MP for Ebbw Vale In 1928, Bevan won a seat on
Monmouthshire County Council in the Tredegar Central Division. He lost the seat in 1931, but regained it in 1932 before deciding against seeking re-election in 1934. With his success in 1928, he was picked as the Labour Party candidate for
Ebbw Vale (displacing the sitting
MP Evan Davies), and easily held the seat at the
1929 General Election. Bevan gained more than twice the votes of Liberal candidate William Griffiths, receiving 20,000 votes to Griffiths' 8,000. In Parliament, he became noticed as a harsh critic of those he felt opposed the working man and woman. His targets included the
Conservative Winston Churchill and the
Liberal David Lloyd George, as well as
Ramsay MacDonald and
Margaret Bondfield from his own Labour party (he targeted the latter for her unwillingness to increase unemployment benefits). He had solid support from his constituency, being one of the few Labour MPs to be unopposed in the
1931 General Election, and this support grew through the 1930s and the period of the
Great Depression. becoming one of the 17 signatories of the
Mosley Memorandum in the context of the MacDonald government's repeated economic crises, including the doubling of
unemployment levels. In January 1931, Bevan wrote a letter to the government on behalf of the Mosley group, raising concerns over its "failure to deal with unemployment". Mosley broke from the Labour Party in early 1931 to form the
New Party, but Bevan refused to defect and instead announced that he had no intention of leaving the Labour Party. By 1932, Mosley's
New Party had migrated from the
left over to the
far-right of British politics and was rebranded as the
British Union of Fascists. Bevan's past association with Mosley would be used against him in subsequent years by his political rivals. He married fellow Socialist MP
Jennie Lee in 1934, after they met in London. Described as "more left-wing than Nye", Lee became a considerable influence on Bevan's political career. They were early supporters of the socialists in the
Spanish Civil War, and Bevan visited the country in 1938. In 1936 he joined the board of the new socialist newspaper
Tribune. His agitations for a
united socialist front of all parties of the left (including the
Communist Party of Great Britain) led to his expulsion from the Labour Party from March to November 1939 (along with
Stafford Cripps,
C. P. Trevelyan and three others). Bevan and Cripps had previously been threatened with disciplinary action by the party for sharing a stage with a Communist speaker, and all party members were threatened with expulsion if they were associated with the Popular Front. Bevan and another expelled MP,
George Strauss, appealed against the decision. Bevan was readmitted to the party on 20 December 1939, after agreeing "to refrain from conducting or taking part in campaigns in opposition to the declared policy of the Party". He strongly criticised the
National Government's
rearmament plans in the face of the rise of
Nazi Germany, saying to the Labour conference in autumn 1937: If the immediate international situation is used as an excuse to get us to drop our opposition to the rearmament programme of the Government, the next phase must be that we must desist from any industrial or political action that may disturb national unity in the face of
Fascist aggression. Along that road is endless retreat, and at the end of it a voluntary
totalitarian state with ourselves erecting the barbed wire around. You cannot collaborate, you cannot accept the logic of collaboration on a first class issue like rearmament, and at the same time evade the implications of collaboration all along the line when the occasion demands it. His opposition to the Labour leadership's approach was partly based on his view that the leadership of the Labour Party was not demanding assurances from the Government on its
foreign policy as a price for the party's support for re-armament as expressed in his speech to the Bournemouth Conference of that year: ...we should say to the country we are prepared to make whatever sacrifices are necessary, to give whatever arms are necessary to fight Fascist powers and in order to consolidate world peace... The Labour conference voted to drop its opposition to rearmament. When
Winston Churchill said that the Labour Party should refrain from giving
Adolf Hitler the impression that Britain was divided, Bevan rejected this as sinister: The fear of
Hitler is to be used to frighten the workers of Britain into silence. In short Hitler is to rule Britain by proxy. If we accept the contention that the common enemy is Hitler and not the British capitalist class, then certainly Churchill is right. But it means abandonment of the class struggle and the subservience of the British workers to their own employers.
Opposition to the war-time government By March 1938, Bevan was writing in
Tribune that Churchill's warnings about German intentions for
Czechoslovakia were "a diapason of majestic harmony" compared to Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain's "thin, listless trickle". Bevan now called unsuccessfully for a
Popular Front against fascism under the leadership of the Labour Party, including even anti-fascist Tories. When the government introduced voluntary national service in December 1938, Bevan argued that Labour should demand the nationalisation of the armaments industry, support the
democratic government of Spain and sign an
Anglo-
Soviet pact in return for its support. When Labour supported the government's scheme with no such conditions, Bevan denounced Labour for imploring the people on recruiting platforms to put themselves under the leadership of their opponents. The
Military Training Act 1939 reintroduced
conscription six months later, and Bevan joined the rest of the Labour Party in opposing it, calling it "the complete abandonment of any hope of a successful struggle against the weight of wealth in Great Britain". He emphasised that the government had no arguments to persuade young men to fight "except merely in another squalid attempt to defend themselves against the redistribution of international swag". In August 1939 came the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, a non-aggression pact between the
Nazi and
Soviet governments that shocked democratic governments around the world. In Parliament, Bevan argued that this was the logical outcome of the government's foreign policy. He wanted the war to be not just a fight against fascism but a war for socialism. Bevan was relieved that the country had united against Nazi Germany in the fight against fascism to provide a common enemy away from the working class. Historian
Max Hastings described Bevan's role in Parliament during the war as "his figures were accurate but his scorn was at odds with the spirit of the moment—full of gratitude, as was the prime minister". His fierce opposition made him unpopular with some portions of the public at the time; his wife later described how the couple would frequently receive parcels filled with excrement at their home. Bevan was critical of the leadership of the
British Army, which he felt was class bound and inflexible. After General
Neil Ritchie's retreat across
Cyrenaica early in 1942 and his disastrous defeat by General
Erwin Rommel at
Gazala, Bevan made one of his most memorable speeches in the Commons in support of a motion of censure against the Churchill government. "The Prime Minister must realise that in this country there is a taunt on everyone's lips that if Rommel had been in the British Army he would still have been a sergeant ... There is a man in the British Army who flung 150,000 men across the
Ebro in Spain,
Michael Dunbar. He is at present a sergeant ... He was Chief of Staff in Spain, he won the
Battle of the Ebro, and he is a sergeant." Dunbar had been recommended for a commission, but rejected it himself to remain with his unit. Bevan was subject to further disciplinary action in 1944, when he deliberately voted against Labour's stance on new defence regulations. He also voiced criticism of trade union leaders, which drew complaints from both the Miners' Federation and the
Trades Union Congress. An administrative committee voted 71 to 60 in favour of retaining Bevan as an MP, although it was announced that party discipline was to be strengthened in future. He believed that the Second World War would give Britain the opportunity to create "a new society". He often quoted an 1855 passage from
Karl Marx that was published in
The New York Times in 1865: "The redeeming feature of war is that it puts a nation to the test. As exposure to the atmosphere reduces all mummies to instant dissolution, so war passes supreme judgment upon social systems that have outlived their vitality." At the beginning of the
1945 general election campaign, Bevan told his audience that his goal was to eliminate any opposition to the Labour programme: "We have been the dreamers, we have been the sufferers, now we are the builders. We enter this campaign at this general election, not merely to get rid of the Tory majority. We want the complete political extinction of the Tory Party, and twenty-five years of Labour Government." ==Government==