 1977. Manchester University Press. 16. 9780719006968.
  2. Book: Kenneth R. Hoover. Economics As Ideology: Keynes, Laski, Hayek, and the Creation of Contemporary Politics. 2003. Rowman & Littlefield. 164. 9780742531130.
  3. Book: Michael R. Gordon. Conflict and Consensus in Labour's Foreign Policy, 1914–1965. 1969. Stanford UP. 157. 9780804706865.
  4. UK, Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870–1916
  5. 1871 England Census
  6. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1580358/Anthony-Blond.html Obituary: Anthony Blond
  7. Peter . Lamb. Harold Laski (1893–1950): Political Theorist of a World in Crisis. Review of International Studies. 25. 2. 329–342. April 1999. 20097600. 10.1017/s0260210599003290. 145139622 .
  8. Kramnick and Sheerman 1993, pp. 66–68.
  9. Web site: NSSR :: About Us :: Message from the Dean . www.newschool.edu . 14 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090926130505/http://www.newschool.edu/nssr/subpage.aspx?id=9060 . 26 September 2009 . dead.
  10. Web site: About. New School. 16 February 2020.
  11. Book: Howe, Mark DeWolfe . Holmes–Laski letters: the correspondence of Mr. Justice Holmes and Harold J. Laski . 1 . 1953 . London . Geoffrey Cumberlege . registration . Internet Archive.
    Book: Howe, Mark DeWolfe . Holmes–Laski letters: the correspondence of Mr. Justice Holmes and Harold J. Laski . 2 . 1953 . London . Geoffrey Cumberlege . registration . Internet Archive.
  12. Schlesinger, 1993
  13. Web site: Mortimer. Molly . Harold Laski: A Political Biography. – book reviews . September 1993 . Contemporary Review.
  14. Martin Jay The Dialectical Imagination, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972, p.30, 115
  15. Franz Neumann Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of National Socialism, 1933–1944, Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2009, p. ix–x
  16. Newman, Michael. "Laski, Harold Joseph (1893–1950)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) online edn, Jan 2011 accessed 11 June 2013 doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34412
  17. Laski, The State in Theory and Practice (Transaction Publishers, 2009) p. 242
  18. Web site: Schlesinger Jr. . Arthur . Harold Laski: A Life on the Left . The Washington Monthly. 16 January 2010.
  19. Angus Calder, The People's War: Britain, 1939–1945 (Panther Books, 1969) p. 733.
  20. O'Connell . Jeffrey . Jeffrey O'Connell . O'Connell . Thomas E. . 1996 . The Rise and Fall (and Rise Again?) of Harold Laski . Maryland Law Review. 55 . 4 . 1387–1388. 0025-4282 . 23 July 2014. subscription .
  21. Robert Dare, "Instinct and Organization: Intellectuals and British Labour after 1931", Historical Journal, (1983) 26#3 pp. 677–697 in JSTOR
  22. Yosef Gorni, "The Jewishness and Zionism of Harold Laski," Midstream (1977) 23#9 pp 72–77.
  23. "Catholic Church for Democracy, Foley Says in Reply to Laski"Poughkeepsie Journal, 7 February 1946, p. 9. (Newspapers.com)
  24. "Walls Have Ears", Catholic Exchange, 13 April 2004
  25. News: April 1, 1948 . Laski Chides Jews in Palestine Crisis . 3 . . November 6, 2023.
  26. News: Freedland. Jonathan. 2012-02-17. Eugenics: the skeleton that rattles loudest in the left's closet Jonathan Freedland. en-GB. The Guardian. 2020-06-15. 0261-3077.
  27. Isaac Kramnick and Barry Sheerman, Harold Laski: A Life on the Left (1993)
  28. Ben Pimlott, "The Socialist League: Intellectuals and the Labour Left in the 1930s," Journal of Contemporary History (1971) 6#3 pp. 12–38 in JSTOR
  29. T. D. Burridge, "A Postscript to Potsdam: The Churchill-Laski Electoral Clash, June 1945," Journal of Contemporary History (1977) 12#4 pp. 725–739 in JSTOR
  30. Book: Thorpe, Andrew . A History of the British Labour Party . 1997 . Macmillan Education UK . 978-0-333-56081-5 . London . 106 . en . 10.1007/978-1-349-25305-0 . none.
  31. Book: Rubinstein, Michael . 1972. Wicked, wicked libels . Taylor & Francis. 167–168. 9780710072399.
  32. Deane, Herbert A. The Political Ideas of Harold Laski (1955)
  33. Isaac Kramnick and Barry Sheerman Harold Laski: A Life on the Left, The Penguin Press, 1993
  34. News: Guha. Ramachandra. Ramachandra Guha. The LSE and India . 23 November 2003 . The Hindu.
  35. Web site: Gandhi . Gopalakrishna . A remarkable life-story . 2 December 2005 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100207224741/http://www.flonnet.com/fl2224/stories/20051202005812900.htm . 7 February 2010 .
  36. Book: Fung, Edmund S. K. . In search of Chinese democracy: civil opposition in Nationalist China, 1929–1949 . 2000. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-77124-5. 309.
  37. Olson, Walter (1998). "The Writerly Rand", Reason.com, October 1998
  38. Rand, Ayn (1997). Harriman, David, ed. "Journals of Ayn Rand". New York: Dutton. . OCLC 36566117.
  39. Book: Rosen. Greg. Cowell. Harold Laski (1893–1950). Dictionary of Labour Biography. London. Politico. 2001. 348.
  40. News: Clark. Neil. Harold Laski - the man who influenced Ralph Miliband. New Statesman. 3 January 2013. 10 October 2019.
  41. Book: Communist Manifesto: Socialist Landmark: A New Appreciation Written for the Labour Part. George Allen and Unwin Limited. 1948. 9780043350126 . 21 May 2022.