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{{Short description|English journalist and writer}} | |||
{{EngvarB|date=October 2013}} | {{EngvarB|date=October 2013}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date= |
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}} | ||
{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = Polly Toynbee | | name = Polly Toynbee | ||
| image = National Poverty Hearing Polly Toynbee.jpg | | image = National Poverty Hearing Polly Toynbee.jpg | ||
| caption =Toynbee in |
| caption = Toynbee in 2006 | ||
| birthname = Mary Louisa Toynbee | | birthname = Mary Louisa Toynbee | ||
| birth_date = {{ |
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1946|12|27}} | ||
| birth_place = ], England | | birth_place = ], Isle of Wight, England, UK | ||
| death_date = | | death_date = | ||
| death_place = | | death_place = | ||
| residence = | |||
| education = ] | | education = ] | ||
| occupation = Journalist |
| occupation = {{Hlist|Journalist|columnist|writer}} | ||
| title = | | title = | ||
| party = ] (until 1981; c. 1990–present)<br />] (1981–1988)<br/>] (1988–1990) | |||
| family = | | family = | ||
| years_active = 1966–present | |||
| spouse = ] (1970–1992) <br> David Walker | |||
| |
| spouse = {{plainlist| | ||
* {{marriage|]|1970|1992|end = died}} | |||
| relatives = ] <small>(grandfather)</small> <br> ] <small>(father)</small> | |||
* David Walker | |||
| ethnicity = English | |||
}} | |||
| religion = None (] and ]) | |||
| relatives = ] (grandfather)<br />] (father) | |||
| networth = | |||
| credits = Social Affairs editor |
| credits = ] Social Affairs editor (1988–1995)<br />'']'' columnist (since 1998) | ||
}} | |||
'''Mary Louisa |
'''Mary Louisa''' "'''Polly'''" '''Toynbee''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|t|ɔɪ|n|b|i}}; born 27 December 1946)<ref>{{cite book |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=2001 |title=The International Who's Who of Women 2002 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6J8xDWDqOkEC&pg=PA580 |location=London |publisher=Europa |page=580 |isbn=1857431227 |access-date=11 October 2023 }}</ref> is a British journalist and writer. She has been a columnist for '']'' newspaper since 1998. | ||
She is a ] and was a candidate for the ] in the 1983 general election. She now broadly supports the ], although she was critical of its left-wing former leader, ].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Toynbee|first1=Polly|title=Why can't I get behind Corbyn, when we want the same things? Here's why {{!}} Polly Toynbee|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/sep/27/jeremy-corbyn-labour-conference-2016|access-date=31 January 2018|work=The Guardian|date=27 September 2016}}</ref> | |||
Toynbee previously worked as social affairs editor for the ] and also for '']'' newspaper. She is vice-president of ], having previously served as its president between 2007 and 2012.<ref name="BHAPres">{{cite web|url= https://humanism.org.uk/about/our-people/distinguished-supporters/polly-toynbee/ |title= Polly Toynbee|access-date= 11 March 2014|publisher= British Humanist Association}}</ref> She was named Columnist of the Year at the 2007 ]. She became a patron of right-to-die organization ] in 2021.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mydeath-mydecision.org.uk/about/|title=About Us|website=mydeath-decision.org|access-date=2021-03-25}}</ref> | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
Toynbee was born at ] on the ],<ref>{{cite web|last1=Toynbee|first1=Polly|title=Back on the Isle of Wight, Tory Britain rehearses its collapse|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/07/isle-wight-tory-rehearses-collapse|work=The Guardian|date=7 April 2015|access-date=7 April 2015|ref=gu}}</ref> the second daughter of the literary critic ] by his first wife Anne Barbara Denise (1920-2004), daughter of ], of the ].<ref name="theguardian.com">{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/nov/27/guardianobituaries|title=Obituary: Anne Wollheim|website=] |date=27 November 2004}}</ref><ref>An Historian's Conscience: The Correspondence of Arnold J. Toynbee and Columba Cary-Elwes, ed. Christian B. Peper, 1986, Beacon Press, p. 266</ref> | |||
Polly Toynbee was born on the ], the second daughter of the literary critic ] (by his first wife Anne), granddaughter of the historian ], and great-great niece of philanthropist and economic historian ], after whom ] in the ] of London is named. Her parents divorced when Toynbee was aged four and she moved to London with her mother.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3634626/Profile-Polly-Toynbee.html | location=London | work=The Daily Telegraph | first=William | last=Langley | title=Profile: Polly Toynbee | date=26 November 2006}}</ref> After attending ], a girls' independent school in Bristol, followed by the ], a state ] in London (she had failed the ] examination), she won a scholarship to read history at ], despite gaining only one A-level.<ref name=indie261106>{{cite news | first = Andy | last = McSmith | url = http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/polly-toynbee-reborn-as-a-lady-of-the-right-425833.html | title = Polly Toynbee: Reborn, as a lady of the right | newspaper = The Independent | location = London | date = 26 November 2006 }}</ref> During her ], in 1966, she worked for ] in ] (which had just ]) until she was expelled by the government.<ref name=indie261106/> She published her first novel, ''Leftovers'', in 1966.<ref name=indie261106/> Following her expulsion from Rhodesia, Toynbee revealed the existence of the ], which detailed the alleged funding of Amnesty International by the British government.<ref name="Forsythe2009">{{cite book|author=Professor David P Forsythe|title=Encyclopedia of Human Rights|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=1QbX90fmCVUC&pg=PA164|accessdate=12 November 2012|date=11 August 2009|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-533402-9|pages=164–}}</ref> | |||
Her grandfather was the historian ], her grandmother was ], and her great-grand uncle the philanthropist and economic historian ], after whom ] in the ] of London is named. Her parents divorced when Toynbee was aged four and she moved to London with her mother, who married the philosopher ].<ref name="theguardian.com"/><ref name=langley/><ref>Enlightening: Letters 1946-1960, Isaiah Berlin, ed. Henry Hardy, Random House, 2012, end note no. 361</ref> | |||
After 18 months at Oxford, she dropped out, finding work in a factory and a burger bar and hoping to write in her spare time. She later said "I had a loopy idea that I could work with my hands during the day and in the evening come home and write novels and poetry, and be ]... But I very quickly discovered why people who work in factories don't usually have the energy to write when they get home."<ref name=indie261106/> She went into journalism, working on the diary at '']'', and turned her eight months of experience in manual work (along with "undercover" stints as a nurse and an Army recruit) into the book ''A Working Life'' (1970).<ref name=indie261106/> | |||
Toynbee attended ], a private girls' school in ], leaving with 4 O-levels, which she describes as 'bad'.<ref name="privilege">{{cite news |last=Toynbee |first=Polly |date=20 May 2023 |title=What my privileged start in life taught me about the British class system |work=] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/may/20/polly-toynbee-what-my-privileged-start-in-life-taught-me-about-the-british-class-system |access-date=27 May 2023}}</ref> She then attended ], a state ] in London,<ref name=privilege/> where she took the missing O-levels,<ref name=privilege /> passed one A-level,<ref name=indie261106>{{cite news | first = Andy | last = McSmith | url = https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/polly-toynbee-reborn-as-a-lady-of-the-right-425833.html | title = Polly Toynbee: Reborn, as a lady of the right | newspaper = The Independent | location = London | date = 26 November 2006 }}</ref> and obtained a scholarship to Oxford University<ref name=privilege/> to read history at ]. {{Citation needed|date=June 2021}}. | |||
===Toynbee genealogy=== | |||
The Toynbees have been prominent in British intellectual society for several generations ''(note that this diagram is not a comprehensive Toynbee family tree)'': | |||
She had a teenage affair and became pregnant. Despite pressure from the father's family, and having visited his student sister (mother of the infant ]) in Oxford, they decided to separate, and she took illegal abortion-inducing pills. They remained 'remote' friends.<ref name=privilege /> | |||
{{familytree/start}} | |||
{{familytree | JT |y| UNK | | | | | | | | | | | JT=]<br>Pioneering ]|UNK=Harriet Holmes}} | |||
