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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/attlee2_4152.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:250: [[BoringButPractical All substance and no show.]]]]
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4->''Few thought he was even a starter''\
5''There were those who thought themselves smarter''\
6''But he ended PM,''\
7''CH and OM,''\
8''An Earl and a Knight of the Garter.''
9-->-- '''Clement Attlee'''
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11Clement Richard Attlee, [[UsefulNotes/KnightFever 1st Earl Attlee KG OM CH PC FRS]] (3 January 1883 – 8 October 1967) was a British Labour politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1945 to 1951 and was voted the greatest Prime Minister of all time in a 2004 poll of British politics professors. He was Deputy Prime Minister under UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill in the wartime coalition government and then won a landslide election victory in 1945. He was the first Labour Prime Minister to serve a full Parliamentary term and the first to have a majority in Parliament.
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13Born to a well-off London family, he became a [[{{UsefulNotes/Socialism}} socialist]] after he personally saw the horrific conditions of the British working class during the early 1900's while working in a charity club. During UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, he served in the army (reaching the rank of Major) and served in the Gallipoli Campaign, the notorious military disaster organised by his future political rival UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill.[[note]]Despite getting seriously wounded at Gallipoli (a piece of shrapnel passed through his leg), he considered the campaign a basically good idea that had been badly executed by commanders on the ground.[[/note]] He became very involved in Labour Party politics following the war, winning in 1922 a seat in Parliament representing the very poverty-stricken Limehouse constituency in London. Attlee was one of the few Labour [=MPs=] to keep hold of his seat after the disastrous 1931 general election,[[note]](and even, only just; he retained his seat by a little over five hundred votes, and was helped by the opposition vote being split between the Conservative candidate and one nominated by the newly-formed British Union of Fascists)[[/note]] which saw the party virtually wiped out and only avoid reduction to third-party status by virtue of the Liberal Party splintering into three different factions. In the aftermath, he became deputy to new Labour leader George Lansbury, as the only person who really wanted the job.
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15When Lansbury resigned barely a month before the next general election, Attlee was left holding the reins through the campaign, and did a creditable job of bringing the party back from the brink of extinction. While he was challenged for the party leadership after the election by Herbert Morrison and Arthur Greenwood, Attlee ultimately emerged as the new permanent leader after a backroom deal with Greenwood, who subsequently replaced him as deputy leader. Attlee would lead the party continuously for 20 years (from October 1935 to December 1955)--the longest-serving Labour leader by a country mile[[note]](Not counting Keir Hardie, who had a combined 15 years as leader of the party and its predecessor, the Labour Representation Committee, the next longest two, UsefulNotes/HaroldWilson and UsefulNotes/TonyBlair, served 13 years apiece)[[/note]]. Whilst he was Leader of the Opposition, he opposed UsefulNotes/NevilleChamberlain's policy of appeasement, at times viciously, and called the Munich agreement "a victory for brute force." He formed a Coalition government with Churchill and served in the war cabinet as Deputy Prime Minister from 1940 to 1945. Then in 1945, when the national unity government broke up and an election was held in July 1945, Labour unexpectedly won a landslide victory. While voters respected Churchill's war record, they were sceptical about his ability to govern in peacetime and were won over by Labour's plans to rebuild the economy and create a welfare state. It didn't help that Churchill, against the advice of basically everyone, made a catastrophically ill-judged election broadcast, in which he foolishly claimed that a Labour government would need to suppress dissent by means of "some sort of Gestapo." Attlee made a broadcast the following night in which he calmly rebutted everything Churchill had said, making Churchill seem partisan and near-hysterical.
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17Attlee's [[BoringButPractical laconic, unglamorous personality]] makes him seem colourless next to Churchill, but he was a supremely effective politician, as Churchill recognised; Attlee and Churchill were the only constant members of Churchill's War Cabinet from its formation in 1940 to the 1945 general election.[[note]]Churchill also respected Attlee's war record, which had involved considerably more hazard and suffering than his own, and was scrupulous about referring to Attlee in the house as "the [right] honourable and gallant gentleman", the correct format for referring to an MP who's been a military officer.[[/note]] He has been regarded as a [[HeroWithBadPublicity good person with bad publicity]] - the Sunday Times political journalist Stephen Margach noted that the generally conservative British press went far beyond what was necessary or fair in their attacks on him: "I have never known the Press so consistently and irresponsibly political, slanted and prejudiced". Perhaps the most well-known attack on Attlee was a joke which went "An empty taxi drew up outside 10 Downing Street and Clement Attlee got out of it"--a quote sometimes attributed to Churchill, who strenuously denied it, although when Harry Truman said to Churchill of Attlee "He seems a modest sort of fellow," Churchill did reply "He's got a lot to be modest about."[[note]]Actually, Churchill and Attlee had a cordial relationship, especially when they were both no longer in government; Churchill disliked people telling jokes about Attlee, and Attlee disliked people complaining about Churchill's windbag tendencies.[[/note]] Still, Attlee's lack of a forceful personality in public hid his very real skills in organising a government, where he managed to successfully work with members of his Cabinet for six years without much difficulty (at least until the very end) in spite of the major issues plaguing the country.
