
Leo Abse, a colorful Welsh politician who took a leading role in liberalizing laws on homosexuality and divorce, has died at age 91.
Abse died Tuesday in London, according to Leo Abse and Cohen, the Welsh law firm he founded. The cause of death was not announced.
Noted for his dandyish apparel, Abse also won attention with books that attempted to apply psychoanalysis to Margaret Thatcher, Tony Blair, and Bill Clinton.
Fellatio, Masochism, Politics and Love, published in 2000, expounded his views of Clinton's fling with Monica Lewinsky and also delved into Blair's political relationship with Gordon Brown, his successor as prime minister.
Exhibiting a knack for a long, catchy title, Abse wrote about Thatcher in Margaret, Daughter of Beatrice in 1989, Wotan, My Enemy: Can Britain Live With the Germans in the European Union? in 1995, and The Man Behind the Smile: Tony Blair and the Politics of Perversion in 1997.
"Leo was courageous, highly principled, very funny, and totally unique," former Labour leader Neil Kinnock and his wife, Glenys, said in a statement. "We are glad that he had such a long and fulfilling life in which he gained so much social progress by being an outstanding freethinking socialist."
Abse was a Labour Party member of parliament from 1958 to 1987. He sponsored legislation in 1967 that decriminalized private sexual acts between adult men in England and Wales.
He also was active in passing the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act of 1984, which updated divorce laws, and the Children's Act of 1975, which reformed laws on adoption and fostering.
"I had two great advantages: I was born a Jew in Wales in the benign climate of Welsh nonconformity; we believed we had a covenant with God and God would look after us," Abse said in an interview this year with Intelligent Life magazine.
"Being in a minority within a minority, I had the benefit of being an outsider without feeling inferior. And I never went to university, which meant I wasn't groomed to conform."
Marjorie, his wife of 40 years, died in 1996. Four years later Abse married Ania Czeputkowska, a former shipyard worker from Gdansk, Poland, who was 51 years his junior.
He is survived by his wife, a son, a daughter, and his brother, the poet Dannie Abse. (AP)
These comments are reproduced as written by visitors to this Web site. They have not been edited for content, grammar, or spelling. The viewpoints appearing here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or views of advocate.com, The Advocate, or its affiliates.
Be the first to comment on this story.
If you would like to submit a comment for posting, please fill out the form above.
All comments submitted via this form are subject to posting or publication. (To send a private letter to an Advocate editor or writer, please use the e-mail button at the top of the page, or use snail mail.) If you would like your comment considered for publication in The Advocate magazine, please include your full name, your city of residence, and a phone number where you can be reached during business hours so that we can confirm your identity. Your e-mail address and telephone number are strictly confidential and will not be shared or used for any purpose other than to contact you about your comment.
See the Contact page for sending comments for reasons other than responding to Advocate editorial and news stories.
Please note that comments sent by fax or snail mail are unlikely to be posted, although they will be considered for publication along with all letters received via e-mail or via this Web page. Comments that chiefly concern Advocate.com content will be considered for posting only on the Web site. The Advocate reserves the right to edit submitted comments for grammar, spelling, obscenities, or libel; we will, however, do our best to preserve the original comment's style and intent. Comments considered for publication in The Advocate magazine may also be edited for length.