Stephen Hastings

Sir Stephen Hastings
Member of Parliament
for Mid Bedfordshire
In office
16 November 1960 – 13 May 1983
Preceded byAlan Lennox-Boyd
Succeeded byNicholas Lyell
Personal details
Born
Stephen Lewis Edmonstone Hastings

(1921-05-04)4 May 1921
Knightsbridge, London
Died10 January 2005(2005-01-10) (aged 83)
Wansford, Cambridgeshire
NationalityBritish
Political partyConservative
Spouses
Harriet Tomlin
(m. 1948; div. 1971)
Elizabeth Naylor-Leyland
(m. 1975; died 1997)
Children2 (by Tomlin)
RelativesMax Hastings (cousin)
Alma materRMC Sandhurst
AwardsMilitary Cross
Military service
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch/service British Army
Years of service1940–1948
RankMajor
UnitScots Guards
Battles/warsSecond World War
Service No.112983

Sir Stephen Lewis Edmonstone Hastings MC[1] (4 May 1921 – 10 January 2005)[2] was a British Conservative politician who was elected Member of Parliament for Mid Bedfordshire in a 1960 by-election and held it until he stood down at the 1983 general election.[3] He was also a soldier, MI6 operative, Master of Foxhounds and author.

The son of a Southern Rhodesian farmer, Hastings had visited the country only briefly as a young child, but he grew up with tales of the veldt and the farm. A year after he was elected to Parliament, he accepted an invitation from the British South Africa Company to visit the country, and from then on made frequent visits, getting to know the leading politicians of the white minority regime. Over the next twenty years, Hastings devoted his political energies to injecting what he felt was much needed balance into the debate about Rhodesia's future. When Rhodesia's Prime Minister, Ian Smith, unilaterally declared the independence of Rhodesia in 1965, Hastings was a prominent member of the Rhodesia lobby opposing sanctions – against the official party line.

Fourteen years later, he strongly supported the Internal Settlement between Smith and the moderate nationalist leaders under which Bishop Abel Muzorewa became Prime Minister, though effective power remained in white hands. He saw the Lancaster House Agreement of 1979, which created an independent Republic of Zimbabwe and led to Robert Mugabe's election as Prime Minister of Zimbabwe in 1980, as a disaster caused by "unnecessary deference to the delusion of the Commonwealth, the Afro-Asian lobby and to the Americans by a series of British governments".

Although Hastings claimed to have been invited to join Edward Heath's ministry, his stance on Rhodesia effectively rendered him ineligible for office. Even Margaret Thatcher, whom he counted as an ally, kept him on the backbenches, though she recommended him for a knighthood in 1983. In his latter years at his Cambridgeshire home, Stibbington Hall, the only person whose photographs were displayed in more than one room (apart from those of his beloved late wife, Elizabeth) were those of Ian Smith.

  1. ^ "Obituary Peterborough Cathedral". peterborough-cathedral.org.uk. Archived from the original on 13 April 2005. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  2. ^ "Hastings, Sir Stephen Lewis Edmonstone (1921–2005), politician | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". oxforddnb.com. 24 July 2012. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  3. ^ "The Times obituary". The Times. Archived from the original on 18 September 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2017.