Clare Short
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- Born:
- February 15, 1946, Birmingham, England (age 78)
- Political Affiliation:
- Labour Party
Clare Short (born February 15, 1946, Birmingham, England) British politician who, while a member of the Labour Party, served as secretary of state for international development (1997–2003). She was known for being fiercely independent.
Short’s parents were both Irish-born Roman Catholics with strong Irish republican sympathies. After studying at the University of Leeds and at Keele University, Short joined the Home Office as a career civil servant in 1970. She left five years later to enter politics. In 1983 she was elected as the Labour MP for the Ladywood district in Birmingham. She identified with the left wing of the Labour Party but remained an independent-minded MP, and her fiery passion helped her to stand out from the crowd. In 1985 Neil Kinnock, then leader of the Labour Party in opposition to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government, appointed Short to his shadow ministerial team. Twice she resigned over Kinnock’s refusal to oppose specific government policies (in 1988 over the renewal of antiterrorism legislation and again in 1991 over Kinnock’s support for the Persian Gulf War); both times she was eventually brought back into the shadow ministerial team.
Upon Labour’s return to power in 1997, Prime Minister Tony Blair appointed Short secretary of state for international development. Her reputation as an effective minister grew throughout the world as she secured large increases in the British government’s overseas-aid budget and introduced new policies to increase the effectiveness of that aid in helping less-developed countries. She was especially concerned with poverty in Africa and persuaded Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown to write off the debts to Britain of Africa’s poorest countries. In 1999 she gave strong support to the military action in Kosovo by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Given her left-wing inclinations and previous resignations, her support was vital to Blair and helped to avoid a major split in the Labour Party over Britain’s involvement in the NATO action.
Short’s support for Blair ended in 2003, however, and she quickly became one of the prime minister’s harshest critics, denouncing the government’s policies and calling for Blair’s resignation. In a remarkable radio interview on March 10, 2003, shortly before the U.S.-led Iraq War began, Short criticized the impending war and described as “reckless” Blair’s stance on Iraq. It was widely assumed that her resignation or dismissal would follow swiftly. Instead, Blair asked her to stay on to oversee Britain’s contribution to Iraq’s postwar reconstruction. Short agreed, on the condition that this would happen within the framework of the United Nations. On May 12, however, she resigned, accusing Blair of having betrayed her by failing to work with the UN on plans for postwar nation-building in Iraq. Short’s resignation was the first in a series of events that provoked ongoing questioning of Blair’s integrity and caused his opinion-poll ratings to plummet.
Short continued her efforts to discredit the prime minister in 2004 with the revelation that British intelligence services had electronically surveilled UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Also that year she published An Honourable Deception?: New Labour, Iraq, and the Misuse of Power. Differences with Blair’s government played a key role in Short’s decision to leave the Labour Party in 2006. That year she announced that she would not seek reelection, and she retired from Parliament in 2010.