Henry Labouchère

Henry Du Pré Labouchère (9 November 1831 – 15 January 1912) was an English politician, writer, publisher and theatre owner in the Victorian and Edwardian eras. He is now most remembered for the Labouchère Amendment, which for the first time criminalised all male homosexual activity in the United Kingdom.

Henry Labouchère
Member of Parliament
for Middlesex
In office
15 April 1867  21 November 1868
Preceded byRobert Culling Hanbury
Succeeded byGeorge Hamilton
Member of Parliament
for Northampton
In office
27 April 1880  12 January 1906
Succeeded byHerbert Paul
Personal details
Political partyLiberal
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Occupationwriter, publisher and theatre owner
Known forLabouchere Amendment criminalising male homosexual activity

Labouchère, who came from a wealthy Huguenot banking family, was a junior member of the British diplomatic service before briefly serving in Parliament in 1865–68. He lived with the actress Henrietta Hodson from 1868, and they married in 1887. He made a name for himself as a journalist and theatre producer, first buying a stake in The Daily News and in 1876 founding the magazine Truth, which he bankrolled during an extensive series of libel suits.

In 1880, he returned to Parliament as the Liberal member for Northampton, and became a key figure in the radical Home Rule wing of the party. He was a controversial figure, and opposition from Queen Victoria as well as from senior Liberals ensured that he was never given a ministerial position. He became increasingly unpopular because of his opposition to the Second Boer War, and resigned from politics in 1906, when he left Britain and retired to Italy.

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