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During the miners' strike of 1984-85, he was a strong supporter of the NUM president, Arthur Scargill.

After the return to work he attempted, unsuccessfully, to introduce a bill in the Commons giving an amnesty to all miners imprisoned for offences during the strike.

After Labour's third successive election defeat in 1987, he stood for the leadership against Neil Kinnock but was heavily defeated.

His party was now moving away from his views in an attempt to reclaim the middle ground of British politics. Benn was becoming unfashionable.

He finally stood down from Parliament before the 2001 election in order, as he put it, "to spend more time on politics", and threw himself into campaigning against the Iraq war, becoming president of the Stop the War Coalition.

He seemed to mellow in his later years and became a regular pundit on radio and television as well as occasionally appearing on stage with folk singer Roy Bailey.

He was also a compulsive keeper of diaries, both in written form and on audiotape; extracts from the latter have appeared on BBC Radio.

In 2006, he topped a poll commissioned by the BBC's Daily Politics programme to find who people considered to be their political hero, beating Margaret Thatcher into second place.

Subject as he often was to personal attacks from his opponents, Tony Benn held to his view that politics should be about policies and not personalities.

"This idea that politics is all about charisma and spin is rubbish," he said. " It is trust that matters."


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