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Authors: Gyles Brandreth

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WEDNESDAY 1 DECEMBER 1993

A long forty-eight hours. To secure my rightful place behind the Chancellor for the Budget, I turned up at the Commons at 7.00 a.m. yesterday morning to join the queue. The Chamber opens at eight, when we fools rush in, armed with our little green prayer cards and bag our favourite places. By tradition Dame Elaine Kellett-Bowman
336
(knocking seventy)
is always at the front of the line. She brings a sleeping bag and a portable bed which she parks outside the door to the Chamber and she spends the night there, sleeping in the shadow of the statues of Churchill and Lloyd George. By the time I arrived there were about forty ahead of me, some standing, some squatting, quite a few with chairs they’d brought from nearby offices, and the line stretched back from the Chamber across member’s lobby through the swing door towards Central Lobby.

The Budget itself was a triumph for KC. It was a delicious, teasing, playful performance. He is a wonderful operator and such a likeable man. He’s had a superb press: ‘A Budget for economic and political recovery’ says
The Times
. ‘No smoke, no mirrors, just loads of chutzpah’ says Anatole Kaletsky. And so say all of us – though the Chancellor said to me last night, ‘It’s a golden rule – a Budget that’s acclaimed on the day doesn’t fare so well in retrospect. Let’s not get too cheerful too soon. Wait till they’ve read the small print.’

I think I’m weary through a surfeit of duchesses. I was on the bench till gone ten, not in bed till gone midnight, then up at dawn to fly to Manchester for the Waterstones’s Literary Lunch. The line-up was Trevor McDonald,
337
Lt Col Bob Stewart, Fergie and me. Fergie
338
spoke surprisingly well: she’d worked on her material, had several pages of notes written out in a large and loopy hand. She rather overdid her undying devotion to the present Queen and her grovelling gratitude for Her Majesty’s sustained and unstinting kindness to her, and I imagine her claims to have some sort of spiritual connection with Queen Victoria has the widow of Windsor spinning in her grave (and the likes of Lord Charteris positively spitting), but she was eager and good-hearted and nicely flirtatious in a gosh-golly-girls-in-the-dorm kind of way, and I liked her – especially because she gave me a copy of her book and bought three copies of mine.

‘What’s the worst thing about being royal?’

‘When you meet them, people remember what you say. And when you meet them for the second time, years later, they say, “You don’t remember me, do you?” I
hate
that.’

I was planning to come back by train because it was going to be easier for me from Euston. ‘No,’ she said, ‘Come on the plane.’

‘I haven’t got a ticket.’

‘I’ve got two tickets.’

‘Why?’

‘Just in case! I always get two … you never know.’

I imagine the money’s pouring away. She bought several copies of everybody’s books. She gushed and gladhanded and
yearned
to be wanted and liked and loved. Colonel Bob
did his best to imply an established intimacy. (‘Yes, Sarah, I’ll call you.’ It
has
all gone to his head.) Trevor and I settled for a new friendship and, while I imagine our hoots and giggles and guffaws will have been immensely irritating to our fellow passengers, we rather enjoyed the flight home.

As a consequence of being seduced onto the plane, I arrived late for the charity do at St James’s Palace. They were already
à table
. I went to apologise to our hostess, the Duchess of Gloucester, knelt at her side and said ‘I’m so sorry I’m late.’ She was not amused. I compounded my
lèse-majesté
, by telling her (as Fergie insisted I should, absolutely insisted, ‘You must, please, please. I don’t see any of them now and I don’t want to be frozen out’) that I’d spent the day with the Duchess of York and ‘Sarah particularly asked to be remembered to you.’ The Danish duchess said nothing, nothing at all, frowned ever-so-slightly to get her ‘Who do you think you are?’ message across, and returned her attention to her plate.

