Born in Ballybane,
Galway, Ireland, to Michael Healy, a farmer, and Margaret Mary Rabbitte, Gerry Healy emigrated to Britain and worked as a ship radio operator at the age of 14. He soon joined the
Communist Party of Great Britain, but then left to join the
Trotskyist Militant Group in 1937. He then left to become one of the founders of the
Workers International League, led by
Ted Grant,
Jock Haston and Ralph Lee. Healy's period in the WIL was difficult and he threatened to resign several times and was actually expelled and readmitted. He was in the group when it fused with the
Revolutionary Socialist League to form the
Revolutionary Communist Party but grew closer to the leadership of the
Fourth International, effectively the leadership of the American
Socialist Workers Party, and their representative in Britain, Sam Gordon. They encouraged Healy to form a faction and to take that group into the
Labour Party. In 1950, he was rewarded as the RCP voted to dissolve itself into his faction which became known as
The Club. In 1953, Healy joined the wing of the Fourth International led in part by
James P. Cannon after the FI split into two competing wings. Healy's wing was the
International Committee of the Fourth International of which he soon became a leader, along with James P. Cannon and
Pierre Lambert, the leader of the French Section of the FI. The Club recruited a substantial number of former members of the
Communist Party of Great Britain after they became disillusioned with
Stalinism after the
Twentieth Congress of the Soviet Communist Party in February 1956 which brought
Khrushchev's revelations about
Stalin and, later that year, the defeat of the
Hungarian Revolution. This qualitatively changed the ability of Healy's group to carry out activity and they launched
The Newsletter as a regular weekly paper in 1958. The creation of the
Socialist Labour League was formally announced in February 1959, and proscribed by the
Labour Party in late March that year, along with
The Newsletter, rendering anyone associated with Healy's group ineligible for membership of the Labour Party. Later in the year. Healy was excluded from the Streatham Constituency Labour Party, by which time the local party had been suspended, and the neighbouring
Norwood Labour Party was in the process of being re-organised because of the activities of SLL activists. In 1966, Healy and the SLL were accused of thuggery after
Ernie Tate was allegedly beaten and hospitalised by supporters of Healy while selling a pamphlet critical of him outside an SLL public meeting. Allegedly, Healy was present and "essentially supervised" the assault. The incident became a
cause célèbre within the world
Trotskyist movement. Healy's Socialist Labour League filed lawsuits against
Peace News and
Socialist Leader for repeating the allegations, threatening them with bankruptcy, prompting the two publications to issue retractions and a public apology to Gerry Healy “for having published the suggestion that he employs violence or seeks to curtail freedom of expression” on 9 and 10 December 1966 respectively., The incident resulted in
Isaac Deutscher, who had previously been a contributor to Healy's publications, summoning both Healy and Tate to his home where he "upbraided" Healy for his alleged thuggery and broke off relations with him. The SLL became the
Workers' Revolutionary Party in 1973. ==Workers Revolutionary Party==