Independent Member for Maldon, 1942–45 When Driberg returned to Britain in March 1942 he found widespread public dissatisfaction with the government's conduct of the war. This mood was reflected in a series of parliamentary
by-elections in which candidates supporting the wartime
coalition government were defeated by independents – the major parties had agreed to a pact under which they would not contest by-elections in seats held by their respective parties. Driberg, in his column, generally welcomed this trend, while questioning "the merit of some of the candidates likely to get in if the reaction against the Party machines continues". On 12 May 1942 the death was announced of
Sir Edward Ruggles-Brise, the Conservative member for
Maldon—the constituency in which Bradwell Lodge was situated. Next day, Driberg requested three weeks' leave from his column to fight the
by-election. the
Express proprietor was unenthusiastic; an
editorial on 25 May drew attention to Driberg's individual viewpoint and stated that "The
Daily Express does not support his candidature". Commander Gen.
Neil Ritchie (centre, with pipe). The surrender of
Tobruk on 21 June 1942 after Ritchie's defeat at
Gazala may have contributed to Driberg's by-election victory. Driberg's campaign slogan was "A Candid Friend For Churchill", personally supportive but critical of many of the prime minister's circle. The lacklustre campaign of his
right-wing Conservative opponent helped to secure Driberg a wide range of support, from moderate Conservatives,
Liberals and
socialists. His fame as "William Hickey", and his stance as the only candidate with a home in the constituency, gave him a strong local profile. His previous Communist Party associations were not revealed. At the poll, on 25 June, he overturned a previous Conservative majority of 8,000 to finish 6,000 votes ahead of his opponent. In his war memoirs, Churchill called the result "one of the by-products of Tobruk" – which had
fallen to Rommel on 21 June following the recent
Battle of Gazala. Waugh, in his diary, remarked that the presentation of Driberg during the by-election merely as a journalist and churchwarden gave "a very imperfect picture of that sinister character". On 2 July 1942 Driberg cast his first vote in the
House of Commons, in support of Churchill against a rebel motion of censure on the government's conduct of the war. The rebels' case was put incompetently, which ensured that the motion gained only 25 votes, as against 477 cast for the government. Driberg delivered his
maiden speech on 7 July, in a debate on the use of propaganda. He called for the lifting of the ban on the Communist Party's newspaper, the
Daily Worker, which he saw as a potentially valuable weapon of home propaganda. In the following months he tabled questions and intervened in debates on behalf of various progressive causes. For example, on 29 September 1942 he asked the prime minister to "make friendly representations to the American military authorities asking them to instruct their men that the colour bar is not a custom in this country". He continued to write the Hickey column, and used his parliamentary salary to fund a constituency office in Maldon. In January 1943, while in
Edinburgh to campaign in another by-election, Driberg was caught by a policeman while in the act of
fellating a Norwegian sailor. In his own account of the incident Driberg records that he escaped arrest by identifying himself as "William Hickey" and as a member of parliament. These disclosures evidently overawed the constable, who took no further action; indeed, Driberg says, the incident began a chaste friendship with the officer that endured for more than ten years. Meanwhile, Beaverbrook had become disenchanted with him, and did not intervene when
Arthur Christiansen, the
Express editor, sacked the columnist in June 1943 over a story detrimental to a government minister,
Andrew Rae Duncan. Driberg subsequently signed up with
Reynolds News, a Sunday newspaper owned by
The Co-operative Group, and undertook a regular parliamentary column for the
New Statesman. He also contributed to a weekly BBC European Service broadcast until, in October 1943, he was banned after government pressure. He reported the post-
D-Day allied advances in France and Belgium as a war correspondent for
Reynolds News, and as a member of a parliamentary delegation witnessed the aftermath of the liberation of
Buchenwald concentration camp in April 1945.
Labour Member, 1945–55 with King
George VI, following the
Labour Party's election in 1945. Attlee served as prime minister from 1945 to 1951. In the
general election of July 1945 Driberg increased his majority at Maldon to 7,727. Before the election he had joined the Labour Party and had been welcomed by the local constituency party as their candidate. He was thus one of the 393 Labour MPs in the
landslide election victory that replaced Churchill as prime minister with
Clement Attlee. Within a few days of his victory, Driberg left for the Far East, to report on the conditions of the allied troops in
Burma. The Supreme Allied Commander,
Lord Mountbatten, knew him slightly and made him an unofficial temporary special adviser. In this role he met the Patriotic Burmese Forces leader,
Aung San, who impressed him as honest and incorruptible, "unlike some of the older Burmese politicians". Later, he visited
Saigon and offered to mediate with
Ho Chi Minh, who had recently declared an independent
Vietnam state. Driberg later maintained that, had his offer been taken up, he might have prevented the
Vietnam War. Because of his journalism, Driberg was a well-known figure within the Labour Party generally, and in 1949 was elected to the party's
National Executive Committee (NEC). With so small a majority, members' regular attendance in the Commons chamber became important; however, in August 1950 Driberg left the country for Korea, where Britain had joined the United States in a
United Nations military expedition to repel the North Korean invasion of the South. Driberg and a few other
left-wing MPs had objected to British involvement; In his
Reynolds News column, Driberg had written of "Tories (Conservatives) who ... cannot help baying their delight at the smell of blood in the air", a comment that caused outrage in parliament among the Conservative members. Whatever his reservations, Driberg's war dispatches to
Reynolds News were strongly supportive of the British troops. He participated in several night operations, and won respect from many of the soldiers for his courage despite, as one Marine put it "being a bit bent". In April 1951 the Labour government was hit by the resignations of three ministers—
Aneurin Bevan, the future prime minister
Harold Wilson, and
John Freeman—over the imposition of prescription charges to pay for an increased armaments programme. Driberg was sympathetic to the rebels, though he tried to find a basis for compromise that would avoid resignations. The former ministers strengthened the small Labour group known as "Keep Left", in which Driberg was prominent; the group would henceforth be known as "Bevanites". In the
October 1951 general election the Labour Party was defeated, and Churchill resumed office; Driberg held on to his Maldon seat by 704 votes. Through the years of Labour government he had neither received nor sought office, having what historian
Kenneth O. Morgan called a "backbench mindset". He still enjoyed aspects of his parliamentary life, such as in 1953 when he showed the American singing sensation
Johnnie Ray round the House of Commons; his attempts to seduce the singer were politely resisted. However, he needed to earn more money, and in the spring of 1952 responded to a suggestion that he should write a biography of Beaverbrook. The press lord was amenable, and work began in the summer of 1953. The project extended over several years, by which time Driberg was no longer in parliament; he had announced in March 1954 that he was standing down from Maldon, which at the
general election of May 1955 fell, as he had expected, to the Conservatives. ==Marriage==