Gerry Healy
Thomas Gerard Healy, known as
Gerry Healy, (
December 3,
1913 in
Cork,
Ireland -
December 14,
1989) was a
Trotskyist activist. He emigrated to
England and worked as a ship
radio operator at the age of 14. He soon joined the
Communist Party of Great Britain, but then left to join the Trotskyist
Militant Group in
1937. He then left to become one of the founders of the
Workers International League, led by
Jock Haston and Ralph Lee.
Healy's period in the WIL was difficult and he threatened to resign several times and was actually expelled and readmitted. He was in the group when it came to form the
Revolutionary Communist Party, but grew closer to the leadership of the
Fourth International, effectively the leadership of the American
Socialist Workers Party and their representative in Britain,
Sam Gordon. They encouraged Healy to form a
faction, and to take that group into the
Labour Party. In
1950, he was rewarded as the RCP voted to dissolve itself into his faction, which became known as
The Club.
In
1953, Healy joined the split in the Fourth International instigated by
James P. Cannon and was soon nominal leader of the
International Committee of the Fourth International. The Club recruited a substantial number of former members of the
Communist Party of Great Britain after they became disillusioned with
Stalinism after the
Twentieth Congress of the Soviet Communist Party which brought
Khrushchev's allegations about
Stalin and the defeat of the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956. This qualitatively changed the ability of Healy's group to carry out activity and they launched
The Newsletter as a regular weekly paper in
1958. He reconstituted The Club as the
Socialist Labour League in 1959, and then in
1973 as the
Workers Revolutionary Party.
In 1974 a group of members around
Alan Thornett, then a leading militant in the automobile industry at Cowley, departed from the party. Part of this group would form the
Workers Socialist League. From this point the WRP lost members and became ever more isolated from the rest of the
labour movement. However, they remained sizeable and wealthy enough to produce a daily
newspaper. Much of the monies for this printing enterprise coming from subsidies and printing contracts with various
Middle Eastern regimes as internal reports later proved. They supplemented their income by printing newspapers for leading figures of the Labour Left such as
George Galloway and the
Labour Herald for Ted Knight, a former member of the SLL, and
Ken Livingstone. Healy forged a friendship with Livingstone. The Herald also served as a vehicle for the WRP limited
entrist operation in this period.
Healy's regime within The Club, SLL and WRP was marked by demands for a high level of activism. The beating of opponents too had long been a cause for concern as with the famous beating of
Ernie Tate in
1966. By
1985, concern as to Healy's links with the
Libyan and
Iraqi governments had risen within the WRP to the point at which the group imploded. the final straw being revelations from long time associate Aileen Jennings concerning Healy's alleged (but never proven) abuse of female members of his movement. Healy described the allegations as a smokescreen for those who had become disappointed with revolutionary politics, following the defeat of the miners' strike. The result was that Jennings disappeared and the WRP collapsed into many tiny, competing, groups.
Healy was expelled from the WRP and it promptly split in two. One version of the group producing a version of their daily paper headlined "Healy Expelled" while his WRP produced a totally different version. Healy's WRP continued until what he saw as unconstitutional manoeuvres by the Torrance leadership led him to form another new group. Formed in
1987, the
Marxist Party had very few members, but did retain the allegiance of
Vanessa Redgrave, the best known member of the WRP. In his old age Healy would claim that the disintegration of the WRP was due to the intervention of
MI5 and came to the conclusion that
Mikhail Gorbachev represented the looked for
political revolution in the USSR.
Healy died at the age of 76 in the UK from natural causes. He is depicted as Frank Hood of the Hoodlums in
Tariq Ali's satire
Redemption (Chatto & Windus 1990 ISBN 0701133945).
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The Lubitz TrotskyanaNet provides a bio-bibliographical sketch on Gerry Healy