Milligan joined The Economist in 1970, and was industrial editor and chief EEC correspondent from 1972 to 1980. In 1976, he published a book, The New Barons, on British trade unions in the 1970s. Still working for The Economist, he took a position as presenter of The World Tonight on BBC Radio 4 from 1980 until 1983. He later became foreign editor and Washington correspondent at The Sunday Times from 1984 until 1987, before rejoining the BBC in 1988 as a European correspondent.[2]Sunday Times editor Andrew Neil described Milligan: "He possessed an enquiring, original intelligence, a wide knowledge of foreign and domestic affairs and he was great fun to work with, his infectious laugh filling our editorial meetings, where he played a major role in defining the paper's policy positions".[3]
Milligan was found dead in his house at 64 Black Lion Lane, Hammersmith, London, by his secretary Vera Taggart on 7 February 1994. Milligan had failed to appear in the House of Commons as expected, and so Taggart went to look for him.[4] Milligan's corpse was found naked except for a pair of stockings and suspenders, with an electrical flex tied around his neck, his head covered and an orange in his mouth.[5][4] The coroner concluded that he had died in the early hours of February 7th (on the same day).[4]
The pathology report into Milligan's death discounted the possibility of murder, lending weight to the belief that he died as a result of suicide or, more likely, died accidentally from autoerotic asphyxiation. No drugs or alcohol were found in his blood, and no substances were found to have contributed to his death.[4][6] It was ruled a death by misadventure.[4]
Aftermath
Milligan's death was one of the scandals which contributed to the collapse of John Major's "Back to Basics" policy initiative, which was seen as emphasising socially conservative values.[7] In an interview after Milligan's death, likely under the presumption it was a suicide, Major said that Milligan "must have been pretty unhappy, pretty miserable".[6][8] This characterisation was criticised by Milligan's cousin, Judge Tim Milligan, who wrote that "with respect to the Prime Minister, Stephen was neither miserable or unhappy. On the contrary, he was thoroughly fulfilled and happy in his work in Westminster and his Eastleigh constituency, which gave him the chance to be of service to others as he always wished."[9]
Milligan left an estate worth £846,860 (equivalent to £2,127,561 in 2023), leaving £5,000 (equivalent to £12,561 in 2023) to Oxfam and £500 (equivalent to £1,256 in 2023) to St Peter's Church, Hammersmith.[10] His death triggered a by-election for his Eastleigh seat, which was held on 9 June. The by-election was won by the Liberal Democrat candidate David Chidgey, who would hold the seat until the 2005 general election.[11] The Conservative candidate, Stephen Allison, came third in the by-election.[12]
Following Milligan's death, Hat Trick Productions, the producers of the BBC's satirical television programme Have I Got News For You, sent black bin bags, oranges and black stockings to journalists to publicise a new series of the show. The BBC subsequently apologised to Milligan's parents for the incident.[13]
References
^Jebb, Louis (9 February 1994). "Obituary: Stephen Milligan". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
^ abBates, Stephen (8 February 1994). "Stephen Milligan". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
^"MP leaves £846,000". The Times. No. 64975. 8 June 1994. p. 5. Archived from the original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2015 – via The Times Digital Archive.