She dropped out of university after eighteen months, which she regrets, as she was told by her tutor she would. She has variously attributed this to having an affair with a married TV presenter, to having her first novel published in her first term at Oxford, to the pressure of her scholarship and family expectations, and to taking up with ].<ref name=privilege /> | |||
{{familytree | |,|-|^|-|.| | | | | | | | | | | | }} | |||
{{familytree | AT | | HVT | | GM |y| LMH | | | AT=]<br>]|HVT=Harry Valpy Toynbee | |||
During her ], in 1966, she had worked for ] in ] (which had just ]) until she was expelled by the government.<ref name=indie261106/> She published her first novel, ''Leftovers'', in 1966.<ref name=indie261106/> Following her expulsion from Rhodesia, Toynbee revealed the existence of the ], which detailed the alleged funding of Amnesty International in Rhodesia by the British government.<ref name="Forsythe2009">{{cite book|author=Professor David P Forsythe|title=Encyclopedia of Human Rights|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1QbX90fmCVUC&pg=PA164|access-date=12 November 2012|date=11 August 2009|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-533402-9|pages=164–}}</ref> | |||
|GM=]<br>] and ]|LMH=Lady Mary Howard}} | |||
{{familytree | | | | | |!| | | | | |!| | | | | | }} | |||
After Oxford, she found work in a factory and a burger bar, hoping to write in her spare time. She later said: "I had a loopy idea that I could work with my hands during the day and in the evening come home and write novels and poetry, and be ]... But I very quickly discovered why people who work in factories don't usually have the energy to write when they get home."<ref name=indie261106/> She went into journalism, working on the diary at '']'', and turned her eight months of experience in manual work (along with "undercover" stints as a nurse and an Army recruit) into the book ''A Working Life'' (1970).<ref name=indie261106/> | |||
{{familytree | | | | | AJT |~|y|~| RM | | | | | AJT=''']'''<br>]|RM=Rosalind Murray<br>1890–1967}} | |||
{{familytree | | | | |,|-|-|-|+|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|.| | }} | |||
{{familytree | | | | AN| | PT |y| AP | | LA |AN = Antony Harry Toynbee<br>1914–39| PT=]<br>Writer and journalist|AP=Anne Powell|LA = Lawrence Toynbee<br>1922-2002}} | |||
{{familytree | | | | | | | | |,|-|^|-|.| | | | | | }} | |||
{{familytree | | | | | | | | JT | | MLT | | | | | JT=Josephine Toynbee |MLT='''Polly Toynbee'''<br>Journalist}} | |||
{{familytree/end}} | |||
==Career== | ==Career== | ||
Toynbee worked for many years at '']'' before joining the |
Toynbee worked for many years at '']'', before joining the BBC, where she was social affairs editor (1988–1995). At '']'', which she joined after leaving the BBC, she was a columnist and associate editor, working with then editor ]. She later rejoined ''The Guardian''. She has also written for '']'' and the '']''; at one time she was an editor for the ''Washington Monthly''. | ||
] conference]] | ] conference]] | ||
Following in the footsteps of ]'s '']'' (2001), |
Following in the footsteps of ]'s '']'' (2001), in 2003 she published '']'' about an experimental period voluntarily living on the ], which was £4.10 per hour at the time. She worked as a ] in a ] hospital, a ] in a primary school, a ] assistant, a ] employee, a cake factory worker and a ] assistant, during which time she contracted ]. The book is critical of conditions in low pay jobs in Britain. She also contributed an introduction to the UK edition of Ehrenreich's '']''. | ||
Currently Toynbee serves as President of the ].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.social-policy.com/contacts.aspx |title= SPA Executive Committee 2007–08 | |
Currently Toynbee writes for ''The Guardian'',<ref name=guardpage>{{cite web |last1=Toynbee |first1=Polly |title=Polly Toynbee |url=https://www.theguardian.com/profile/pollytoynbee |website=] |access-date=31 March 2020}}</ref> and serves as President of the ].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.social-policy.com/contacts.aspx |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060908012215/http://www.social-policy.com/contacts.aspx |url-status= dead |archive-date= 8 September 2006 |title= SPA Executive Committee 2007–08 |access-date= 21 April 2008 |publisher= Social Policy Association }}</ref> She is chair of the ] and deputy treasurer of the ]. | ||
==Political history and opinions== | ==Political history and opinions== | ||
Toynbee and her first husband ] (from 1970)<ref>{{cite news | first = William | last = Langley | url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3634626/Profile-Polly-Toynbee.html | title = Profile: Polly Toynbee | newspaper = The Daily Telegraph | location = London | date = 26 November 2006}}</ref> were supporters of the ] breakaway from Labour in 1981, both signing the ]. Toynbee stood for the party at the ] in ], garnering 9351 votes (22%), and finishing third.<ref>, The Daily Politics, BBC, 19 March 2010.</ref> She was one of the very few SDP members who believed in ], founding an unsuccessful group "Unilateralists for Social Democracy".<ref>Roy Jenkins, ''A Life at the Centre'' (London: Macmillan, 1981), p. 588.</ref> She later refused to support the subsequent merger of the SDP with the Liberals (to form the ]), reacting instead by rejoining Labour when the rump SDP collapsed.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/01/labour-unions-social-democracy-unions | location=London | work=The Guardian | first=Polly | last=Toynbee | title=Some SDP thinking might strengthen Labour's nerve | date=1 March 2011}}</ref> | |||
Toynbee has written about her privilege in the British class system, saying that all her family "lived on the left ... locked in combat with the ... forces of conservatism", but were clearly members of a privileged class. Toynbee did badly at school as she was "too rebellious to work, too angry to obey, too impatient to get out of there"; she attributed her gaining an Oxford scholarship to its "heavily class-biased exam" being designed "to reward people of exactly my background". After deliberately taking on menial jobs, she took a job that led to her becoming a journalist, something she had never intended.<ref name=privilege /> | |||
In a 2002 debate hosted by the ] and ''Prospect'', Toynbee argued that the West should pursue liberal internationalism by intervening through the ] to promote democracy around the world: "Spreading people's right to self-determination, and their right to think and vote for themselves, is a moral obligation...We should be intervening now in the Congo and Sudan".<ref>Polly Toynbee, John Gray and Hazem Saghiyeh, '(Re-)ordering the world: dilemmas of liberal imperialism', ''RSA Journal'' Vol. 149, No. 5501 (2002), p. 52.</ref> | |||
Toynbee is a member of the Labour Party. She and her first husband, ] (from 1970),<ref name=langley>{{cite news | first = William | last = Langley | url = https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3634626/Profile-Polly-Toynbee.html | title = Profile: Polly Toynbee | newspaper = The Daily Telegraph| location = London | date = 26 November 2006}}</ref> were supporters of the ] (SDP) breakaway from Labour in 1981, both signing the ]. Toynbee stood for the party at the ] for ], garnering 9351 votes (22%) and finishing third.<ref>, The Daily Politics, BBC, 19 March 2010.</ref> She was one of the few SDP members who believed in ], founding an unsuccessful group "Unilateralists for Social Democracy".<ref>Roy Jenkins, ''A Life at the Centre'' (London: Macmillan, 1991), p. 588.</ref> She later refused to support the subsequent merger of the SDP with the Liberals (to form the ]), reacting instead by rejoining Labour only after the rump ], led by ], collapsed in 1990.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/mar/01/labour-unions-social-democracy-unions | location=London | work=The Guardian| first=Polly | last=Toynbee | title=Some SDP thinking might strengthen Labour's nerve | date=1 March 2011}}</ref> | |||
