Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, Baron
Home of the Hirsel 1903–95, was a British politician.
Educated at Eton and Oxford, he was elected to the House of Commons in
1931 as a Conservative. As parliamentary private secretary (1937–39) to
Neville Chamberlain, he supported the latter's policy of appeasement
toward Nazi Germany.
He lost his Commons seat in 1945; reelected in 1950 he resigned (1951)
when he succeeded his father's peerage as the 14th earl of Home. He served
as minister of state (1951–55), secretary of state for commonwealth
relations (1955–60), and leader of the House of Lords (1957–60). As
foreign secretary (1960–63), he pursued a policy of dEtente with the
USSR and worked for the establishment of an independent British nuclear
deterrent.
In Oct., 1963, he became prime minister after Harold Macmillan's
resignation, emerging as the controversial compromise choice of a divided
party. The first peer to become prime minister since 1902, he renounced
his Scottish title for life and took a seat in Commons as Sir Alec
Douglas-Home. As prime minister, he was handicapped by the divisions
within his party and the continuing distraction of the Profumo scandal.
After the Conservative defeat in Oct., 1964, he led the opposition
until July, 1965. During his term as Conservative party leader, reforms
gave the party's members of Parliament the power to elect the party
leader. Douglas-Home was foreign secretary (1970–74) under Edward Heath.
He retained his seat in Commons until 1974, when he was created a life
peer.
See his autobiography The Way the Wind Blows (1976).
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