I should have remembered that she’s not an easy ride. At the Roy Miles Gallery, at a private view, somehow we’d been left alone in the middle of a quite small room. I’d struggled with the small talk long enough. She was saying nothing: I had nothing more to say. I moved slightly closer to her and, while I burbled some inanity in her ear, behind her back I frantically gestured to Michèle to come and rescue me. Suddenly I realised that Her Royal Highness was gazing over my left shoulder into the mirror that was facing her. She was staring at the awful reflection of me frantically waving – and drowning.

WEDNESDAY 8 DECEMBER 1993

Last night at the Foreign Office party, in the newly refurbished and quite splendid Durbar Room, I met up with Liza Manningham-Buller, whom I last saw when she played the Fairy Queen in my production of
Cinderella
at Oxford twenty-six years ago. She seemed remarkably unchanged, except that I gather she’s now one of our most senior spies, destined to be, if not already, the head of MI6.
339
Extraordinary.

Tonight we’re voting on Sunday trading. I’m voting for total deregulation. I like these free votes. It is a relief now and again to be able to make up one’s own mind – even if, as in this case, my vote is going to upset the churches, M&S, and the small shopkeepers in Chester. Never mind. For once I shall do what I believe to be right and hang the consequences. There’s got to be
some
point to being an MP. (People are quite shocked when you admit that most of the time most MPs have no idea what they’re voting about. They just walk into the lobby where they see one of their whips standing and that’s that.)

TUESDAY 14 DECEMBER 1993

The Treasury Christmas lunch was a fairly hard slog. The Financial Secretary entertained his team at Joe Allen’s, which was an ideal venue because the din and clatter were so great no one could hear anybody and the fact that nobody seemed to have much to say to anybody consequently didn’t matter. Stephen [Dorrell] is delightful, I like him more and more, but slumming it with the troops, small talk with the secretaries, seasonal banter with the lower ranks – these are not his forte. They are the sort of thing Mr Major does better than anybody. He (the PM) came to mingle with his men in the Tea Room this afternoon and did well. He’s engrossed in the Northern Ireland business and both his commitment and grasp of detail are impressive. He was busy sending out signals to reassure the UUs, he reiterated his line that having to deal with Gerry Adams
340
would ‘make his stomach turn’, but he concedes there’s been a ‘chain of communication’ between the government and the IRA for years and there’s no doubt, before too long, we’ll be talking to the terrorists face to face. What happens to our fragile majority then?

MONDAY 27 DECEMBER 1993

We are in Framlingham with Simon and Beckie [Cadell]. Simon seems to be in much better shape. Beckie is a saint. The boys [their young sons] are amazing. They do their own thing, watch TV, play with the computer, scamper about outside, leaving us to get on with the serious business of working our way through Simon’s cellar. ‘We don’t know how long I’ve got,’ says Simon, in his best Ralph Richardson voice, dropping a splash or two of
pêche
into our mid-morning champagne, ‘so we’d better get on with it, eh cockie?’

We’ve had a merry Christmas. I imagine the PM was feeling relatively festive too – until yesterday when the
News of the World
brought us its latest world exclusive. Tim Yeo,
341
our Minister for the Environment and the Countryside, has a love child! Michèle has been against him since she saw him lolling on the front bench with his feet up against the despatch box. ‘Arrogant sod.’ I tried to explain that they all sit like that. ‘No they don’t. Mr Major doesn’t. I tell you: Tim Yeo’s an arrogant bastard. The sooner he goes the better.’

According to today’s papers, the Prime Minister is taking a more charitable view. He is standing by his man. ‘Minister with love child wins Major support.’ ‘This is a purely private matter,’ says PM. Oh yes?

THURSDAY 30 DECEMBER 1993

Yesterday: lunch with the Hanleys. Jeremy told a funny story. Pretty young diary secretary comes in to see her minister.

Secretary: Well, Minister, there’s good news and bad news.

Minister: Give me the good news.

Secretary: You’re not infertile.

