Elected to Parliament in the
Attlee landslide at the
1945 general election, Thomas held
Cardiff Central between 1945 and 1950, and
Cardiff West between 1950 and his retirement from the
Commons at the
1983 general election. When the Labour Party came to power under
Harold Wilson in 1964, Thomas was made joint
Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department, In April 1966 he was appointed
Minister of State for Wales, and was one of the first on the scene of the
Aberfan disaster in October 1966. Thomas initially showed sympathy to the people of the village, where a
NCB colliery
spoil tip slid down a hillside and engulfed houses and a primary school, killing 144 people, 116 of them children. Disagreements subsequently arose, when Thomas refused to order the removal of the other tips surrounding the village, for which the villagers were campaigning. When the government ultimately acceded to the demands for removal, it took £150,000 from the Aberfan relief fund – raised to help the victims of the disaster and their families – in part payment of the costs. Just over 30 years later, the money was refunded by the newly appointed
Secretary of State for Wales Ron Davies who described it as, "a wrong that needed to be righted." In early 1967 he became
Minister of State for Commonwealth Affairs. As
Secretary of State for Wales from 1968 to 1970 he presided over the investiture of the
Prince of Wales at
Caernarfon Castle in 1969. Thomas was fervently attached to the
Royal Family and also strongly opposed to
Plaid Cymru, and particularly to the
Welsh Language Society. In 1974 Thomas was elected
Chairman of Ways and Means and Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons. Two years later he succeeded Selwyn Lloyd as
Speaker of the House of Commons. The first broadcasting of parliamentary proceedings (although only the sound was broadcast until 1989, not live pictures) brought him unprecedented public attention, but he proved more impartial than party colleagues had expected. In June 1983 he retired and, a month later, on 11 July 1983, he was raised to the peerage with a
hereditary peerage as Viscount Tonypandy, of Rhondda in the County of Mid Glamorgan. Thomas's was the last creation of a Viscountcy for a non-royal person in the UK;
William Whitelaw, who is often cited as the last such creation, received his in June 1983, a month earlier than Thomas. The same year he was the subject of the television show
This Is Your Life, when he was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews at London's
Royal Albert Hall, ahead of a charity concert for the
National Children's Homes. In the
House of Lords Thomas was an
outspoken critic of the
European Union and the
Maastricht Treaty, and in a June 1993 debate, he endorsed
Margaret Thatcher's comments and defended her after
Roy Jenkins had criticised her similar "extreme" views against further European sociopolitical integration. Thomas's opposition to
Welsh nationalism was finally expressed in hostility to the
Blair government's devolution proposals of 1997. He was asked by Robert Hodge, son of Sir
Julian Hodge, to be a member of the steering committee of the "Just Say No" campaign (which opposed devolution in 1997). Despite ailing from cancer, Thomas agreed to a ceremonial role and became president. Other known persons in the movement included
Nick Bourne,
David Davies (Monmouth MP) and
Alun Cairns. During that year, he also gave his very high-profile endorsement of Sir
James Goldsmith's
Referendum Party, believing that the European Union was compromising the sovereignty of Parliament. He also wrote the foreword to Adrian Hilton's book on this issue,
The Principality and Power of Europe. Outside Parliament, Lord Tonypandy was Chairman of the
Bank of Wales between 1985 and 1991. A portrait of Thomas in the robes of the Speaker is part of the Parliamentary Art Collection. ==Personal life==