Dianne Hayter
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The 1981 deputy leadership contest
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The 1981 deputy leadership election is now recognised as the high water mark of Bennism but at the time it was viewed by many as another step to a more left-wing party. Few would have predicted that Benn would be out of parliament and thus unable to contest the leadership only two years later. Indeed, his nomination for the deputy leadership was viewed as the forerunner of a challenge for the leadership. The deputy leadership vote was the first use of the Electoral College, and it produced for Healey a victory which would have been denied him had the College been segmented into thirds. The 1981 contest was Benn's last chance of high office (he lost his Shadow Cabinet place in November) and led to the Tribune–Campaign Group split. For the traditional right, it demonstrated (and rewarded) their organisational effectiveness (which had been lacking in the late 1970s).

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Labour’s traditional right in the 1970s and 1980s

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