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Like Brexit and Iraq, Suez divided Britain bitterly

A protest against Anthony Eden during the Suez crisis.
A protest against Anthony Eden during the Suez crisis. Photograph: Mark Kauffman/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image

Simon Jenkins says “Parliament and public opinion backed him [Anthony Eden] all the way” in relation to the 1956 Suez debacle (May can learn to compromise with a political tip from 1846, 18 January). But opinion in parliament and among the public was bitterly divided. I well remember Hugh Gaitskell’s impassioned speeches condemning the illegality of the operation and Nye Bevan addressing a huge crowd in Trafalgar Square. In my workplace, aged 17, I became aware of just how divisive politics could be, with my colleagues divided pretty well 50-50 for and against. Suez, Iraq and now Brexit stand out as the three times during my life that the country has been so bitterly, and almost equally, divided on a major issue.
Dr John Coad
Loanhead, Midlothian

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