Jeremy is loving the MoD. He rates Rifkind highly, he’s wary of Aitken. They’re both (Jeremy & Verna) quite seduced by the PM. People who get close to him invariably are. We went to John Schlesinger’s new flat last night. He thinks Major is quite wonderful too. Close up, the PM has a charm that disarms, that positively seduces. The flat is fabulous (an unexpectedly spacious duplex perched at the top of a single mansion block on the Gloucester Road) and the evening was very jolly. Eileen [Atkins] & Bill [Shepherd], Twiggy, Albert Finney and co. Noel
342
was so funny. The stories just keep tumbling out – the old favourites and always one or two someone hasn’t heard before. The Gurkha story, which I love, seemed new to one and all.
343

I doubt there’ll be much of that kind of humour
here
. We’re in Ablemont, in Normandy, staying in what I’m choosing to call ‘the valley of the Lilleys’. It’s a bourgeois house, not grand but solid, surrounded by farm buildings in the middle of nowhere. Peter and Gail escape here whenever they can. They say they just ‘hop over’. It took us rather longer to reach than that. We got to Folkestone to find the crossing cancelled. We moved on to Dover where they warned us the Channel was fairly choppy. This turned out to be something of an understatement. (Already we are dreading the return journey on Sunday.) It’s an odd party – Michael Brown, the Chopes,
344
Peter Oborne
345
(I am always wary when there’s a hack in the house) – but we’re promised plenty of wine, candles when the lights go (which apparently they will – they always do), no party hats but civilised parlour games. On the sideboard in the dining room there’s an elegant glass bowl engraved with a playful inscription to ‘The Bastards’. We arrived as night was falling, to see Peter through the window, sitting at his laptop, engrossed. What was he doing? ‘Looking for ways to reduce the social security bill.’ It is good to be spending New Year with the most
thoughtful
member of the government.

239
The 2nd Earl of Gowrie, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Minister for the Arts 1984–5, had given up his political career to concentrate on business.

240
Theo Richmond and Lee Langley, writers, friends of GB.

241
MP for Hendon North 1970–97.

242
MP for Birmingham Hall Green 1987–97.

243
Labour MP for Liverpool Broadgreen 1992–7; Liverpool Wavertree 1997–2010. She was then thirty-four.

244
Lord Parkinson since 1992; MP for Enfield West 1970–74, Herts South 1974–83, Hertsmere 1983–92.

245
David Heathcoat-Amory, MP for Wells since 1983.

246
MP for Witney from 2001; Prime Minister from 2010. He was then twenty-six.

247
Shadow Transport Secretary; Labour MP for Hull East 1970–2010; MEP 1975–9; Deputy Prime Minister 1997–2007; later Baron Prescott of Kingston upon Hull.

248
Minister of State for Transport; MP for Kettering 1983–97; later Baron Freeman.

249
There had been press speculation that the Princess Royal might take an apartment in Dolphin Square, not far from the Palace of Westminster, where a number of MPs have flats.

250
MP for Bolton North East 1983–97.

251
MP for Loughborough 1979–97; Charnwood since 1997.

252
Lyricist and broadcaster.

253
1920–2003; Lord Jenkins of Hillhead from 1987; Labour MP for Southwark Central 1948–50, Birmingham Stechford 1950–76; SDP MP for Glasgow Hillhead 1982–7; Chancellor of Oxford University from 1987.

254
MP for South Gloucestershire 1974–83, Northavon 1983–97; later Baron Cope of Berkeley.

255
MP for Chichester 1974–97.

256
MP for Basildon 1983–97; Southend West since 1997.

257
MP for Edmonton 1983–97.

258
MP for Windsor 1992–2005.

259
MP for Westbury 1992–2001.

260
GB’s short-lived constituency secretary.

261
MP for Bebington & Ellesmere Port 1978–83, Wirral South 1983–96.

262
MP for Harrow East 1970–97; a fervent pro-European.

263
Monetarist guru and economic adviser to the Prime Minister 1981–4 and 1989.

264
Tony Marlow, MP for Northampton North 1979–97.

265
John MacGregor, Secretary of State for Transport; MP for Norfolk South 1974–2001; later Baron MacGregor of Pulham Market.