Toynbee strongly supports ], though she had two of her three children partly educated in the private sector, leading to accusations of ].<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/polly-toynbee-reborn-as-a-lady-of-the-right-425833.html |title= Polly Toynbee: Reborn, as a lady of the right |work= The Independent |author=McSmith, Andy |date=26 November 2006 |location =London}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/45076,news-comment,news-politics,polly-toynbee-the-great-comic-figure-of-the-age,2 |title=Toynbee: the great comic figure of the age |author=Jones, Lewis |work= The First Post |date=August 2008}}</ref> Although she has been consistently critical of many of ]'s ] reforms, she wrote in 2005 that his government "remains the best government of my political lifetime".<ref>{{cite news |first= Polly |last= Toynbee |url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2005/sep/23/labour.politicalcolumnists |title= The fight for the centre ground is throttling British politics |newspaper =The Guardian |date= 23 September 2005 |location= London}}</ref> During the ], with dissatisfaction high among traditional Labour voters, Toynbee wrote several times about the dangers of ], "Giving Blair a bloody nose". She urged ''Guardian'' readers to vote with a ] over their nose if they had to, to make sure ] would not win from a ]. "Voters think they can take a free hit at Blair while assuming Labour will win anyway. But Labour won't win if people won't vote for it".<ref>{{cite news |url= http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/election2005/archives/2005/04/13/hold_your_nose_and_vote_labour.html |title= Hold your nose and vote Labour |accessdate=21 April 2008 |last= Toynbee |first= Polly|date=13 April 2005|work= ] Election blog |location=London}}</ref> | |||
In 1995, Toynbee criticised Metropolitan Police Commissioner ]'s comments that 80% of ] cases were committed by black people, stating that it was "an over-simplification that is seriously misleading".<ref name=Vhscb>{{cite news|last1=Toynbee|first1=Polly|title=Mugging: is it a black and white issue?|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/mugging-is-it-a-black-and-white-issue-1590337.html|access-date=15 January 2016|work=]|date=7 July 1995}}</ref> She approvingly quoted academic researcher Michael Keith, who said: "If you were to standardise for everything else – education, unemployment, housing estates, life chances – race on its own would have virtually no significance."<ref name=Vhscb/> | |||
In a 2002 debate hosted by the ] and '']'' magazine, Toynbee argued that the West should pursue liberal internationalism by intervening through the United Nations to promote democracy around the world: "Spreading people's right to self-determination, and their right to think and vote for themselves, is a moral obligation… We should be intervening now in the Congo and Sudan."<ref>Polly Toynbee, ] and Hazem Saghiyeh, , '']'' Vol. 149, No. 5501 (2002), p. 52.</ref> | |||
Toynbee strongly supports ], though she had two of her three children partly educated in the private sector, leading to accusations of ].<ref name="BBCFaces"/><ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/45076,news-comment,news-politics,polly-toynbee-the-great-comic-figure-of-the-age,2 |title=Toynbee: the great comic figure of the age |author=Jones, Lewis |work= The First Post |date=August 2008}}</ref> Although consistently critical of many of ]'s ] reforms, she wrote in 2005 that his government "remains the best government of my political lifetime".<ref>{{cite news |first= Polly |last= Toynbee |url= https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2005/sep/23/labour.politicalcolumnists |title= The fight for the centre ground is throttling British politics |newspaper =The Guardian|date= 23 September 2005 |location= London}}</ref> During the ], with dissatisfaction high among traditional Labour voters, Toynbee wrote several times about the dangers of ], "Giving Blair a bloody nose". She urged ''Guardian'' readers to vote with a ] over their nose if they had to, to make sure ]'s ] would not win thanks to ]. "Voters think they can take a free hit at Blair while assuming Labour will win anyway. But Labour won't win if people won't vote for it."<ref>{{cite news |url= http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/election2005/archives/2005/04/13/hold_your_nose_and_vote_labour.html |title= Hold your nose and vote Labour |access-date=21 April 2008 |last= Toynbee |first= Polly|date=13 April 2005|work= ] |location=London}}</ref> | |||
] in 2013]] | ] in 2013]] | ||
In December 2006, ] (a former SDP member, later to be a Conservative |
In December 2006, ] (a former SDP member, later to be a Conservative minister) claimed Toynbee should be an influence on the modern Conservative Party, causing a press furore. Reacting to this, Conservative leader ] said he was impressed by one metaphor in her writings – of society being a caravan crossing a desert, where the people at the back can fall so far behind they are no longer part of the tribe. He added, "I will not be introducing Polly Toynbee's policies." Toynbee expressed some discomfort with this embrace, adding, "I don't suppose the icebergs had much choice about being hugged by Cameron either."<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3634521/Polly-Toynbee-the-Tory-guru-thats-barking.-Or-maybe-not.html |title= Polly Toynbee the Tory guru: that's barking. Or maybe not |access-date=21 April 2008 |last= Johnson |first= Boris |author-link= Boris Johnson |date=23 November 2006 |newspaper =]|location=London}}</ref> In response to the episode, ], at the time a Conservative MP and journalist who had been severely criticised by Toynbee, rejected any association with Toynbee's views, writing that she "incarnates all the nannying, high-taxing, high-spending schoolmarminess of Blair's Britain. Polly is the high priestess of our paranoid, mollycoddled, risk-averse, airbagged, booster-seated culture of political correctness and ] fascism".<ref name="BBCFaces">{{cite news |url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/6180236.stm |title= Faces of the week|last= Chaundy |first= Bob |date=24 November 2006 |publisher= BBC News}}</ref> | ||
Having advocated ] to succeed Blair as |
Having advocated for ] to succeed Blair as prime minister, Toynbee continued to endorse him in the early part of his premiership.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/jun/29/comment.politics |title= It's a truly decent, clever team, but that is not enough. Now they must excite |access-date=20 August 2009 |last= Toynbee |first= Polly |date=29 June 2007 |work= The Guardian |location=London}}</ref> By spring 2009 she had become sharply critical of Brown, arguing that he had failed to introduce the social-democratic policies he promised, and was very poor at presentation too.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/may/02/gordon-brown-labour-gloom |title=Gordon Brown: no ideas and no regrets |last= Toynbee |first= Polly |date=2 May 2009 |work= ] |location=London}}</ref> She subsequently called for his departure, voluntary or otherwise.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/may/11/labour-gordon-brown |title= Gordon Brown must go – by June 5 |last= Toynbee |first= Polly|date=12 May 2009|work = ] |location=London}}</ref> In the ] she advocated a vote for the ].<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/jun/01/euro-elections-cameron-ukip-labour |title= Throw out bad councils and vote Lib Dem for Europe |last= Toynbee |first= Polly |date=1 June 2009 |work = The Guardian |location=London}}</ref> During the ] she advocated a tactical vote for whichever candidate was best able to keep the Conservatives out of power.<ref>Polly Toynvee , ''The Guardian'', 24 April 2010</ref> | ||
In October 2010 Toynbee was criticised for an article in ''The Guardian''<ref>{{cite news | first = Polly | last = Toynbee | url = |
In October 2010, Toynbee was criticised for an article in ''The Guardian''<ref>{{cite news | first = Polly | last = Toynbee | url = https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/oct/25/benefits-cut-rents-up-housing-time-bomb | title = Benefits cut, rents up: this is Britain's housing time bomb | newspaper = The Guardian | location = London | date = 25 October 2010 }}</ref> in which she said the government's benefits changes would drive many poor people out of London and could be seen as a "]" for their situation. Some people interpreted this as a reference to the ], which Toynbee said was not her intention.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/8097816/Hysterics-over-housing.html | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101031085619/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/8097816/Hysterics-over-housing.html | url-status=dead | archive-date=31 October 2010 | location=London | work=] | title=Hysterics over housing | date=29 October 2010}}</ref> A ] report on the matter ruled the comments were "insensitive", but did not breach any rules as the organisation's remit does not cover matters of taste and offence.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pcc.org.uk/news/index.html?article=NjgwOQ==|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101201060355/http://www.pcc.org.uk/news/index.html?article=NjgwOQ==|url-status=dead|archive-date=2010-12-01|title=News >> Commission's decision in the case of various v The Guardian|publisher=]}}</ref> She later apologised for using the term.<ref>{{cite episode | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9138000/9138628.stm | series = ] | station = Radio 4 | network = BBC | location = London | title=Are the Tories being bullied? | airdate=29 October 2010}}</ref> | ||
