In
World War II, Zilliacus worked for the
Ministry of Information and joined the
1941 Committee.
Election to parliament He was elected as Member of Parliament for
Gateshead in 1945 and became known as a left-wing critic of government foreign policy.
Expulsion from Labour party Zilliacus was frequently accused of being a communist because he was sympathetic to
Soviet policies and frequently contributed articles to liberal British publications, but he was not affiliated with the
Communist Party of Great Britain. In 1947
George Orwell called him one of the "crypto-communists in Westminster." 1949, Zilliacus voted against joining
NATO and remained an open critic of
Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and his
anti-Soviet policies. In 1949, he was expelled from the party, along with
Leslie Solley. To compensate, he helped found the
Labour Independent Group, although he would later leave the group when it supported
Joseph Stalin over
Josip Broz Tito. He sought re-election in the
1950 general election, but he lost his seat to Labour Party candidate
Arthur Moody. Zilliacus was also sympathetic to
Yugoslavia. During the
show-trial of
Rudolf Slánský in Czechoslovakia in 1952, Slánský was
forced to confess that he had given information to Zilliacus while "planning the restoration of capitalism in Czechoslovakia"; an accusation Zilliacus dismissed as "quite fantastic". Zilliacus spoke in many places to a wide ranging audience including The Workers Circle Friendly Society at Stoke Newington Town Hall.
Return to parliament In 1952, he was readmitted to the Labour Party, and he won the
Manchester Gorton constituency in the
1955 general election. He held the seat until his death, on 6 July 1967. He became a founder member of the
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and in 1961 was suspended from the party for several months for writing an article for a Czech magazine. Zilliacus was a prominent pacifist, pushing for less spending on arms and nuclear testing during the 1950s and
opposing the Vietnam War during the 1960s. He died of
leukemia, aged 72. According to one historian, Zilliacus died "an unrepentant admirer of both
Harold Wilson and
N. S. Khrushchev". == Personal life ==