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19He put in place the Keynesian economic structure that, known as the "post-war consensus", remained the cornerstone of UK policy until the election of UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher ushered in a new era of neoliberalism. With the widespread backing of the working class, Attlee helped create the modern British welfare state: government national insurance programs were expanded, free secondary education became a right, worker and union rights reached new highs, and housing programs were put in place to put his citizens back into homes after the chaos of the war years. Most importantly, Attlee's government nationalised many important industries and services, including the coal mines, the railroads and other infrastructure, electricity and gas services, and the steel industry; roughly one fifth of the British economy was nationalised by the time his premiership ended. His most stunning accomplishment was the creation of the UsefulNotes/NationalHealthService, the United Kingdom's legendary single-payer healthcare system which became the model for many other national healthcare plans. It remains extremely popular among Britons to this day, with even Thatcher deciding not to privatise it. Despite the daunting challenge of transitioning from a wartime to a peacetime economy, unemployment was decreased to nearly 2% and social inequality actually reduced, and he did all of this while running budget surpluses (at least until the UK entered UsefulNotes/TheKoreanWar). He also dealt with the decolonisation of much of the British Empire (specifically the lands that are now UsefulNotes/{{India}}, UsefulNotes/{{Pakistan}}, UsefulNotes/{{Bangladesh}}, UsefulNotes/{{Burma}}, UsefulNotes/SriLanka, UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}, UsefulNotes/PalestinianTerritories, and UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}) and the development of [[UsefulNotes/UltimateDefenceOfTheRealm British nuclear weapons]]. The British nuclear power program with the - explicitly dual use - "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnox Magnox]]" reactor [[note]]a natural uranium fueled, graphite moderated, gas cooled reactor capable of producing both power and weapons grade plutonium - the Soviet RBMK (Of {{UsefulNotes/Chernobyl}} infamy) was designed with similar goals - similar to the RBMK, the Magnox had several design flaws due to being a MasterOfNone but unlike the RBMK, it did not have the glaring safety issues. Its successor, the "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Gas-cooled_Reactor Advanced Gas Cooled Reactor]]" (AGR) explicitly foregoes both the "natural uranium fueled" and the "capable of producing weapon's grade plutonium" design goals and thus eliminates some but not all of the Magnox's flaws[[/note]] also originated in his time in office even though it did not produce the first operating power reactor until after he had left office. [[TheAce And he did it all in just five years.]]
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21Attlee, therefore, has a decent shot at second place in the rankings of Prime Ministers. One poll even ranked him first. When his record is criticised, it is generally for being too naive towards the Soviet Union (at one point giving them plans for new British jet engine breakthroughs, which they proceeded to use against British forces in UsefulNotes/TheKoreanWar) and for difficult relations with the United States. The latter, however, is not entirely his fault: after the war, Britain was in a dire economic situation whereas the USA was doing exceptionally well, and Truman was not the only senior US figure who was reflexively wary of the Labour party's explicitly socialist policies regarding health care, nationalisation of industry and social welfare. The United States had entered the war late, and had (as US historian Stephen Ambrose points out) walked away with the spoils of it, entering a period of unprecedented post-war prosperity, whereas Britain was facing a massive national debt and living off rationing. Nevertheless, Attlee and Truman hit it off personally, having similarly laconic and undemonstrative personalities, and they found common ground as fellow veterans of the First World War; it's just that the USA was quietly withdrawing from a partnership that Attlee hoped would continue. Attlee improved on the foreign policy field as he went on, partly thanks to his excellent Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, and his position on the USSR went from general wariness to regarding them as definitely an enemy of stability in Europe. Not surprisingly, he welcomed the Marshall Plan, and was instrumental in forming UsefulNotes/{{NATO}}, as well as being an enthusiastic supporter of the fledgling UsefulNotes/UnitedNations.
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23Attlee's government came to end in 1951. In 1950, they were re-elected after serving a full term and but with an unworkably small majority, so another election was held in 1951: however, several senior figures in the government had died, including Bevin, and Attlee himself was deeply weary, having been in government continually since 1940. The 1951 had the odd result of Labour narrowly winning the most votes (a record 13.9 million votes; the only times this has been surpassed were by the Conservatives in 1992 and again in 2019) but it was the Conservatives who won a majority instead, due to some very weird technicalities and quirks in the British political system.[[note]]Not just the British one: a similar thing happened in the US presidential election of 2016, with Hillary Clinton winning more votes, but winning them in states that returned fewer electoral votes than her rival, Donald Trump.[[/note]] It did not help that two major figures in his government, Aneurin Bevan and UsefulNotes/HaroldWilson, resigned not long before the election, which split the Labour Party and gave the Conservatives a major advantage. Attlee still led Labour as Leader of the Opposition for the next few years, with Churchill back in the premiership, and published an autobiography in 1954. He retired after a second defeat in 1955, and was elevated to the House of Lords. In his last few years, Attlee publicly called for the decriminalisation of homosexual acts, which happened just months before his death. He lived to see Wilson become the Prime Minister, and his party back in power for the first time in over a decade, before dying in 1967.