Toynbee has been described as "the queen of leftist journalists",<ref name=indie261106/> and in 2008 topped a poll of 100 "opinion makers", carried out by Editorial Intelligence. She was also named the most influential columnist in the UK.<ref>{{cite press release | url = http://www.editorialintelligence.com/ei-news/article.php?d=080413 | title = Polly Toynbee Voted UK's 'Most Influential' Commentator | publisher = |
Toynbee has been described as "the queen of leftist journalists",<ref name=indie261106/> and in 2008 topped a poll of 100 "opinion makers", carried out by Editorial Intelligence. She was also named the most influential columnist in the UK.<ref>{{cite press release | url = http://www.editorialintelligence.com/ei-news/article.php?d=080413 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090531032439/http://www.editorialintelligence.com/ei%2Dnews/article.php?d=080413 | url-status = dead | archive-date = 31 May 2009 | title = Polly Toynbee Voted UK's 'Most Influential' Commentator | publisher = Editorial Intelligence | date = 13 April 2008 }}</ref> Andrew Marr has said that "hat makes her stand out as a journalist is not only her strong views but also her ferocious appetite for research. In a media world in which too many media columnists simply voice their top-of-the-head opinions, Polly always arrives heavily armed with hard facts".<ref name="BBCFaces"/> | ||
With her partner, former Social Affairs editor of ''The Guardian'' David Walker (Peter Jenkins died in 1992), Toynbee co-authored two books reviewing the successes and failures of New Labour in power. In ''Unjust Rewards'' (2008) they argued that "excess at the top hurts others".<ref>{{cite news |title= Review: Unjust Rewards by Polly Toynbee and David Walker |url= https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/non_fictionreviews/3559014/Review-Unjust-Rewards-by-Polly-Toynbee-and-David-Walker.html |work=]|location =London |date = 23 August 2008 |author= Reeves, Richard}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/society/2008/sep/14/1?INTCMP=SRCH |author=Sutherland, Ruth |work=] |location =London |title= Asbos for the millionaires: A strong and hopeful analysis of the growing gap between Britain's rich and poor |date =14 September 2008}}</ref> | |||
==Views on religion== | |||
An ], Toynbee is an Honorary Associate of the ] and a supporter of the ], and was appointed President of the ] in July 2007. Since 2012 she has been the BHA's Vice President.<ref name="BHAPres"/> She claimed that she is simply a consistent atheist, and is just as critical of ], ] and ]. She wrote: "The pens sharpen – ]! No such thing. Primitive Middle Eastern religions (and most others) are much the same – Islam, Christianity and Judaism all define themselves through disgust for women's bodies."<ref name=whr>. ''Womens History Review'', Volume 10, Number 4, 2001.</ref> In 1997 she declared "I am an Islamophobe and proud of it".<ref>''The Independent'' (23 October 1997), quoted in Naser Meer, ''Citizenship, Identity and the Politics of Multiculturalism: The Rise of Muslim Consciousness'' (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), p. 182.</ref> In 2005 she opposed the ] to outlaw incitement to religious hatred: "Race is something people cannot choose and it defines nothing about them. But beliefs are what people choose to identify with...The two cannot be blurred into one – which is why the word Islamophobia is a nonsense".<ref>''The Guardian'' (10 June 2005), quoted in Meer, p. 182.</ref> | |||
To reduce child ], Toynbee has supported an increase in the ].<ref>, '']''</ref> She has criticized the ] under Conservative governments, and the reduction in the public sector and government services.<ref>, '']''</ref><ref> '']''</ref> She has criticised the underfunding of the ] and its adverse effects on patient care.<ref>, '']''</ref> | |||
In 2003 upon the 25th anniversary of ]'s papacy, she wrote that he "is a hate-figure and with good reason...No one can compute how many people have died of Aids as a result of Wojtyla's power, how many woman have died in childbirth needlessly, how many children starved in families too large and poor to feed them. But it is reasonable to suppose these silent, unseen, uncounted deaths at his hand would match that of any self-respecting tyrant or dictator".<ref>Polly Toynbee, '', ''The Guardian'' (17 October 2003).</ref> | |||
In the aftermath of the ], Toynbee wrote that "Political blame spreads right through the Conservative party, with no escape on offer. This goes far beyond the precise shockers – the Tory MPs who mockingly rejected housing regulation; the cuts to funding to councils responsible for retro-fitting fire suppressants; the disregard of coroner's instructions after the 2009 ]; and even the plan to opt out of EU safety regulations. Conservative Kensington and Chelsea council allegedly blocking its ears to tenants' well-founded anxiety is just the immediate scandal. But this event reaches far deeper, to the very sinews of its party's policy."<ref>, '']''</ref> | |||
Toynbee had agreed to debate with philosopher ] during his UK October visit,<ref></ref> but subsequently pulled out, saying "I hadn't realised the nature of Mr Lane Craig's debating style, and having now looked at his previous performances, this is not my kind of forum."<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
She is a strong opponent of ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/feb/25/labour-brexit-jeremy-corbyn-public-vote-remain|title=At last, Jeremy. Now Labour's mission must be to prevent any Brexit: Polly Toynbee|date=25 February 2019|work=The Guardian}}</ref> | |||
Toynbee has mixed feelings about the ]; she opposed both religious and secular ]tic beliefs. In April 2014 she wrote: | |||
{{cquote|The C of E is a confusing creature. Even while it tussles internally between conservative and liberal wings on gay marriage or female bishops, polls of its members show it's no longer the Conservative party at prayer: more vote Lib Dem and Labour. Look at the 40 bishops' raspberry of an Easter message to Cameron, with their strong rebuke against the "national crisis" of hunger so much worsened by his welfare policies. They know because their churches house the food banks used by almost a million people. (...) Like all humanity, the religious are both good and bad. The C of E is good on food banks, bad on sex and death. Faith makes people no more virtuous, but nor do rationalists claim any moral superiority. Pogroms, inquisitions, jihadist terror and religious massacres can be matched death for death with the secular horrors of Pol Pot, Hitler or Stalin. The danger is where absolute belief in universal truths, religious or secular, permits no doubt.<ref>Polly Toynbee , ''The Guardian'', 18 April 2014</ref>}} | |||
== |
==Views== | ||
===Views on politics=== | |||
Toynbee was awarded an Honorary Degree by the ] in 1999 and by ] in 2002.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/about/honoraryDegrees.shtml|title= Honorary Degrees |accessdate=21 April 2008 |publisher= ]}}</ref> In 2005, she was made an Honorary Doctor of ] for "her notable contribution to the educational and cultural well-being of society". The ] awarded her third Honorary Doctorate in 2008. | |||
Writing about the government of ] in November 2022, Toynbee argued that choosing ] as home secretary was a blunder and that Braverman's promise to reduce immigration to "tens of thousands" was unworkable since more than 270,000 people arrived during the year to March 2022, mostly with visas. Only small numbers arrived in boats." Toynbee further said that Braverman's "dreams" about Rwanda and cruelty and putting arrivals into squalid conditions in the Manston processing centre disrupted policy."<ref name="sunak1"> '']''. 1 November 2022.</ref> | |||
Toynbee also criticised Sunak's initial decision to miss the ]. Later Sunak ] and decided he would attend the COP27 conference.<ref> '']''</ref><ref name="sunak1"/> | |||
She won the ] for journalism in 1998 (for journalism published by '']''),<ref>The Orwell Prize, </ref> and in 2007 was named 'Columnist of the Year' at the ].<ref>http://www.theguardian.com/media/2007/jul/09/mediatop1002007.mondaymediasection76</ref> | |||
===Views on religion=== | |||
==Personal life== | |||
