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Authors: Gyles Brandreth

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On Thursday night I’d gone to
Birmingham
for the Birmingham Post Literary Dinner. Kenneth Baker, Jane Asher, Peter Stringfellow (‘200? That was last year. Hands up any of you ladies who’ve had the pleasure?), me. The speeches started late, went on too long. I didn’t mind as I wasn’t due to do the local radio at Pebble Mill till midnight. That done, I got back to the hotel at one. I turned on the light in my dismal room and the lights fused. Every one. Pitch darkness, in the room, in the corridor. I stumbled about. I tried the bedside light. Nothing. I tried the TV. Joy. It crackled to life. The hotel porn channel: I began to undress in the flickering glow of two young women soaping one another in the shower. Suddenly, crackle, crackle, rain across the screen. ‘If you want to see the rest of the movie dial X.’ I got dressed, stumbled to the door, felt my way along the corridor, got to the landing. Lights! I went down to reception.
Eventually
a night porter was produced, who accompanied me back to my room, found the fuse box outside, flicked the switch and all was well. ‘This happens most nights,’ he said cheerily as I fumbled in my pocket to find him a tip.

I was asleep by two, awake at 6.30 a.m., and turning on the radio as I dressed suddenly
found myself hearing about ‘a serious fire in Chester’. I called Brian Bailey, I called Neil Fitton [Chester City councillors]. I got on to the
Chronicle
. A major fire in Lightfoot Street, several houses still ablaze, casualties unknown. I cancelled the Birmingham book signings and set off for the constituency. I got to Lightfoot Street by lunchtime. The police, the fire services, the WRVS, everyone had done a superb job. No life lost, but several houses destroyed, families made homeless. The city council had come up trumps – at once. Refuge found, food laid on. Martin Seed [the local manager] from M&S rolled up with supplies and blankets and fresh underwear for all. Truly impressive.

I asked the Superintendent if he could show me what had happened and, accompanied by two television crews, we walked the course of the devastation. The stench of the smoke was terrible. I showed my concern because I was concerned, but I am troubled because I know as I walked through the debris I was glad that I was on camera and (in my head) as I listened to the police and the firemen I began phrasing and rehearsing my thoughtful sound bite. It was worth it, I’m afraid, because when I got to the Eddisbury Patrons’ Club Dinner at Rowton Hall at 8.00
everybody
had seen me on the early evening news. My admiration for what the rescue services achieved is heartfelt, the congratulations I offered was richly deserved, it was right that the Member of Parliament should be there showing interest and concern and offering (genuinely) to help. But when I volunteered to be the one to take the pet rabbit that had been saved from the fire over to the refuge to restore him to his young owner, I knew that my motive was not entirely worthy.

MONDAY 28 OCTOBER 1996

Marginals’ Club dinner with the PM. He’s remarkably chipper, considering. On education, law and order, the reform of the welfare state – ‘there’s clear water between us and Labour.’ He thinks Blair is beginning to come over as too holier-than-thou, evangelical, ‘preachy’. ‘People don’t want the “nanny state”.’ And the economy’s coming our way. He managed to be upbeat and relatively relaxed. He’s in no hurry to go to the polls – ‘no hurry at all.’

‘We’ve got a working majority and the whips tell me everything’s nicely under control. Isn’t that right, Gyles?’ I
assume
the Chief has told him about Barry Porter. If Barry dies, our majority falls to one. If we lose Barry’s seat in the by-election we then become a minority government. And Barry, poor man, is going to die any day now. I speak to his wife and his mistress on alternate days. His wife (plus four, five children) are up in the constituency. His mistress, Angela, is nursing him in the flat down here. They are both coping remarkably.

THURSDAY 31 OCTOBER 1996

Breakfast at Claridges with David Puttnam. He has some deal with the hotel (is/was a non-exec director or some-such) whereby he gets the breakfast at a fiver a head. This is the sort of arrangement I could usefully use. He’s full of his schemes, plans, committees, initiatives. I imagine he is hoping to be one of Mr Blair’s first peers and a minister of state in the new administration. He is certainly busy-busy-busy. He floats the idea that within a year of the election Blair will have dropped Ken Livingstone and the hard left and that Ken Clarke and co. will somehow have come on board. He’s convinced of it. He deploys the argument persuasively and implies (but doesn’t state) that he’s as good as heard the plan from his leader’s lips … Is this why we still have breakfast? Because David thinks I may be a conduit to Clarke, Gummer, Curry, Stephen D.?

