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Victor Mishcon, Baron Mishcon

British solicitor and Labour politician (1915–2006)


British solicitor and Labour politician (1915–2006)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Right Honourable
nameThe Lord Mishcon
honorific-suffixQC DL
imageVictor Mishcon, Baron Mishcon, in 1951.jpg
captionMishcon in 1951
officeShadow Lord Chancellor
leaderNeil Kinnock
term_start9 January 1989
term_end18 July 1992
predecessorThe Lord Elwyn-Jones
successorThe Lord Irvine of Lairg
office1Member of the House of Lords
status1Lord Temporal
termlabel1Life peerage
term_start110 May 1978
term_end128 January 2006
birth_date
birth_placeLondon, England
death_date
death_placeLondon, England
partyLabour

|honorific-prefix = The Right Honourable |honorific-suffix = QC DL

Victor Mishcon, Baron Mishcon, QC, DL (14 August 1915 – 27 January 2006) was a leading British solicitor and a Labour politician. His firm acted for Diana, Princess of Wales in her divorce.

The Mishcon Lectures were established at University College, London in 1990 in honour of Lord Mishcon to mark his 75th birthday and in recognition of his achievements and service in the fields of law, education, religion, government and politics, both central and local.

Early life

Mishcon was born in Brixton, south London, the son of Arnold Mishcon, a rabbi who emigrated from Russian Poland, and his wife Queenie. He was educated at the City of London School. He studied law and founded the firm of solicitors Victor Mishcon & Co in Brixton in 1937.

Labour Party

An active member of the Labour Party, Mishcon served as a Councillor on Lambeth Borough Council from 1945–48, and represented Brixton on London County Council from 1946–64. He was chairman of London County Council in 1954—then aged 39, the youngest chair that century. He was elected to the successor Greater London Council for Lambeth 1964–67. He stood without success as a Labour party candidate in four parliamentary elections, in Leeds North-West in 1950; in Bath in 1951; and in Gravesend in 1955 and 1959.

He was made a life peer on 10 May 1978 as Baron Mishcon, of Lambeth in Greater London on the recommendation of the Prime Minister, James Callaghan. Lord Mishcon was Labour home affairs spokesman in the House of Lords from 1983 to 1990 and served as shadow Lord Chancellor from 1990 to 1992.

Other activities

Mishcon was a board member of the Royal National Theatre 1965–90 and the South Bank Centre 1966–67. He served as Vice-President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews 1967–73 and Vice-Chair of the Council of Christians and Jews 1976–77.

He was chairman of the Institute of Jewish Studies, University College, London, and the honorary president of the British Technion Society. He was a governor of Technion, Israel, president of the Association of Jewish Youth and of the British Council and the Shaare Zedek Hospital, Jerusalem.

He was awarded the Star of Ethiopia in 1954 and the Star of Jordan in 1995 for his work in the Middle East peace process. Between 1984 and 1990 he had acted as a secret intermediary in negotiations between King Hussein of Jordan and the Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres, offering the use of his country house.

Family

Lord Mishcon was married four times. His second marriage, to Beryl Honor Posnansky, produced two sons, Peter and Russell and a daughter, Jane. He married his fourth wife, Joan Estelle Conrad, in 1976; the marriage was dissolved in 2001. In 2006, he died at his home in Bayswater, London.

Arms

References

References

  1. [http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/mishcon/ ''UCL LAWS''] {{Webarchive. link. (17 November 2011 . University College London. Retrieved 5 November 2016)
  2. (8 March 1999). "The Royal Victor".
  3. {{London Gazette. (12 May 1978)
  4. (2003). "Debrett's Peerage".
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