Toynbee married ''The Guardian'''s political columnist ] in 1970 having met him at trade union conference; they had three children. Jenkins died from a ] in 1992. She lives in a house in ], a villa in ], Italy and also in ].<ref>Tim Walker , ''Daily Telegraph'', 29 March 2011</ref><ref>Lewis Jones , ''The First Post'', 7 August 2008</ref><ref>Henry Deedes , ''The Independent'', 25 February 2009</ref><ref>Andrew Pierce , ''Daily Mail'', 23 September 2013</ref> Toynbee is married to David Walker, a ''Guardian'' journalist and former communications director of the ].<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/Mobile/8209736/Rage-at-Audit-Commission-boss-pocketing-a-30000-payoff.html | location=London | work=The Daily Telegraph | first=Tim | last=Walker | title=Rage at Audit Commission boss pocketing a £30,000 payoff | date=18 December 2010}}</ref> | |||
An ], Toynbee is an Honorary Associate of the ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.secularism.org.uk/honoraryassociates.html|title=National Secular Society Honorary Associates}} National Secular Society. Retrieved 27 July 2019</ref> a supporter of the ], and was appointed President of the ] in July 2007. Since 2012, she has been the BHA's vice president.<ref name="BHAPres"/> She has said that she is simply a consistent atheist, and is just as critical of Christianity, ] and ]. She wrote: "The pens sharpen—]! No such thing. Primitive Middle Eastern religions (and most others) are much the same—Islam, Christianity and Judaism all define themselves through disgust for women's bodies."<ref name=whr>. ''Women's History Review'', Volume 10, Number 4, 2001.</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Polly|last=Toynbee|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/sep/28/religion.afghanistan|title=Behind the burka|date=28 September 2001|access-date=25 September 2020|work=The Guardian}}</ref><ref>'']'' 18 December 2020 p. 9</ref> In 1997 she declared "I am an Islamophobe and proud of it".<ref>''The Independent'' (23 October 1997), quoted in Naser Meer, ''Citizenship, Identity and the Politics of Multiculturalism: The Rise of Muslim Consciousness'' (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), p. 182.</ref> In 2005 she opposed the ] to outlaw incitement to religious hatred: "Race is something people cannot choose and it defines nothing about them. But beliefs are what people choose to identify with...The two cannot be blurred into one—which is why the word Islamophobia is a nonsense".<ref>''The Guardian'' (10 June 2005), quoted in Meer, p. 182.</ref> | |||
Toynbee is a member of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://e-activist.com/ea-action/action?ea.client.id=1789&ea.campaign.id=23045|title=Media Diversity UK|publisher=E-activist.com |date= |accessdate=2013-10-25}}</ref> | |||
In 2003, upon the 25th anniversary of ]'s papacy, she wrote that he "is a hate-figure and with good reason… No one can compute how many people have died of Aids as a result of Wojtyla's power, how many woman have died in childbirth needlessly, how many children starved in families too large and poor to feed them. But it is reasonable to suppose these silent, unseen, uncounted deaths at his hand would match that of any self-respecting tyrant or dictator".<ref>Polly Toynbee, '', ''The Guardian'' (17 October 2003).</ref> In 2011 she accepted an invitation to participate in a debate with the Christian philosopher ] on the existence of God but Toynbee later pulled out stating "...this is not my kind of forum".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2011/14-october/comment/why-are-the-atheists-shy-of-debate | title=Why are the atheists shy of debate? }}</ref> | |||
Toynbee has mixed feelings about the ]; she has opposed both religious and secular ]tic beliefs. In April 2014, she wrote: | |||
{{cquote|The C of E is a confusing creature. Even while it tussles internally between conservative and liberal wings on gay marriage or female bishops, polls of its members show it's no longer the Conservative party at prayer: more vote Lib Dem and Labour. Look at the 40 bishops' raspberry of an Easter message to Cameron, with their strong rebuke against the "national crisis" of hunger so much worsened by his welfare policies. They know because their churches house the food banks used by almost a million people. (...) Like all humanity, the religious are both good and bad. The C of E is good on food banks, bad on sex and death. Faith makes people no more virtuous, but nor do rationalists claim any moral superiority. Pogroms, inquisitions, jihadist terror and religious massacres can be matched death for death with the secular horrors of Pol Pot, Hitler or Stalin. The danger is where absolute belief in universal truths, religious or secular, permits no doubt.<ref>Polly Toynbee , ''The Guardian'', 18 April 2014</ref>}} | |||
==Honours== | |||
Toynbee was awarded an honorary degree by the ] in 1999 and by ] in 2002.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/about/honoraryDegrees.shtml|title= Honorary Degrees |access-date=21 April 2008 |publisher= ]}}</ref> In 2004, she was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=University Honours archive {{!}} Graduation {{!}} Loughborough University |url=https://www.lboro.ac.uk/students/graduation/honorary-graduates/archive/ |access-date=2024-02-07 |website=www.lboro.ac.uk}}</ref> In 2005, she was made an Honorary Doctor of ] for "her notable contribution to the educational and cultural well-being of society". The ] awarded Toynbee the honorary title of Doctor of Civil Law in November 2007<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kent.ac.uk/congregations/honorary-grads/archive/2007/pollytoynbee.html|title=Polly Toynbee – Congregations – University of Kent|website=kent.ac.uk|access-date=19 January 2017|archive-date=26 January 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170126143302/https://www.kent.ac.uk/congregations/honorary-grads/archive/2007/pollytoynbee.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> in recognition of her concern with poverty and welfare. This was followed in 2008 when ] awarded her fourth honorary doctorate.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.leeds.ac.uk/news/article/379/|title=Seven honoured by the University of Leeds|date=9 July 2008|work=leeds.ac.uk|access-date=17 October 2019}} She won the ] for journalism in 1998 (for journalism published by '']'')</ref><ref>{{Cite web | title=Polly Toynbee | website=The Orwell Foundation | url=https://www.orwellfoundation.com/journalist/polly-toynbee/ | access-date=9 July 2022}}</ref> and in 2007 was named 'Columnist of the Year' at the ].<ref>{{Cite web | title=Media top 100 2007 : 79. Polly Toynbee |website=The Guardian|date=9 July 2007| url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/2007/jul/09/mediatop1002007.mondaymediasection76 | access-date=9 July 2022}}</ref> Toynbee ] to be made a Commander of the ] (CBE) in 2000.<ref>{{Cite web | vauthors=((Alliss, Peter)) |date=22 December 2003 | title=Some who turned the offer down |website=] | url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2003/dec/22/uk.Whitehall1 | access-date=9 July 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Personal life== | |||
Toynbee lives in ], East Sussex.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nsWQCgAAQBAJ&q=polly+toynbee+lewes&pg=PT312|title=Against the Grain|first=Norman|last=Baker|date=23 September 2015|publisher=Biteback Publishing|isbn=9781849549936|via=Google Books}}</ref> She also owns a ] in ].<ref name="primitive">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2006/nov/29/comment.economy|title=A primitive reaction|author= Zoe Williams|website=The Guardian|date=29 November 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2016/04/polly-toynbee-forgets-to-check-her-privilege-on-marr/|title=Polly Toynbee forgets to check her privilege on Marr |author=Steerpike|website=spectator.co.uk (])|date=10 April 2016}}</ref> | |||
She is a member of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://e-activist.com/ea-action/action?ea.client.id=1789&ea.campaign.id=23045|title=Media Diversity UK|publisher=E-activist.com|access-date=25 October 2013|archive-date=23 December 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201223011339/http://e-activist.com/ea-action/action?ea.client.id=1789&ea.campaign.id=23045|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
==Select bibliography== | ==Select bibliography== | ||
*''Leftovers |
*''Leftovers: A Novel'' (1966) {{ISBN|0-586-02643-6}} | ||
*''A Working Life'' (1971) ISBN |
*''A Working Life'' (1971) {{ISBN|0-340-14760-1}} | ||
*''Hospital'' (1977) ISBN |
*''Hospital'' (1977) {{ISBN|0-09-131390-2}} | ||
*''Way We Live Now'' (1981) ISBN |
*''Way We Live Now'' (1981) {{ISBN|0-413-49090-4}} | ||
*''Lost Children: Story of Adopted Children Searching for Their Mothers'' (1985) ISBN |
*''Lost Children: Story of Adopted Children Searching for Their Mothers'' (1985) {{ISBN|0-09-160440-0}} | ||
*''Hard Work: Life in Low- |
*'']'' (2003) {{ISBN|0-7475-6415-9}} | ||
*''Better or Worse?: Has Labour Delivered?'' (2005) ISBN |
