Marcus Lipton

Marcus Lipton

Marcus Lipton OBE (29 October 1900 – 22 February 1978) was a British Labour Party politician.

Lipton was educated at Bede Grammar School, Sunderland, and Merton College, Oxford with a scholarship. He studied law and was called to the Bar in 1926. He was a Corporal in the Royal Army Pay Corps Territorial Army and was commissioned into the Army Educational Corps in 1941, rising to Lieutenant-Colonel by the end of the Second World War.

Lipton ran a free advice surgery in Brixton, south London from 1933, and was elected to Stepney Borough Council in 1934; he became an alderman of Lambeth Metropolitan Borough Council in 1937 serving until 1959. He was elected Member of Parliament for Brixton in the 1945 general election. In 1974, the seat became Lambeth Central.

Lipton used parliamentary privilege to question Prime Minister Anthony Eden about the alleged Third Man, Kim Philby. Philby used the press and the law to force Lipton to withdraw his comments, although Philby was subsequently unmasked as a Soviet spy.

In 1964 Lipton brought up the case of the missing Lionel Crabb, again using parliamentary privilege.

Lipton was still a Member of Parliament at his death in 1978. In the last years of his life, he had notably criticised pop/rock acts as diverse as the Sex Pistols and the Bay City Rollers. A youth centre in Lambeth is named after him.

He gave a tour of Parliament a 13-year-old constituent in the 1950s, John Major, sparking a political ambition that would lead Major to becoming Conservative Prime Minister.[1]

References

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Nigel Colman
Member of Parliament for Brixton
1945Feb 1974
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for Lambeth Central
Feb 19741978
Succeeded by
John Tilley



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