British politician (1925-2014)
When we have a majority we will do it. I think the days of the Lords are quite genuinely numbered.
TONY BENN
Independent Radio News, November 12, 1976
Through talk, we tamed kings, restrained tyrants, averted revolution.
TONY BENN
attributed, The Changing Anatomy of Britain
I think there are two ways in which people are controlled. First of all frighten people and secondly, demoralize them.
TONY BENN
interview with Michael Moore, Sicko
Choice depends on the freedom to choose and if you are shackled with debt you don't have the freedom to choose.
TONY BENN
interview with Michael Moore, Sicko
Middle class Labour leaders are recaptured by the establishment when they die.
TONY BENN
Out of the Wilderness: Diaries, 1963-67
Well I came across Marx rather late in life actually, and when I read him, two things: first of all I realised that he'd come to the conclusion about capitalism which I'd come to much later, and I was a bit angry he'd thought of it first; and secondly, I see Marx who was an old Jew, as the last of the Old Testament Prophets, this old bearded man working in the British Library, studying capitalism, that's what 'Das Kapital' was about, it was an explanation of British capitalism. And I thought to myself, 'Well anyone could write a book like that, but what infuses, what comes out of his writing, is the passionate hostility to the injustice of capitalism. He was a Prophet, and so I put him in that category as an Old Testament Prophet.
TONY BENN
interview with John Cleary, February 23, 2003
People at the top do not want to share their power. They've always got some marvellous reason: I'm following my religion; I'm following the laws of economics. Even Stalin: I'm representing the vanguard of the working class, so please don't cause trouble. That is the battle that every generation has, and yet we mustn't be pessimistic about it.
TONY BENN
interview, "Hope is the Key", Share International, January 2003
I must tell the House quite frankly that if I were confronted with a Japanese at this present moment and were asked to tell him that I believed that he was wrong in the treatment of those British prisoners in his hands, I could not but accept a similar criticism from him on the question of the atom bomb. I should be quite unable to avoid it. I am afraid I must say on the question of principle here involved--this question of moral principle--that I believe it to be humbug, when so many people, women, children, old folk, were killed by the atom bombs at Nagasaki and Hiroshima. For every individual photograph that could be produced of a wounded and battered British prisoner of war in Japanese hands, I think one could find an equally horrible photograph of a victim of the atomic bomb.
TONY BENN
speech in the House of Commons, May 10, 1951
The crisis that we inherit when we come to power will be the occasion for fundamental change and not the excuse for postponing it.
TONY BENN
Speeches by Tony Benn
Freedom is defended by the ballot box and not by the Division Lobby. If the Liberal Party now says that freedom rests in Parliament instead of seeing itself as the guardian of freedom outside Parliament, no wonder it is a tiny minority.
TONY BENN
Office Without Power: Diaries 1968-72
For those without personal wealth or political authority a trade union card and a ballot paper are the only two routes to political power.
TONY BENN
Arguments for Democracy
If you file your waste-paper basket for 50 years, you have a public library.
TONY BENN
The Daily Telegraph, March 5, 1994
How can those Christians who see monetarism being so cruelly applied to the old, the sick, the homeless, women, the black community, and the young unemployed, lead a struggle against this injustice from within an established church subject to a Cabinet and a parliamentary majority composed of those very people who are responsible for implementing those very policies?
TONY BENN
speech to St. James' Church, Piccadilly, March 2, 1983
A quotation is what a speaker wants to say--unlike a soundbite which is all that an interviewer allows you to say.
TONY BENN
letter to Antony Jay, August 1996
Politicians are bound to indicate what they would hope to do if they are elected to parliament, and that is a perfectly legitimate means of securing support--but they are less ready to admit that it may be impossible to fulfil their commitments once elected.
TONY BENN
Letters to My Grandchildren
Secrecy in decision-making does not occur by accident or default. It is because knowledge is power, and no government willingly gives up power to the Commons, the public, or anyone else. Open government would disclose more about the processes of decision-making, including the workings of the Cabinet committee system, reveal the roles of officials and advisers, and involve both admitting and encouraging pressure upon ministers.... If parliamentary democracy is, as I believe, a unique system of government, partly because it allows us to learn from our own mistakes in time to correct them, the raw material of that experience must be made available in time to use it for that purpose.
TONY BENN
speech to a Press Gallery luncheon, February 14, 1977
The reason the members of parliament and prime ministers, with all their defects, have to listen is because the Day of Judgement comes on polling day, whereas the bankers, the World Trade Organization, the IMF, the Pope, the mullahs, the rabbis, don't have to listen -- because they are there. Some of them say they're there because God gave them power, others say they are following the inescapable conclusions of a market-related society. But whatever justification they give they aren't accountable and can't be removed -- and I will not be governed by people I can't get rid of.
TONY BENN
interview, "Hope is the Key", Share International, January 2003
But if there is hope, it lies in ordinary working people. When you put it in words it sounds reasonable: it is when you look at the human beings passing you on the pavement that it becomes an act of faith.
TONY BENN
Arguments for Socialism
The demand for more popular power is building up most insistently in industry, and the pressure for industrial democracy has now reached such a point that a major change is now inevitable, at some stage. What is happening is not just a respectful request for consultation before management promulgates its decisions. Workers are not going to be fobbed off with a few shares ... or by a carbon copy of the German system of co-determination. The campaign is very gradually crystallizing into a demand for real workers' control. However revolutionary the phrase may sound; however many Trotskyite bogeys it may conjure up, that is what is being demanded and that is what we had better start thinking about.
TONY BENN
The Times, September 5, 1970
Marxism is now a world faith and must be allowed to enter into a continuous dialogue with other world faiths, including religious faiths.
TONY BENN
lecture on Karl Marx, March 16, 1982