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Downing Street Years - Margaret Thatcher [470]

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us at this time and in the light of the traffic congestion which Britain’s new prosperity brought with it. I asked Paul to leave and he did so with perfect good humour. I appointed Cecil Parkinson to his place. Deciding to ask John Moore to go was even more of a wrench. He was of my way of thinking. At Health it was he — rather than his successor Ken Clarke — who had really got the Health review under way. At Social Security, after I split the DHSS into two departments, he had been courageous and radical in his thinking about dependency and poverty. But, as I have explained, John had never fully recovered, at least psychologically, from the debilitating illness he suffered while Secretary of State at the old combined DHSS. So I asked him to make way and appointed Tony Newton, a stolid, left-inclining figure but one with a good command of the House and of his brief. I also brought into the Cabinet Peter Brooke who had been a much loved and utterly dependable Party Chairman. He wanted to be Ulster Secretary and I gave him the job, moving Tom King to the Defence Ministry, vacated by George Younger who wanted to leave the Government to concentrate on his business interests. George’s departure was something of a blow. I valued his common sense, trusted his judgement and relied on his loyalty. His career is proof of the fact that, contrary to myth, gentlemen still have a place in politics.

But there were three main changes which determined the shape of the reshuffle and the reception it received. In reverse order of importance: I moved Chris Patten to the Environment Department to succeed Nick Ridley, who went to the DTI (David Young left the Cabinet at his request and became Deputy Chairman of the Party); I moved Ken Baker to become Party Chairman from the Department of Education, where he was succeeded by John MacGregor. And John was succeeded by John Gummer who entered the Cabinet as Minister for Agriculture.

But first, and crucially, I called in Geoffrey Howe and said that I wanted him to leave the Foreign Office, where I intended to put John Major. It was predictable that Geoffrey would be displeased. He had come to enjoy the trappings of his office and his two houses, in Carlton Gardens in London and Chevening in Kent. I offered him the Leadership of the House of Commons at a time when the House was shortly to be televised for the first time. It was a big job and I hoped he would recognize the fact. But he just looked rather sullen and said that he would have to talk to Elspeth first. This, of course, held up the whole process. I could see no other ministers until this matter was decided. Geoffrey also, I believe, saw David Waddington, the Chief Whip, who had advised me to keep Geoffrey in the Cabinet in some capacity. David meant well by this advice, but perhaps I should have asked Geoffrey to go altogether, for he clearly never forgave me. Back and forth to Downing Street messages passed in the course of which I offered Geoffrey the Home Office — knowing in advance that he would almost certainly not accept — then, after conferring with Nigel Lawson, Dorneywood, the Chancellor’s country house which I rightly thought that he would accept, and finally, with some reluctance and at his insistence, the title of Deputy Prime Minister which I had held in reserve as a final sweetener. This is a title with no constitutional significance but which Willie Whitelaw (until his stroke in December 1987 and subsequent resignation the following month) had almost made his own because of his stature and seniority. But because Geoffrey had bargained for the job, it never conferred the status which he hoped. In practical terms it just meant that Geoffrey sat on my immediate left at Cabinet meetings — a position he may well have come to regret.

The delay in concluding the reshuffle was bound to prompt speculation. But it was, I am told, Geoffrey’s partisans who leaked the content of our discussions in a singularly inept attempt to damage me. As a result he received a very bad press about the houses, which was not unmerited, but which he doubtless

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