266
Sydney Chapman, MP for Birmingham Handsworth 1970–74, Chipping Barnet 1979–2005; in the Whips’ Office 1988–95.

267
Nicholas Soames, MP for Crawley 1983–97, Mid Sussex since 1997; son of Lord Soames, grandson of Sir Winston Churchill.

268
Nicholas and his wife Ann Winterton, MP for Congleton 1983–2010.

269
MP for Esher 1987–2010.

270
MP for Dover 1987–97.

271
MP for Worthing 1964–97.

272
Minister of State for Industry; MP for Hove 1973–97.

273
Secretary of State for Education; MP for Oxford 1979–83, Oxford West & Abingdon 1983–97; later Baron Patten.

274
One of GB’s three sisters, Virginia.

275
Family nickname for GB, based on his middle name ‘Daubeney’.

276
Ann and Nick Owen (whom GB had known at TV-am) were now presenting
Good Morning
for the BBC at Pebble Mill, produced by Ann’s then husband, Mike Hollingsworth. GB founded the National Scrabble Championships in 1972 and was a director Spear’s Games, manufacturers of Scrabble.

277
Iain Sproat, MP for Aberdeen South 1970–83, Harwich 1992–7.

278
Lord James Douglas-Hamilton, Under-Secretary of State for Scotland; MP for Edinburgh West 1974–97.

279
In the Whips’ Office 1990–97; MP for Stevenage 1983–97.

280
Editor of the
Evening Standard
1992–5, formerly editor of the
Mail on Sunday
1982–92.

281
MP for Stratford-on-Avon 1983–97, Newport East 1997–2005, later Baron Howarth of Newport.

282
Labour MP for Gateshead West 1970–81, SDP MP for Gateshead West 1981–3, Conservative MP for Orpington 1992–2010; later Baron Horam of Grimsargh.

283
MP for Cambridgeshire South East since 1987.

284
MP for Sutton Carshalton 1976–83, Carshalton & Wallington 1983–97.

285
Director General of the BBC 1992–2000; later Baron Birt.

286
Tony Blair, shadow Home Secretary; MP for Sedgefield 1983–2007; Prime Minister 1997–2007.

287
MEP for Midlands East 1979–84; MP for Solihull 1983–2005.

288
Under-Secretary of State for Transport; MP for Lincoln 79–97.

289
In fact, the Queen Mother had suffered a minor injury to her foot. She was only in hospital briefly as a precaution.

290
The international summit conference on the future of the global environment.

291
He became Secretary of State for Wales in place of David Hunt.

292
MP for Berwick & East Lothian 1974, Edinburgh South 1979–87, Devizes 1992–2010. He succeeded as 13th Marquess of Lothian in 2004, by which time hereditary peers no longer had an automatic right to sit in the House of Lords. In 2010 he was created Baron Kerr of Monteviot.

293
Under-Secretary of State for Industry and Consumer Affairs 1990–93; MP for Gainsborough & Horncastle since 1983.

294
Became Under-Secretary of State at the Department of Health; MP for Battersea 1987–97.

295
Joined the Whips’ Office; MP for Shrewsbury & Atcham 1983–97.

296
Joined the Whips’ Office; MP for Brigg & Scunthorpe 1979–83, Brigg & Cleethorpes 1983–97.

297
Political Secretary to the Prime Minister 1992–4. He was thirty-two. Later, Baron Hill of Oareford; Leader of the House of Lords since 2013.

298
Minister of State, Northern Ireland Office, 1992–3; MP for Petersfield 1974–83, Hampshire East 1983–2010.

299
The sole witnesses at GB and his wife’s marriage at Marylebone Register Office in 1973.

300
Unlike Lamont, Archie Hamilton had stepped down as a Defence Minister at his own request.

301
MP for Erewash 1992–7.

302
MP for Clwyd North West 1992–7.

303
Anne Campbell, Labour MP for Cambridge 1992–2005.

304
Harriet Harman, shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Labour MP for Peckham since 1982.

305
MP for Rutland Melton since 1992.

306
Comedy writer and television presenter.

307
Tessa Keswick, later Director of the Centre for Policy Studies, and David Ruffley, MP for Bury St Edmunds from 1997.

308
Kenneth Clarke’s PPS; MP for Amber Valley 1983–97.

309
Deputy Leader of the Opposition and shadow Leader of the House; Labour MP for Lincoln 1974–9, Derby South since 1983.