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25Certainly, with the possible exception of UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher and UsefulNotes/BorisJohnson (and even in the latter's case, mostly through actions he took before becoming PM), no British Prime Minister since 1945 has inculcated such profound transformation of the political, cultural and economic landscape of Great Britain since Clement Attlee. Thatcher herself (along with UsefulNotes/HaroldWilson) considered him to be the greatest PM of her own lifetime, because though she disagreed with his views, she admired how effectively and radically he had implemented them, describing him as "all substance and no show" and "a serious man and a patriot". Attlee's historical reputation suffered on account of him being the man who unseated UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill, but nowadays he is remembered as the father of the National Health Service and one of the greatest Prime Ministers in British history. It wouldn't be until late in UsefulNotes/TheNewTens, following a major rightward shift in the country's overall political landscape, that Attlee's reputation finally started coming under sustained attack from conservative commentators, who've typically accused him of creating an overly centralised, tax-heavy economy that would end up causing major problems in the 1970s. However, these attacks rely on the idea that Churchill would have rebuilt the country into more of a free market economy had he remained in power after the war, something that would have been politically untenable given the country's war-torn state (not to mention that it would have been the opposite approach to virtually every other major country's governments of the time). More pertinently, not only did Churchill not reverse Attlee's reforms to any significant degree after he returned to power, nor did any of the other Conservative [=PMs=] until Thatcher, making it hard for Attlee alone to be blamed for any issues that may have resulted from them.
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27He was, as noted above, famously laconic. In contrast to Churchill, Attlee was not a prolific writer and most of his notes on political papers tended to consist of 'Yes', 'No', his initials (to show that he'd read a document) or a tick. He published an autobiography, ''As It Happened'', in 1954; he himself suspected that it wasn't very interesting, and his cabinet colleague Hugh Dalton commented "No statesman not an Englishman could have written such a book." He once summoned a junior minister to No. 10 and told him that he was fired; when the minister asked why, Attlee replied "Not up to the job." When asked by his official biographer if he had any feelings about Christianity, or life after death, he said "Believe in the ethics of Christianity. Can't believe in the mumbo jumbo." On another occasion he grew so exasperated with the interference of the Chairman of the Labour Party, the more militant Harold Laski, that he wrote him a letter that concluded "[[SarcasmMode A period of silence from you would be welcome.]]"
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29He was also the first UK Prime Minister to admit to not believing in any sort of God.
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31!!Clement Attlee in fiction:
32* In ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' episode ''The Dreaded Batter Pudding Hurler of Bexhill-Upon-Sea'' it is heavily implied that UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill threw a batter pudding at Attlee.
33* In the final episode of ''Series/GoodnightSweetheart'', the main character saves Attlee's life.
34* In ''Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years'' he's played by Norman Jones as a conscientious committee member trying to get a SleazyPolitician to tell the truth, who's then scuppered by the fact that the head of his own committee is secretly on the side of the Sleazy Politician, and lets the guy off the hook.
35* In ''Edward and Mrs. Simpson'', he's played by Creator/PatrickTroughton. Which may add [[Franchise/DoctorWho Time Lord]] to the list of his accomplishments.
36* In the 1974 film ''The Gathering Storm'', starring Creator/RichardBurton as Churchill, Attlee is played by Creator/PatrickStewart, who bears a remarkable resemblance to him. He's depicted as a ReasonableAuthorityFigure, demanding that there be accountability in the government for the failure of the Allied campaign in Norway.
37* In ''Literature/WorldWarZ'', one character near the end refers to Attlee as a "third-rate mediocrity" whose only claim to fame was unseating Churchill and having UsefulNotes/WorldWarII end on his watch. To say that his judgment is quite [[ArtisticLicenseHistory inaccurate]] would be an {{understatement}}.
38* In ''Film/IntoTheStorm2009'' he's played by Creator/BillPaterson as a calm and laconic {{Foil}} to Churchill himself.
39* ''Film/DarkestHour'' has a highly unsympathetic and relentlessly inaccurate depiction of Attlee as a loud-mouthed, angry {{Jerkass}}, played by David Schofield.
40* Portrayed in the first season of ''Series/TheCrown'' by Simon Chandler, which briefly takes place during his premiership; however, the bulk of the series is set following Churchill's return to office and his to Leader of the Opposition.

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