The Special Relationship: President's and Labour Prime Minister's
From MacDonald and Hoover to Brown and Obama (and the one that got away @JoeBiden )
Ramsay MacDonald became the first British Prime Minister to visit the United States as a guest of the President
US media were excited by his daughter Ishbel - as people "lined the streets of broadway" to observe her fashion taste
MacDonald claimed that ‘both nations have a great role to play in the advancement not only of disarmament but of many other democratic and moral issues with which their history is associated’
His aim was to agree a Naval treaty that would ‘narrow the Atlantic’.
MacDonald’s speech went down well. Senator Watson, the Republican Floor Leader, claimed it ‘expressed a sentiment near to the heart of every well-wisher of the race’
An editorial in the New York Times described him as ‘unpretentious, unspoiled with dignity fitting his position’
Attlee and Truman met three times as prime minister and president. The first was at Potsdam in July 1945
The second time concerned the new atomic bomb. Attlee sought to prevent war by internationalising atomic bomb development with control under the United Nations.
Attlee obtained Truman's personal pledge not to use the atomic bomb without informing him, but Truman refused Attlee's request that it be a written pledge.
"Churchill never asked or got so much as Attlee did" claimed the secretary of state Dean Acheson
In the 1960s, Harold Wilson looked to JFK for inspiration whilst in opposition.
He copied some of his language and style - such as holding mass open air stadium rallies, using celebrity and promising "100 days of action" if elected
In November 1963. Wilson was informed of JFK’s death by Joan Parkins who had heard the news on the radio on her way to hear Wilson speak in Scotland
“We came in through a back door and were met by his people, so we told them what had happened.
“They couldn’t believe it and said we should tell Harold ourselves, as we had heard all of the details on the car radio”
Nixon and Harold Wilson got on well. After Nixon resigned, Wilson was one of the first people he encountered. In 1976, Wilson met him for a private dinner at the Dorchester Hotel
Jonathan Aitken recalled how they ate and sang HMS Pinafore together
When Wilson later resigned the New York Times claimed
‘In his tendency to pass off appearance for substance and in his fascination for precedents, record and figures, Wilson’s style is reminiscent of that of Richard Nixon’
Wilson also visited Gerald Ford at the White House in 1975
Jimmy Carter, beat Ford in 1976 and telephoned Callaghan for a long chat in Jan 77 – a week before his inauguration.
Callaghan went to Washington March, where Carter backed Concorde's campaign for landing rights in New York.
Callaghan invited Carter to the U.K.
In May 1977 that Mr Carter captured the hearts of the North East when he greeted the crowd of 20,000 outside the Newcastle Civic Centre with: 'Howay the lads
Recently @TylerCHawkins looked back at their relationship:
On a visit to the U.S Bush praised Brown as "a good friend", portrayed his handling the aftermath of the terror attack at Glasgow airport as "brilliant".
The election of Barack Obama came at the tail end of the Labour government.
Brown declared "The bonds that unite the US and the UK are vital to our prosperity and security and I know from talking to Senator Obama that he will be a true friend of Britain"
In March 2009, Downing Street proudly boasted that Mr Brown was the first European leader President Obama had met.
The first meeting was dominated by the global financial crisis and the upcoming G20 summit in London.
However, there was said to be some embarrassment when President Obama gifted a box of US films to Brown
The DVDs that did not actually work on UK DVD players...
And finally... as @JoeBiden becomes the 46th President of the United States, it could have happened over thirty years ago....
Famously, Biden’s bid collapsed under allegations over plagiarism after he utilised Kinnock’s ‘thousand generations’ speech for his 1988 campaign
Biden later requested a meeting with the Labour leader to present him, tongue in cheek, with ‘a small collection of his own speeches on foreign policy’
Kinnock read the speeches and highlighted Biden’s ‘tough-minded internationalist foreign policy’ that Labour should follow
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#OTD 1981. Labour unemployment rally in Birmingham as the Benn Healey nears its conclusion
Foot intervenes as Healey is heckled with chants of "Tory, Tory, Tory"
Roy Hattersley writes of "the orgy of intolerance" witnessed on TV which "must have cost Labour a million votes"
Tony Benn began the rally with an 'enthusiastic' reception at Aston Hall Park:
“The Labour Party speaks for Britain and the working class. It’s a broad part appealing to millions and millions of people. Which is why we are under attack by the press”
When Healey spoke, one minute in, he began to be heckled with chants of “Tory, Tory, Tory!”
Foot took the microphone and declared the hecklers “a disgrace to the Labour Movement”
#OTD 1992. Britain exits the ERM on ‘Black Wednesday’.
John Smith claims that John Major is “the devalued Prime Minister of a devalued Government”
The Sun goes with “Now we’ve ALL been screwed by the Cabinet”
A thread on how Smith and Brown went on the attack:
Labour called for an emergency debate on the ERM and the recalling of Parliament
On his debut as leader in the Commons Smith argued it was becoming a “not me Government”
“In view of the debacle, one would expect at least a word of explanation or apology, but there was not a hint of that by the Government whose most noted characteristic is that no one takes responsibility, no one resigns and no one takes the blame. They are a "not me" Government”