It won’t happen – even if Portillo or Redwood becomes leader. He misunderstands why we are Conservatives. But the left (or, as we like to think of ourselves, ‘the moderate middle ground’) are not enamoured of the rightwards shift. One of the advantages of where I’m sitting now (in the quiet room in the Library) is that it used to be part of the Speaker’s apartments and the corridor leading from the House itself to the internal entrance to the Speaker’s house is actually part of this room – the ‘wall’ is simply a glass and wood panel divide. As people come and go to and from the Speaker’s house, I prick up my ears. Betty as she sweeps through is invariably chatty, but usually discreet. But now and again I do hear something worthwhile – most recently Douglas Hurd plotting with someone (it might have been Kenneth Baker, but possibly not, the other voice was quite low – Peter Brooke? Peter Lloyd?)
607
to find ways to undermine Michael Howard’s plans to introduce mandatory sentences for repeat offenders …

And have I recorded our latest wheeze for tackling our vanishing majority? It came up when we were trawling through names, wondering who might be next to follow Thurnham, Howarth, Nicholson across the floor. Why don’t we find someone to defect to us?! We decided Kate Hoey
608
was our prime target. We like her, she seems sensible, she isn’t valued by New Labour – let’s have her! It’s laughable, of course, a daydream, but you never know. We’re going to put out the gentle, gentle feelers. Seb is going to seek her out and have lunch.

MONDAY 11 NOVEMBER 1996

I caught the 8.05 for Liverpool for Barry Porter’s funeral. It was at St Xavier’s, Oxton. The
wake was across the road from the church, at a pub called The Bowler Hat. I travelled up with John Ward, who was representing the PM. John arrived at Euston, grey, puffing, looking unusually anxious. He’d got the funeral details faxed to him from No. 10 yesterday, had seen mention of the Bowler Hat on the briefing note and, knowing Barry’s Unionist sympathies, spent the entire night worrying where he was going to find one.

John is exactly what the PM needs: he’s good, decent, dogged, loyal, no axes to grind. He’s quite a bit older than the PM too, which may help. He doesn’t look it, but he’s coming up for seventy-two. We chatted all the way. It’s clear the PM feels beleaguered on all sides, fed up with the factions, infuriated by the infighting. He no longer trusts anyone. Norma, John, Howell, Norman Blackwell, the inner circle excepted, can he completely trust his most senior colleagues? Not really, and he knows it.

The train arrived late. We shared a taxi with Frank Field. Fortunately he knew where we were going. He spent most of the journey leaning across me giving instructions to the driver. Right close up, nostrils flaring, Frank looks
exactly
like Kenneth Williams.

I am writing this on the front bench. We got back from Liverpool at 5.30 p.m. It is now after nine. The Second Reading of the Education Bill is drawing to a close. Rather to my surprise, Lady Olga is telling us she is against caning. We have done her an injustice. In the office, we’d put her down for a lash ’em and thrash ’em woman. (This may, of course, have been wishful thinking on some of my colleagues’ parts.) What is incredible, of course, (and what, justifiably, has had the PM hopping with anger), is that the education debate has been hijacked by all this rubbish on corporal punishment. It’s not going to be reintroduced, so why discuss it? We can only disappoint the diehards out there who want it, while reinforcing the view of everyone else that most Tories are heartless brutes.

THURSDAY 14 NOVEMBER 1996

Breakfast with Tim Rice at Claridge’s. He is late, but we don’t mind because when he arrives he readily agrees to be our ‘Luvvies for John Major’ front man. I wanted Charles Lewington
609
to hear it from his own lips. We’re drawing up a long list of potential celeb supporters and Tim is going to top and tail letters to them. I told him his peerage is now in the post. (I assume he’s too sensible to believe me.)

Back at the Palace of Varieties it’s all gone wrong again and I think it’s probably worse than it’s ever been. The caning nonsense is just a side-show. The main event this week is the Firearms Bill. The shooting lobby (step forward Prince Philip) think we’re going too far (it’s gesture politics, won’t change a thing), Mellor and co. want a total ban and
are going to back Labour because we’re not going far enough. The boys want a free vote. That would get us off the hook, but the PM won’t have it. This is
government
policy. It must be backed by a three-line whip.

And coming up on the radar screen: more Euro trouble, major Euro trouble. The PM’s standing by with a confidence motion. ‘Do turkeys vote for Christmas?’ he asks plaintively. ‘Some of our colleagues have got to decide if they want me or Mr Blair.’ The truth is a great swathe of his colleagues have decided it’s going to be Mr Blair come what may.

THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER 1996

It’s a shambles. We are six months away from a general election at most and the Prime Minister is being barracked by his own backbenchers. In the Tea Room he’s being openly derided. The poor man, of course, is caught between a rock and a hard place. What the troops want is a debate on the floor of the House on the latest range of EU documents relating to EMU. They want the debate before ECOFIN.
610
And ‘they’ is everyone from Hugh Dykes to Bill Cash! But the PM won’t have it, both because the Chancellor says it isn’t necessary, and because it could prove impossible to avoid a division on it and we might lose the vote – and why go to the country as a broken-backed government in the aftermath of a lost vote in the Commons if there’s a chance of struggling on till the Spring and finding calmer waters?

At PMQs the PM resisted demands for a debate – to open cries of ‘Shame!’, ‘This is a constitutional outrage!’ etc. He then made the mistake of saying that the European reports on the single currency had been subject to ‘detailed scrutiny’ in the Standing Committee. This was met with hoots of derision. The scrutiny at European Standing Committee B yesterday was cursory at best – and in any event Whitto
611
voted with the other side so it’s not clear whether the documents have been formally ‘taken note of’ or not. Heathcoat-Amory got up and flatly contradicted the PM. When the poor man persisted, there were shouts of ‘No! No! You’re wrong!’ At 3.30 p.m. the PM stomped off, looking ashen, and angry, leaving Tony Newton to pick up the pieces. For the forty minutes of Business Questions the demands rained down on him. Cartiss, Marlow, Wilkinson, Heathcoat-Amory, but not just the usual suspects. John Townend: ‘May I
implore
my RHF to think again?’ Even Sir John Stanley (who I don’t think I’ve ever
heard speak before) threw in his two cents’ worth from a great height. I sat right next to Tony. (I’m afraid I moved myself into the doughnut. If your constituents see you sitting there amazingly they think you’re
doing
something.) His hands were shaking violently throughout. He voice trembled too, but his content was measured, courteous. He did his best, he held the line. Every time he sat down, he muttered, ‘Was that all right?’ ‘It’s fine,’ I said, ‘It’s the wicket that’s impossible.’

MONDAY 25 NOVEMBER 1996

Not that we are describing it quite like this, but we have capitulated. The Chancellor is making a statement at 3.30 p.m. and we’re going to find time for a debate after all. (This is how we play it: five days of digging-in, mayhem and bloodshed all around, followed by total cave-in. Evidently we have a death-wish.)

LATER

Ken was brilliant. He is extraordinary. He defused all the hostility. He even had Lamont on his feet saying he’d got it right! He was conciliatory, he was good-humoured, he was so reasonable. It’s all been a misunderstanding. The press are guilty: a lot of ‘farcical misrepresentation’. Of course, there’s to be a full debate. Of course, we must have proper scrutiny. There will be no binding decisions made at ECOFIN on 2 December. That’s guaranteed, copper-bottomed. Make no mistake, the government isn’t frightened of debate. The government welcomes debate, hungers for it. And, remember, everything is subject to parliamentary approval anyway. The man is a master.

MONDAY 25 NOVEMBER 1996

I’ve taken to turning up for Transport prayers ten minutes ahead of time in order to have a while
à deux
with the Secretary of State [Sir George Young]. I like him, but I don’t really know him. For example, this morning we agreed that Ken is brilliant, that he rescued the fat from the fire on Monday, that his Budget performance yesterday was a model of bonhomie and shrewd politics, but we
didn’t
then go on to discuss what happens after we’ve lost the election. With colleagues one doesn’t know that well one still goes through the charade of pretending victory is possible.

Transport prayers are oddly formal. At nine we troop into a conference room. The
Permanent Secretary and heads of department – about a dozen in all – line up on one side of the table, and we sit facing them on the other. George then goes down the line, inviting news and views from each area – rail, shipping, road, air, the press office etc. It’s a curious ritual, but I suppose it keeps everyone roughly up to speed. (Ken or Stephen would regard it as a complete waste of time.) Sometimes, but not always, the ministers then troop back to George’s room for a coffee and chat. The chat is fairly stilted. John Watts
612
is pretty leaden. Giles Goschen
613
looks like an elongated version of Jiminy Cricket and can be quite fun, but somehow
fun
is out of place at the Department of Transport. (At the DoE when Robin Ferrers returned to prayers after he’d been off with his bad leg, at 9.00 a.m. Gummer arrived with a tray of glasses and a bottle of chilled champagne. That’s the way to do it.) At Transport, the issue of the hour is the proposed ministerial photocall: to celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of the zebra crossing (or some-such) the four ministers will be pictured crossing Abbey Road (or equivalent) in the manner of the Beatles. Given their unusual figures, two bean poles and a brace of Bunters, I urge caution. But I think they want to do it.

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