*''Better or Worse?: Has Labour Delivered?'' (2005) {{ISBN|0-7475-7982-2}} | ||
*''Unjust Rewards: Exposing Greed and Inequality in Britain Today'' (with David Walker, 2008) ISBN |
*''Unjust Rewards: Exposing Greed and Inequality in Britain Today'' (with David Walker, 2008) {{ISBN|978-1-84708-093-6}} | ||
*'']'' (with David Walker, 2015) | |||
*''An Uneasy Inheritance: My Family and other Radicals'' (2023) | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist |
{{reflist}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* {{Twitter|pollytoynbee}} | |||
* {{Twitter}} | |||
* {{Journalisted|polly-toynbee}} | * {{Journalisted|polly-toynbee}} | ||
* {{ |
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060925204757/http://www.thirdway.org.uk/past/showpage.asp?page=613 |date=25 September 2006 |title=Interview with Polly Toynbee }} focussing on religion with ], 22 June 1998 | ||
* {{ |
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080118092236/http://www.psa.ac.uk/awards2003/toynbee.htm |date=18 January 2008 |title=Political Journalist of the Year 2003 citation }} | ||
* 18 September 2008 | |||
* | |||
* 18 September 2008 | |||
{{Authority control |
{{Authority control}} | ||
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. --> | |||
| NAME =Toynbee, Polly | |||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | |||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = British journalist | |||
| DATE OF BIRTH =27 December 1946 | |||
| PLACE OF BIRTH =], England | |||
| DATE OF DEATH = | |||
| PLACE OF DEATH = | |||
}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Toynbee, Polly}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Toynbee, Polly}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 19:46, 3 January 2025
English journalist and writer
Polly Toynbee | |
---|---|
Toynbee in 2006 | |
Born | Mary Louisa Toynbee (1946-12-27) 27 December 1946 (age 78) Yafford, Isle of Wight, England, UK |
Education | St Anne's College, Oxford |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1966–present |
Notable credit(s) | BBC Social Affairs editor (1988–1995) The Guardian columnist (since 1998) |
Political party | Labour (until 1981; c. 1990–present) SDP (1981–1988) 'Continuing' SDP (1988–1990) |
Spouses |
|
Relatives | Arnold J. Toynbee (grandfather) Philip Toynbee (father) |
Mary Louisa "Polly" Toynbee (/ˈtɔɪnbi/; born 27 December 1946) is a British journalist and writer. She has been a columnist for The Guardian newspaper since 1998.
She is a social democrat and was a candidate for the Social Democratic Party in the 1983 general election. She now broadly supports the Labour Party, although she was critical of its left-wing former leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
Toynbee previously worked as social affairs editor for the BBC and also for The Independent newspaper. She is vice-president of Humanists UK, having previously served as its president between 2007 and 2012. She was named Columnist of the Year at the 2007 British Press Awards. She became a patron of right-to-die organization My Death My Decision in 2021.
Background
Toynbee was born at Yafford on the Isle of Wight, the second daughter of the literary critic Philip Toynbee by his first wife Anne Barbara Denise (1920-2004), daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel George Powell, of the Grenadier Guards.
Her grandfather was the historian Arnold J. Toynbee, her grandmother was Rosalind Murray, and her great-grand uncle the philanthropist and economic historian Arnold Toynbee, after whom Toynbee Hall in the East End of London is named. Her parents divorced when Toynbee was aged four and she moved to London with her mother, who married the philosopher Richard Wollheim.
Toynbee attended Badminton School, a private girls' school in Bristol, leaving with 4 O-levels, which she describes as 'bad'. She then attended Holland Park School, a state comprehensive school in London, where she took the missing O-levels, passed one A-level, and obtained a scholarship to Oxford University to read history at St Anne's College. .
She had a teenage affair and became pregnant. Despite pressure from the father's family, and having visited his student sister (mother of the infant Boris Johnson) in Oxford, they decided to separate, and she took illegal abortion-inducing pills. They remained 'remote' friends.
She dropped out of university after eighteen months, which she regrets, as she was told by her tutor she would. She has variously attributed this to having an affair with a married TV presenter, to having her first novel published in her first term at Oxford, to the pressure of her scholarship and family expectations, and to taking up with Jeremy Sandford.
During her gap year, in 1966, she had worked for Amnesty International in Rhodesia (which had just unilaterally declared independence) until she was expelled by the government. She published her first novel, Leftovers, in 1966. Following her expulsion from Rhodesia, Toynbee revealed the existence of the "Harry" letters, which detailed the alleged funding of Amnesty International in Rhodesia by the British government.
After Oxford, she found work in a factory and a burger bar, hoping to write in her spare time. She later said: "I had a loopy idea that I could work with my hands during the day and in the evening come home and write novels and poetry, and be Tolstoy... But I very quickly discovered why people who work in factories don't usually have the energy to write when they get home." She went into journalism, working on the diary at The Observer, and turned her eight months of experience in manual work (along with "undercover" stints as a nurse and an Army recruit) into the book A Working Life (1970).
Career
Toynbee worked for many years at The Guardian, before joining the BBC, where she was social affairs editor (1988–1995). At The Independent, which she joined after leaving the BBC, she was a columnist and associate editor, working with then editor Andrew Marr. She later rejoined The Guardian. She has also written for The Observer and the Radio Times; at one time she was an editor for the Washington Monthly.
Following in the footsteps of Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed (2001), in 2003 she published Hard Work: Life in Low-pay Britain about an experimental period voluntarily living on the minimum wage, which was £4.10 per hour at the time. She worked as a hospital porter in a National Health Service hospital, a dinner lady in a primary school, a nursery assistant, a call-centre employee, a cake factory worker and a care home assistant, during which time she contracted salmonella. The book is critical of conditions in low pay jobs in Britain. She also contributed an introduction to the UK edition of Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America.
Currently Toynbee writes for The Guardian, and serves as President of the Social Policy Association. She is chair of the Brighton Festival and deputy treasurer of the Fabian Society.
Political history and opinions
Toynbee has written about her privilege in the British class system, saying that all her family "lived on the left ... locked in combat with the ... forces of conservatism", but were clearly members of a privileged class. Toynbee did badly at school as she was "too rebellious to work, too angry to obey, too impatient to get out of there"; she attributed her gaining an Oxford scholarship to its "heavily class-biased exam" being designed "to reward people of exactly my background". After deliberately taking on menial jobs, she took a job that led to her becoming a journalist, something she had never intended.
Toynbee is a member of the Labour Party. She and her first husband, Peter Jenkins (from 1970), were supporters of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) breakaway from Labour in 1981, both signing the Limehouse Declaration. Toynbee stood for the party at the 1983 general election for Lewisham East, garnering 9351 votes (22%) and finishing third. She was one of the few SDP members who believed in unilateral nuclear disarmament, founding an unsuccessful group "Unilateralists for Social Democracy". She later refused to support the subsequent merger of the SDP with the Liberals (to form the Liberal Democrats), reacting instead by rejoining Labour only after the rump 'continuing SDP', led by David Owen, collapsed in 1990.
In 1995, Toynbee criticised Metropolitan Police Commissioner Paul Condon's comments that 80% of mugging cases were committed by black people, stating that it was "an over-simplification that is seriously misleading". She approvingly quoted academic researcher Michael Keith, who said: "If you were to standardise for everything else – education, unemployment, housing estates, life chances – race on its own would have virtually no significance."
