In his 1992 autobiographical work
A Historian in the Twentieth Century Beloff discusses his political journey. He had been at school a conservative, was then attracted to socialism once at university and became a liberal after the
Second World War. In 1962, during public debate of the case for a referendum on whether to join the
European Economic Community, he argued that a referendum is not meaningful unless clear alternatives are set before the electorate; in the absence of such clarity, "the electorate would... be doing no more than indicating a very general bias one way or another" ('"The Case against a Referendumˮ",
The Observer, 21 October 1962, p. 11). In the debate about educational standards in the 1960s, he found the
Labour government hostile to his idea of a university outside the state-financed framework and felt the
Liberal Party was "moving increasingly to the
left". That inclined him to join the Conservative Party upon his retirement in 1979. He received a
knighthood in 1980, and on 26 May 1981 he was created a
life peer, taking the title
Baron Beloff,
of Wolvercote in the County of Oxfordshire. He spoke often on educational and constitutional matters in the House of Lords and, outside of the chamber, continued to write. He was a strong
Eurosceptic and argued that Britain's history made it incompatible with membership of the
European Union, which led to him writing
Britain and European Union: Dialogue of the Deaf, published in 1996. In 1990 Lord Beloff was one of the leading historians behind the setting up of the History Curriculum Association. The Association advocated a more knowledge-based history curriculum in schools. It expressed "profound disquiet" at the way history was being taught in the classroom and observed that the integrity of history was threatened. In a House of Lords debate on 21 July 1989 he supported the two Lewes teachers, Chris McGovern and Dr Anthony Freeman who suffered redeployment following their criticism of the academic quality of what was then the new GCSE examination. He was a strong opponent of New Labour's
House of Lords Bill and gave many speeches in the chamber defending the hereditary principle; however, he died before the bill was passed. He gave his final speech in the House of Lords on 22 March 1999, the day he died. ==Career==