POLITIC'S STRANGEST CHARACTERS

POLITIC'S STRANGEST CHARACTERS

by NeilHamilton (Author)

Synopsis

The trouble with political jokes is that too many of them get elected. Colourful eccentrics, like John Wilkes, established our basic liberties. Curbing the arbitrary power claimed by George III, he combined politics, obscenity and debauchery in the Hellfire Club. Outlawed and expelled from the Commons three times, when told he would die 'either on the gallows or of the pox' he replied, 'that depends on whether I embrace your principles or your mistress.' Perhaps the most eccentric MP of all was Trebitsch Lincoln. Born into a Jewish family in Hungary in 1879, he became a fraudster, before emigrating to Britain to establish himself first as an Anglican curate, and then as a liberal MP in 1910 for ten months. He went on to flee the country to become a German revolutionary and a secret agent, before leading a Chinese cult as a Buddhist abbot. These and many other eccentrics portrayed in this hilarious book illustrate why the House of Commons is the world's leading political asylum.

$3.37

Save:$8.33 (71%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 268
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Robson Books Ltd
Published: 31 Jul 2003

ISBN 10: 1861055269
ISBN 13: 9781861055262

Media Reviews
'British Political history teems with eccentrics. Indeed, if my own experience is anything to go by, harbouring thoughts of going into politics is pretty eccentric in the first place.' Neil Hamilton
Author Bio
Neil Hamilton was born in 1949 and grew up in the mining valleys of South Wales, where Tories were regarded as eccentrics. Neil became a Tory. In 1983 he became MP for Tatton. He was The Spectator Parliamentary Wit of the Year in 1988, a Government Whip 1990-2 and Corporate Affairs Minister at the DTI 1992-4. Since leaving the House of Commons in 1997, he has largely devoted himself to fighting to clear his name in the Cash for Questions allegations made by Mohammad al Fayed and keeping lawyers employed!