In a 2002 debate hosted by the Royal Society of Arts and Prospect magazine, Toynbee argued that the West should pursue liberal internationalism by intervening through the United Nations to promote democracy around the world: "Spreading people's right to self-determination, and their right to think and vote for themselves, is a moral obligation… We should be intervening now in the Congo and Sudan."
Toynbee strongly supports state education, though she had two of her three children partly educated in the private sector, leading to accusations of hypocrisy. Although consistently critical of many of Tony Blair's New Labour reforms, she wrote in 2005 that his government "remains the best government of my political lifetime". During the 2005 General Election, with dissatisfaction high among traditional Labour voters, Toynbee wrote several times about the dangers of protest voting, "Giving Blair a bloody nose". She urged Guardian readers to vote with a clothes peg over their nose if they had to, to make sure Michael Howard's Conservatives would not win thanks to vote splitting. "Voters think they can take a free hit at Blair while assuming Labour will win anyway. But Labour won't win if people won't vote for it."
In December 2006, Greg Clark (a former SDP member, later to be a Conservative minister) claimed Toynbee should be an influence on the modern Conservative Party, causing a press furore. Reacting to this, Conservative leader David Cameron said he was impressed by one metaphor in her writings – of society being a caravan crossing a desert, where the people at the back can fall so far behind they are no longer part of the tribe. He added, "I will not be introducing Polly Toynbee's policies." Toynbee expressed some discomfort with this embrace, adding, "I don't suppose the icebergs had much choice about being hugged by Cameron either." In response to the episode, Boris Johnson, at the time a Conservative MP and journalist who had been severely criticised by Toynbee, rejected any association with Toynbee's views, writing that she "incarnates all the nannying, high-taxing, high-spending schoolmarminess of Blair's Britain. Polly is the high priestess of our paranoid, mollycoddled, risk-averse, airbagged, booster-seated culture of political correctness and 'elf 'n' safety fascism".
Having advocated for Gordon Brown to succeed Blair as prime minister, Toynbee continued to endorse him in the early part of his premiership. By spring 2009 she had become sharply critical of Brown, arguing that he had failed to introduce the social-democratic policies he promised, and was very poor at presentation too. She subsequently called for his departure, voluntary or otherwise. In the European Elections of June 2009 she advocated a vote for the Liberal Democrats. During the 2010 general election she advocated a tactical vote for whichever candidate was best able to keep the Conservatives out of power.
In October 2010, Toynbee was criticised for an article in The Guardian in which she said the government's benefits changes would drive many poor people out of London and could be seen as a "final solution" for their situation. Some people interpreted this as a reference to the Nazis, which Toynbee said was not her intention. A Press Complaints Commission report on the matter ruled the comments were "insensitive", but did not breach any rules as the organisation's remit does not cover matters of taste and offence. She later apologised for using the term.
Toynbee has been described as "the queen of leftist journalists", and in 2008 topped a poll of 100 "opinion makers", carried out by Editorial Intelligence. She was also named the most influential columnist in the UK. Andrew Marr has said that "hat makes her stand out as a journalist is not only her strong views but also her ferocious appetite for research. In a media world in which too many media columnists simply voice their top-of-the-head opinions, Polly always arrives heavily armed with hard facts".
With her partner, former Social Affairs editor of The Guardian David Walker (Peter Jenkins died in 1992), Toynbee co-authored two books reviewing the successes and failures of New Labour in power. In Unjust Rewards (2008) they argued that "excess at the top hurts others".
To reduce child poverty in the United Kingdom, Toynbee has supported an increase in the Working Tax Credit. She has criticized the UK government austerity programme under Conservative governments, and the reduction in the public sector and government services. She has criticised the underfunding of the National Health Service and its adverse effects on patient care.
In the aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire, Toynbee wrote that "Political blame spreads right through the Conservative party, with no escape on offer. This goes far beyond the precise shockers – the Tory MPs who mockingly rejected housing regulation; the cuts to funding to councils responsible for retro-fitting fire suppressants; the disregard of coroner's instructions after the 2009 Lakanal House tragedy; and even the plan to opt out of EU safety regulations. Conservative Kensington and Chelsea council allegedly blocking its ears to tenants' well-founded anxiety is just the immediate scandal. But this event reaches far deeper, to the very sinews of its party's policy."
She is a strong opponent of Brexit.
Views
Views on politics
Writing about the government of PM Rishi Sunak in November 2022, Toynbee argued that choosing Suella Braverman as home secretary was a blunder and that Braverman's promise to reduce immigration to "tens of thousands" was unworkable since more than 270,000 people arrived during the year to March 2022, mostly with visas. Only small numbers arrived in boats." Toynbee further said that Braverman's "dreams" about Rwanda and cruelty and putting arrivals into squalid conditions in the Manston processing centre disrupted policy."
Toynbee also criticised Sunak's initial decision to miss the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference. Later Sunak changed his mind and decided he would attend the COP27 conference.
Views on religion
An atheist, Toynbee is an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society, a supporter of the Humanist Society Scotland, and was appointed President of the British Humanist Association in July 2007. Since 2012, she has been the BHA's vice president. She has said that she is simply a consistent atheist, and is just as critical of Christianity, Islam and Judaism. She wrote: "The pens sharpen—Islamophobia! No such thing. Primitive Middle Eastern religions (and most others) are much the same—Islam, Christianity and Judaism all define themselves through disgust for women's bodies." In 1997 she declared "I am an Islamophobe and proud of it". In 2005 she opposed the Bill to outlaw incitement to religious hatred: "Race is something people cannot choose and it defines nothing about them. But beliefs are what people choose to identify with...The two cannot be blurred into one—which is why the word Islamophobia is a nonsense".
In 2003, upon the 25th anniversary of Pope John Paul II's papacy, she wrote that he "is a hate-figure and with good reason… No one can compute how many people have died of Aids as a result of Wojtyla's power, how many woman have died in childbirth needlessly, how many children starved in families too large and poor to feed them. But it is reasonable to suppose these silent, unseen, uncounted deaths at his hand would match that of any self-respecting tyrant or dictator". In 2011 she accepted an invitation to participate in a debate with the Christian philosopher William Lane Craig on the existence of God but Toynbee later pulled out stating "...this is not my kind of forum".
Toynbee has mixed feelings about the Church of England; she has opposed both religious and secular dogmatic beliefs. In April 2014, she wrote:
The C of E is a confusing creature. Even while it tussles internally between conservative and liberal wings on gay marriage or female bishops, polls of its members show it's no longer the Conservative party at prayer: more vote Lib Dem and Labour. Look at the 40 bishops' raspberry of an Easter message to Cameron, with their strong rebuke against the "national crisis" of hunger so much worsened by his welfare policies. They know because their churches house the food banks used by almost a million people. (...) Like all humanity, the religious are both good and bad. The C of E is good on food banks, bad on sex and death. Faith makes people no more virtuous, but nor do rationalists claim any moral superiority. Pogroms, inquisitions, jihadist terror and religious massacres can be matched death for death with the secular horrors of Pol Pot, Hitler or Stalin. The danger is where absolute belief in universal truths, religious or secular, permits no doubt.
Honours
Toynbee was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Essex in 1999 and by London South Bank University in 2002. In 2004, she was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from Loughborough University. In 2005, she was made an Honorary Doctor of The Open University for "her notable contribution to the educational and cultural well-being of society". The University of Kent awarded Toynbee the honorary title of Doctor of Civil Law in November 2007 in recognition of her concern with poverty and welfare. This was followed in 2008 when University of Leeds awarded her fourth honorary doctorate. and in 2007 was named 'Columnist of the Year' at the British Press Awards. Toynbee declined to be made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2000.
Personal life
Toynbee lives in Lewes, East Sussex. She also owns a villa in Tuscany. She is a member of the Arts Emergency Service.