310
Michael Heseltine’s PPS; MP for Nottingham North 1983–7, Croydon South since 1992.

311
GB’s constituency secretary.

312
MP for Twickenham 1970–97.

313
Chairman of the Conservative Backbench Finance Committee 1992–7; MP for Bridlington 1979–97, East Yorkshire 1997–2001.

314
Member of the Treasury Select Committee since 1972; MP for Stamford & Spalding 1987–97, Grantham & Stamford 1997–2010; he defected to Labour in 2007 and became Baron Davies of Stamford in 2010.

315
Lord King of Wartnaby from 1983; chairman of British Airways 1981–93.

316
In the Whips’ Office 1992–7; MP for Birmingham Stetchford 1977–9, Berkshire East 1983–97, Bracknell 1997–2010.

317
MP for Westmorland 1964–83, Westmorland & Lonsdale 1983–97.

318
MP for Willesden East 1959–64, Bedford 1970–83, Bedfordshire North 1983–97.

319
A by-election was taking place in Chistchurch, caused by the recent death of Robert Adley, aged fifty-eight, who had been the local MP since 1974.

320
Under the Jumper
, published in November 1993.

321
Actress, friend of GB, appearing in cabaret singing songs by Noel Coward.

322
Commander, 1st Battalion, Cheshire Regiment, 1991–6; MP for Beckenham since 2010.

323
MP forRibble Valley since 1992.

324
MP for Oxford East 1983–7, Epping Forest 1988–97.

325
MP for Penrith & the Border 1983–2010; later Baron Blencathra.

326
In the Whips’ Office 1989–96, Deputy Chief Whip 1993–6; MP for Derby North 1983–97, East Yorkshire since 2001.

327
Labour MP for Dundee West 1979–2005.

328
MP for Newport West 1983–87, Somerton & Frome 1992–97.

329
MEP for London North 1979–89; MP for Hendon South 1987–97.

330
MP for Harrow 1960–87.

331
Head of the Policy Unit at No. 10 1990–95; later Baroness Hogg.

332
Author and commentator, Professor of Government at the University of Essex.

333
Walter Bagehot, 1829–77, author of
The English Constitution
, 1867.

334
Second deputy chairman of Ways and Means (one of the Deputy Speakers) 1992–97; MP for Merton & Morden 1970–74, Plymouth Drake 1974–97. Later Baroness Fookes.

335
GB was appearing on Ned Sherrin’s BBC Radio 4 programme to promote his new book.

336
MP for Lancaster 1970–97; MEP for Cumbria 1979–84.

337
Newsreader and journalist.

338
The Duchess of York was promoting her book based on the journals and travels of Queen Victoria.

339
In fact, she became Director General of MI5, 2002–7; later Baroness Manningham-Buller of Northampton.

340
President of Sinn Fein since 1983; Sinn Fein MP for Belfast West 1983–92 and 1997–2011.

341
MP for Suffolk South since 1983.

342
Noel Davis, casting director, friend of GB.

343
It’s the story of the flighty lady at the military cocktail party who was introduced to a colonel in the Gurkhas and burst out, ‘Oh, goodness, Colonel, you’ve quite taken me aback. You’re
white
. I thought all you Gurkhas were black.’ ‘No,’ said the colonel, ‘only our privates are black.’ ‘Oh,’ gasped the lady, ‘how thrilling!’

344
Christopher Chope, MP for Southampton Itchen 1983–92, Christchurch since 1997, and his wife Christine.

345
Journalist.

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