KINNOCK, NEIL


Meaning of KINNOCK, NEIL in English

born March 28, 1942, Tredegar, Monmouthshire, Eng. in full Neil Gordon Kinnock British politician who was leader of the Labour Party from 1983 to 1992. The son of a miner, Kinnock was educated at University College, Cardiff, and was then for four years an organizer and tutor at the Workers' Educational Association. In 1970 he was elected to Parliament for the seat of Bedwellty. He soon began a rapid rise in party ranks, owing to his gift for oratory and to the patronage of party leader Michael Foot. In 197475 he served as parliamentary private secretary to Foot, and in 1978 he was named to the Labour Party's national executive committee. During this period he authored two books, Wales and the Common Market (1971) and As Nye Said (1980). Following the election of 1983, in which Labour suffered its heaviest defeat since 1935, the search began for a leader to replace Foot. Although a relative newcomer who had never held even a junior ministerial post, Kinnock in October 1983 was elected leader of the Labour Party at its annual conference, becoming the youngest leader in the party's history. Kinnock initially supported the party's policy calling for the unilateral nuclear disarmament of Britain and the removal of all U.S. nuclear weapons and bases from British soil. Labour lost the 1987 general election to the Conservative Party, though it managed to increase its parliamentary representation somewhat. By 1989 Kinnock had persuaded his party to abandon its radical policies on disarmament and large-scale nationalization. Labour lost the 1992 general election to the Conservatives, and though his party had again increased its numbers in Parliament, Kinnock stepped down from his post as party leader later that year.

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