Select bibliography
- Leftovers: A Novel (1966) ISBN 0-586-02643-6
- A Working Life (1971) ISBN 0-340-14760-1
- Hospital (1977) ISBN 0-09-131390-2
- Way We Live Now (1981) ISBN 0-413-49090-4
- Lost Children: Story of Adopted Children Searching for Their Mothers (1985) ISBN 0-09-160440-0
- Hard Work: Life in Low-Pay Britain (2003) ISBN 0-7475-6415-9
- Better or Worse?: Has Labour Delivered? (2005) ISBN 0-7475-7982-2
- Unjust Rewards: Exposing Greed and Inequality in Britain Today (with David Walker, 2008) ISBN 978-1-84708-093-6
- Cameron's Coup (with David Walker, 2015)
- An Uneasy Inheritance: My Family and other Radicals (2023)
References
- The International Who's Who of Women 2002. London: Europa. 2001. p. 580. ISBN 1857431227. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
- Toynbee, Polly (27 September 2016). "Why can't I get behind Corbyn, when we want the same things? Here's why | Polly Toynbee". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
- ^ "Polly Toynbee". British Humanist Association. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
- "About Us". mydeath-decision.org. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
- Toynbee, Polly (7 April 2015). "Back on the Isle of Wight, Tory Britain rehearses its collapse". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
- ^ "Obituary: Anne Wollheim". The Guardian. 27 November 2004.
- An Historian's Conscience: The Correspondence of Arnold J. Toynbee and Columba Cary-Elwes, ed. Christian B. Peper, 1986, Beacon Press, p. 266
- ^ Langley, William (26 November 2006). "Profile: Polly Toynbee". The Daily Telegraph. London.
- Enlightening: Letters 1946-1960, Isaiah Berlin, ed. Henry Hardy, Random House, 2012, end note no. 361
- ^ Toynbee, Polly (20 May 2023). "What my privileged start in life taught me about the British class system". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
- ^ McSmith, Andy (26 November 2006). "Polly Toynbee: Reborn, as a lady of the right". The Independent. London.
- Professor David P Forsythe (11 August 2009). Encyclopedia of Human Rights. Oxford University Press. pp. 164–. ISBN 978-0-19-533402-9. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
- Toynbee, Polly. "Polly Toynbee". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- "SPA Executive Committee 2007–08". Social Policy Association. Archived from the original on 8 September 2006. Retrieved 21 April 2008.
- Polly Toynbee and Andrew Pierce on air and rail strikes, The Daily Politics, BBC, 19 March 2010.
- Roy Jenkins, A Life at the Centre (London: Macmillan, 1991), p. 588.
- Toynbee, Polly (1 March 2011). "Some SDP thinking might strengthen Labour's nerve". The Guardian. London.
- ^ Toynbee, Polly (7 July 1995). "Mugging: is it a black and white issue?". The Independent. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
- Polly Toynbee, John Gray and Hazem Saghiyeh, "(Re-)ordering the world: dilemmas of liberal imperialism", RSA Journal Vol. 149, No. 5501 (2002), p. 52.
- ^ Chaundy, Bob (24 November 2006). "Faces of the week". BBC News.
- Jones, Lewis (August 2008). "Toynbee: the great comic figure of the age". The First Post.
- Toynbee, Polly (23 September 2005). "The fight for the centre ground is throttling British politics". The Guardian. London.
- Toynbee, Polly (13 April 2005). "Hold your nose and vote Labour". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 21 April 2008.
- Johnson, Boris (23 November 2006). "Polly Toynbee the Tory guru: that's barking. Or maybe not". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 21 April 2008.
- Toynbee, Polly (29 June 2007). "It's a truly decent, clever team, but that is not enough. Now they must excite". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
- Toynbee, Polly (2 May 2009). "Gordon Brown: no ideas and no regrets". The Guardian. London.
- Toynbee, Polly (12 May 2009). "Gordon Brown must go – by June 5". The Guardian. London.
- Toynbee, Polly (1 June 2009). "Throw out bad councils and vote Lib Dem for Europe". The Guardian. London.
- Polly Toynvee "Your heart might say Clegg. But vote with your head", The Guardian, 24 April 2010
- Toynbee, Polly (25 October 2010). "Benefits cut, rents up: this is Britain's housing time bomb". The Guardian. London.
- "Hysterics over housing". The Daily Telegraph. London. 29 October 2010. Archived from the original on 31 October 2010.
- "News >> Commission's decision in the case of various v The Guardian". Press Complaints Commission. Archived from the original on 1 December 2010.
- "Are the Tories being bullied?". Today. London. 29 October 2010. BBC. Radio 4.
- "Polly Toynbee Voted UK's 'Most Influential' Commentator" (Press release). Editorial Intelligence. 13 April 2008. Archived from the original on 31 May 2009.
- Reeves, Richard (23 August 2008). "Review: Unjust Rewards by Polly Toynbee and David Walker". The Daily Telegraph. London.
- Sutherland, Ruth (14 September 2008). "Asbos for the millionaires: A strong and hopeful analysis of the growing gap between Britain's rich and poor". The Observer. London.
- "If Theresa May really cares about the poor, she must change course – now", The Guardian
- "Don't fall for Philip Hammond's budget trickery. There is an alternative", The Guardian
- Applauding a public sector pay cap? Tories are cheering their own demise The Guardian
- "NHS crisis: the one act of self-sacrifice that could rescue our health service", The Guardian
- "Theresa May was too scared to meet the Grenfell survivors. She's finished", The Guardian
- "At last, Jeremy. Now Labour's mission must be to prevent any Brexit: Polly Toynbee". The Guardian. 25 February 2019.
- ^ Rishi Sunak’s only been in office for a few days – and the errors are already piling up The Guardian. 1 November 2022.
- Rishi Sunak confirms he will attend Cop27 after earlier saying he would not go – UK politics live The Guardian
- "National Secular Society Honorary Associates". National Secular Society. Retrieved 27 July 2019
- Behind the Burka. Women's History Review, Volume 10, Number 4, 2001.
- Toynbee, Polly (28 September 2001). "Behind the burka". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
- Private Eye 18 December 2020 p. 9
- The Independent (23 October 1997), quoted in Naser Meer, Citizenship, Identity and the Politics of Multiculturalism: The Rise of Muslim Consciousness (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), p. 182.
- The Guardian (10 June 2005), quoted in Meer, p. 182.
- Polly Toynbee, 'False paeans to the Pope', The Guardian (17 October 2003).
- "Why are the atheists shy of debate?".
- Polly Toynbee "David Cameron won't win votes by calling Britain a Christian country", The Guardian, 18 April 2014
- "Honorary Degrees". London South Bank University. Retrieved 21 April 2008.
- "University Honours archive | Graduation | Loughborough University". www.lboro.ac.uk. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
- "Polly Toynbee – Congregations – University of Kent". kent.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
- "Seven honoured by the University of Leeds". leeds.ac.uk. 9 July 2008. Retrieved 17 October 2019. She won the Orwell Prize for journalism in 1998 (for journalism published by The Independent)
- "Polly Toynbee". The Orwell Foundation. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
- "Media top 100 2007 : 79. Polly Toynbee". The Guardian. 9 July 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
- Alliss, Peter (22 December 2003). "Some who turned the offer down". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
- Baker, Norman (23 September 2015). Against the Grain. Biteback Publishing. ISBN 9781849549936 – via Google Books.
- Zoe Williams (29 November 2006). "A primitive reaction". The Guardian.
- Steerpike (10 April 2016). "Polly Toynbee forgets to check her privilege on Marr". spectator.co.uk (wp:newsblog).
- "Media Diversity UK". E-activist.com. Archived from the original on 23 December 2020. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
External links
- Polly Toynbee on Twitter
- Polly Toynbee on Journalisted
- Interview with Polly Toynbee at the Wayback Machine (archived 25 September 2006) focussing on religion with Third Way magazine, 22 June 1998
- Political Journalist of the Year 2003 citation at the Wayback Machine (archived 18 January 2008)
- RSA Vision webcast – Polly Toynbee elaborates on the findings of her new book Unjust Rewards: Exposing the Greed and Inequality in Britain Today 18 September 2008
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