No doubt one of the enemy within. Interestingly the BBC echews any detail of Abse's political books. Now I wonder why?
**Synopsis
In this volume, reforming parliamentarian Leo Abse presents an analysis of Tony Blair. Originally published in 1996, the author has revised the book to scrutinize Blair's premiership years. In an investigation of Blair's psyche, Abse deploys psychoanalytsical scholarship to consider the forces and influences that have driven Blair. He exmaines the house of secrets in which Blair was reared, where the promiscuous grandmother forever cast a shadow, where the legitimate stricken father - authoritative, ambitious and politically unstable - dominated the household, and where death unfairly invaded the family domain. Abse goes on to show how the traumatic effects of Balir's childhood left him a loner, an estranged man who sought to resolve his private dilemmas in rock music and religion and then, belatedly, in politics.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/7572163.stm
Gay rights champion Leo Abse dies
Gay rights champion and former MP Leo Abse has died at the age of 91, according to a family friend.
The former Labour MP for Pontypool and then Torfaen died at Charing Cross Hospital, west London, on Tuesday night after a short illness.
Mr Abse guided a Private Member's Bill through Parliament in 1967 that legalised sex between men.
He was also credited with helping to liberalise divorce laws through the 1969 Divorce Reform Act.
Leo Abse was seen as a crusading backbencher |
Mr Abse, who was in the Commons for nearly 30 years, is survived by his second wife Ania.
On his website, Mr Abse, who was born in Cardiff in 1917 and lived in Chiswick, west London, was described as being politically active from an early age.
According to his website: "In 1944, while serving with the RAF in the Middle East, he was arrested and detained for political activities following upon his contribution to the setting-up of a Forces Mock Parliament in Cairo - an episode that precipitated a parliamentary debate in Westminster."
On returning to Britain he became a solicitor and founded his practice Leo Abse and Cohen, based in south Wales, in 1951.
It now employs around 150 people and has offices in Swansea and Newport as well as Cardiff, where it is one of the city's biggest solicitor firms.
He became an an MP in a by-election in Pontypool in 1958 and remained until his retirement at 70 in 1987.
He remained in parliament for 29 years, holding the seat for Pontypool from 1958 to 1983 and then Torfaen from 1983 - 1987.
Having inspired nine Private Member's Acts, he was noted as one of Britain's top social reformers and was well known for his flamboyant style.
In a statement, the firm said: "The partners and everyone at Leo Abse and Cohen are deeply saddened by the news.
"Leo Abse was both the founding partner and a former senior partner of the firm.
"His contribution was immense, not only to us as a firm but also to the wider legal world in Wales and beyond, both as an accomplished lawyer, and in his role as a respected and groundbreaking law maker.
Mr Abse wrote political books based on his interest in psychoanalysis |
"He laid the foundations for the firm almost 60 years ago and his core belief in 'access to justice for all' continues to be instilled in the philosophy of our work today."
Torfaen Council leader Bob Wellington said Mr Abse was a "great politician" who "was never scared to start debates on subjects which other MPs avoided".
"Leo Abse was small in stature but he was an intellectual giant," he said.
"He was a great parliamentarian who championed the rights of his constituents for nearly 30 years with a passion and tenacity that left its mark on the borough and right across the UK through significant legal reform.
"Leo spoke regularly on national issues in Parliament but never forgot his main priority, the people of Torfaen.
"He will be sorely missed and can rightly be termed Britain's top reformer of the century."
Family
Mr Abse was the son of Rudolf Abse, a Jewish solicitor and cinema owner who lived in Cardiff.
His younger brother is Dannie Abse, a renowned poet.
He attended Howard Gardens High School in Cardiff followed by the London School of Economics where he studied law.
In 1955 he married Marjorie Davies, an artist with a national reputation for her fabrique collage work and head of the pedagogic department at Cardiff College of Art.
They had two children: Tobias, a lecturer in European History, and Bathsheba, one-time curator of the Keats Museum in Rome and now married to an Italian diplomat.
After Marjorie's death in 1996, he married Ania Czepulkowska, a young Polish artist holding a Royal College Masters degree, in 2000.
Since his retirement he has written political books based on his interest in psychoanalysis.