(1974) Boothby was an unsuccessful parliamentary candidate for
Orkney and Shetland in 1923 and was elected as
Member of Parliament (MP) for
Aberdeen and Kincardine East in 1924. He held the seat until its abolition in 1950, when he was elected for its successor constituency of
East Aberdeenshire. Re-elected a final time in 1955, he gave up the seat in 1958 when he was raised to the peerage, triggering
a by-election. Boothby was
Parliamentary Private Secretary to
Chancellor of the Exchequer Winston Churchill from 1926 to 1929. He helped launch the
Popular Front in December 1936. He held junior ministerial office as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food in 1940. He was forced to resign his post and go to the back benches for not declaring an interest when asking a parliamentary question. During the
Second World War he joined the
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve and served as a junior staff officer with
Bomber Command, and later as a liaison officer with the
Free French Forces, retiring with the rank of
Flight Lieutenant. In 1950 he received the
Legion of Honour for his latter services. In 1954 (echoing words he had said in 1934), Boothby complained that for 30 years he had been advocating "a constructive policy on broad lines" but that this had not been taken up: "The doctrine of infallibility has always applied to the
Treasury and the
Bank of England". Boothby opposed
free trade in food stuffs, and claimed that such a policy would invalidate the
Agriculture Act 1947 and ruin British farmers. This
economic liberalism of the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Rab Butler, led to Boothby complaining that "The Tory Party have in fact become the
Liberal Party" and cited what the leader of the Liberal Party (
Clement Davies) had said to him about Butler: "Sir
Robert Peel has come again." In response, Davies claimed that Boothby "has been sitting on the wrong side of the House for many years. Undoubtedly he said tonight that he is the planner of planners. I do not believe in that kind of planning. The hon. Member seems to know better than the ordinary person what is good for the ordinary person, what he ought to buy, where he ought to buy it, where he ought to manufacture and everything else of that kind. There is the true Socialist". He was Vice-Chairman of the Committee on Economic Affairs, 1952–1956; Honorary President of the Scottish Chamber of Agriculture, 1934;
Rector of the University of St Andrews, 1958–1961; Chairman of the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, 1961–1963; and President, Anglo-
Israel Association, 1962–1975. He was awarded an Honorary LLD by St Andrews in 1959, and was made an Honorary
Burgess of the Burghs of
Peterhead,
Fraserburgh,
Turriff and
Rosehearty. He was appointed an Officer of the
Legion of Honour in 1950 and a
KBE in 1953. Boothby was raised to the peerage as a
life peer with the title
Baron Boothby, of
Buchan and
Rattray Head in the
County of Aberdeen, on 22 August 1958. There is a
blue plaque on his house in
Eaton Square, London. He was the subject of
This Is Your Life in October 1963, when he was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews at
BBC Television Centre.
Homosexual law reform During the 1950s, Boothby was a prominent advocate of decriminalising homosexual acts between men. In his memoirs, he wrote that he was determined to "do something practical to remove the fear and misery in which many of our most gifted citizens were then compelled to live". In December 1953, he sent a memorandum to
David Maxwell Fyfe, then the
Home Secretary, calling for the establishment of a departmental inquiry into homosexuality. He argued that:By attaching so fearful a stigma to homosexuality as such, you put a very large number of otherwise law-abiding and useful citizens on the other side of the fence which divides the good citizen from the bad. By making them feel that, instead of unfortunates they are social pariahs, you drive them into squalor – perhaps into crime; and produce that very "underground" which it is so clearly in the public interest to eradicate.Boothby premised his argument for law reform on the idea that it was the role of the state "not to punish psychological disorders – rather to try and cure them". After the Departmental Committee on Homosexual Offences and Prostitution recommended decriminalization in the
Wolfenden Report of 1957, Boothby claimed that, through his correspondence with Fyfe, he had been "primarily responsible" for the committee's establishment. ==Personal life==