Michael Foot (Obituary, 4 March) was always something of a hero to me, for his oratory, writings and for the breadth of his humanity. I only got to know him personally after the end of his parliamentary career when, with characteristic commitment and idealism, he plunged his savings and energies into a joint project with his wife Jill Craigie and nephew Jason, creating a documentary about the horrors of what was happening in former Yugoslavia while the world stood by.

We broadcast it on BBC2 in March 1995. At the press preview, I introduced the film by appealing to everyone to take up the issues Jill and Michael were raising, saying our generation would be judged harshly if the world sat back and did nothing without it even being properly debated. I praised the sense of history that shaped and informed the film as I pulled out of my pocket a copy of Foot’s famous 1940 anti-appeasement book, Guilty Men, a treasured possession of my late mother’s, saluting the longevity of Foot’s engagement with such matters.

After the screening I asked Foot to autograph my copy of Guilty Men. Later I noticed that alongside his expression of thanks he’d added “See Churchill quote”. I turned the pages and found at the end of the preface the words he’d marked up for me with shaky pen-marks: “‘The use of recriminating about the past is to enforce effective action in the present.’ – Winston Churchill, May 29, 1936.”

Giles Oakley

Former head of BBC community and disability programmes, 1993-98

• The tributes to Michael Foot (Friends and enemies united in admiration, 4 March) are true but insufficient. They leave out that he was right. It was his adversaries who were wrong. He saw and spoke out for and acted for decency, for humanity. They were more for themselves. They began the dragging down of Britain to where it is now. Democracy is a good thing, not one that invariably decides in favour of moral truth, or indeed any truth.

Ted Honderich

University College London

• You describe me as “Daniel Hannan, the hard-right Conservative MEP”. Well, OK. Just for the record, though, I opposed the invasion of Iraq, argued against section 28, supported civil partnerships, and backed Barack Obama. The context in which you mentioned me was my praise for Michael Foot, whom I liked and admired: we were both, I wrote, inspired by the radical-democratic tradition of the Levellers.

If the Levellers were around today, I doubt they’d be planning to vote Labour. They’d support withdrawal from the EU, an end to quangos (“Crown placemen”) and democratic local control of the police and judiciary. I’m pretty sure they’d also want referendums. Michael Foot was, in many ways, their heir; Gordon Brown is not.

Daniel Hannan MEP

Con, South East England


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