Longford began visiting prisoners in the 1930s when he was a city councillor in Oxford, and continued to do so every week, all around the country, until shortly before his death in 2001. Among the thousands he befriended and helped were a small number of individuals who had committed the most notorious crimes, including child murderer
Myra Hindley. In 1956, he set up New Bridge Foundation, an organisation that aimed to help prisoners stay in touch with society and integrate them back into it. New Bridge set up
Inside Time in 1990, the only national newspaper for the UK's prison population. , novelist and journalist
Rachel Billington, Longford's daughter, worked at the title one day a week. Longford organised many debates on prison reform in the House of Lords from the 1950s onward, and in 1963 chaired the commission whose report recommended reform in sentencing policy and the establishment of a
parole system. Longford was a leading figure in the
Nationwide Festival of Light of 1971, protesting against the commercial exploitation of sex and violence, and advocating the teaching of Christ as the key to recovering moral stability in the nation. His anti-pornography campaigning made him the subject of derision and he was labelled by the press as
Lord Porn when he and former prison doctor Christine Temple-Saville set out on a wide-ranging tour of sex industry establishments in the early 1970s to compile a self-funded report. when "Lord Porn" was in the midst of the debacle of a much-lampooned anti-pornography crusade against "indecency", giving rise to more allegations of hypocrisy than had already resulted from his tours of sex clubs. In 1977, 11 years after Hindley was convicted of two murders and being an accessory to a third murder, Longford appeared on television and spoke openly of his belief that Hindley should now be considered for parole as she had shown clear signs of progress in prison and now served long enough for the
Parole Board to assess her suitability for parole. He also supported Hindley's claims that her role in the Moors Murders was merely that of an unwilling accessory, rather than an active participant, and that she had only taken part due to Brady's abuse and threats. These claims were aired in the inaugural episode of
Brass Tacks, which featured arguments for and against Hindley being considered for parole. Ann West, the mother of Lesley Ann Downey, spoke out against the suggestion of Hindley ever being paroled, and openly told viewers that she would kill Hindley if she ever was released. In 1985, he condemned the Parole Board's decision not to consider Hindley's release for another five years as "barbaric". His campaign for Hindley continued even after she admitted to two more murders in 1986, which further strengthened media and public suspicion that Hindley’s reported rehabilitation and remorse were nothing more than a ploy to boost her chances of gaining parole. There was also similar doubt over Hindley’s claims that she had only taken part in the killings due to being bullied and blackmailed by Brady. In 1990,
Home Secretary David Waddington ruled that
"life should mean life" for Hindley, who had been told by earlier Home Secretaries and
High Court judges that she would have to serve a minimum of 25 and then 30 years before being considered for parole. Hindley was not informed of the decision until December 1994, following a High Court ruling that all life sentence prisoners had to be informed of their minimum sentences, and Longford later expressed his "disgust" at this ruling, comparing her imprisonment to that of Jews in Nazi Germany. By this time Hindley, who had initially thought that having "friends in high places" could only help her cause, had cut off all contact and communication with him, now considering him a liability whose "campaigning" was little more than publicity-seeking on his own behalf. She did regain contact with him again following this, however. In February 1997, the latest Home Secretary, Michael Howard, reaffirmed the ruling that Hindley should never be freed. Subsequent Hime Secretaries Jack Straw and David Blunkett also agreed with the ruling. Hindley appealed against her whole life tariff in the
High Court in December 1997, November 1998 and March 2000, but each appeal was rejected. Longford maintained that she was a reformed character who was no longer a threat to society, and had qualified for parole. He regularly commented, along with several other Hindley supporters, that she was a "
political prisoner" who was being kept in prison for votes, to serve the interests of a succession of Home Secretaries and their respective governments. Home Office files would later reveal that in 1975 Longford had also lobbied various government ministers, including the Home Secretary Roy Jenkins, on Brady's behalf, as well. This resulted in Brady obtaining special treatment while remaining in the prison hospital, rather than being returned to the segregation unit. This gave him access to adolescent "youth custody" inmates; he was only removed from this privileged situation in 1982, after he was accused by several underage inmates of sexual assault. Unlike Hindley, Brady never wanted to be paroled, and remained in custody for more than 50 years until his death in May 2017 at the age of 79. In March 1996, Longford backed up Hindley's claim in an
Oxford University magazine that she was still in prison so that the Conservative government – trailing in the opinion polls since the autumn of 1992 – would win more votes. This claim was met with anger by the mothers of two of the Moors Murders victims, including Ann West, who remained at the centre of the campaign to ensure that Hindley was never released, and once again vowed to kill Hindley if she was set free. This came just weeks after the announcement that the Parole Board had declared Hindley as a low risk prisoner and recommended her transfer to an open prison. Two years later, she was moved to a medium security prison. Longford regularly condemned the media - especially
The Sun newspaper - for its "exploitation" of Ann West. In 1986, Longford reportedly told Ann West that unless she forgave Hindley and Brady, she would not go to
heaven when she died. He also commented that he was "tremendously sorry for her, but letting her decide Myra's fate would be ludicrous". Hindley died in November 2002, having never been paroled - her death coming just over a week before a legal victory for another prisoner which stripped the Home Secretary of the power to set minimum terms for life sentence prisoners, and which had been widely expected to have secured Hindley’s release. The story of Longford's campaign to free Hindley was told in the
Channel 4 film
Longford in 2006. Longford was played by
Jim Broadbent (who won a
BAFTA for his role) and Hindley was played by
Samantha Morton. ==Decriminalisation of homosexuality==