Michael Heseltine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rt. Hon. Lord Heseltine

In office
1995 – 2 May 1997
Preceded by Geoffrey Howe
Succeeded by John Prescott

Born 21 March 1933
Swansea, Wales
Political party Conservative

Michael Ray Dibdin Heseltine, Baron Heseltine, CH, PC (born 21 March 1933) is a British Conservative politician and businessman. He is a patron of the Tory Reform Group.

Contents

[edit] Before politics

Heseltine was born in Swansea, Wales. He is a distant descendant of Charles Dibdin, from whom one of his middle names was taken. Heseltine was educated at Shrewsbury School and campaigned briefly as a volunteer in the October 1951 General Election before going up to Pembroke College, Oxford, where, in frustration at his inability to be elected to the committee of the Oxford University Conservative Association, he founded the breakaway Blue Ribbon Club. Julian Critchley recounts a story from his student days of how he plotted his future on the back of an envelope, concluding as Prime Minister in the 1990s; another more detailed apocryphal version lists 'millionaire 25, cabinet member 35, party leader 45, prime minister 55'. He did become a member of the shadow cabinet at the age of 41 - but failed to achieve the last two (although he would, under John Major, be appointed Deputy Prime Minister at the age of 62).

Heseltine's biographers Critchley and Crick recount how, despite not being a natural speaker, he became a competent orator through much practice, including practising in front of a mirror, listening to tape recordings of the speeches of Charles Hill and taking speaking lessons from a vicar's wife. In the 1970s and 1980s Heseltine's conference speech was often to be the highlight of the Conservative Party Conference, despite his views being well to the left of the then party leader.

He was eventually elected to the committee of the Oxford Union after five terms at the University. The following year (1953-4) he served in top place on the committee, then as Secretary, then Treasurer, during which post he reopened the Union cellars for business and persuaded the visiting Sir Bernard and Lady Docker to contribute to the cost. After graduating with a second class degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (described by his own tutor as "a great and undeserved triumph"), he was permitted to stay on for an extra term to serve as President of the Oxford Union in Michaelmas 1954, having been elected with the assistance of leading Oxford socialists Anthony Howard and Jeremy Isaacs.

After graduating he built up a property business in partnership with his Oxford friend Ian Josephs, and with financial support from the families of both men, starting with a boarding house in Clanricarde Gardens and progressing to various other properties in the Bayswater area. He also attempted to train as an accountant but did not qualify, and after failing his accountancy exams could no longer postpone National Service. He was called up in January 1959 and became a Second Lieutenant in the Welsh Guards; he left early to contest the General Election that year, and on business grounds was exempted from the remaining sixteen months of his service. During the 1980s his habit of wearing a Guards tie, sometimes incorrectly tied with red showing on the knot, was the subject of much acerbic comment from military figures and older MPs with extensive war records; Michael Crick estimates that he must have worn the tie on more days than he actually served in the Guards.

Besides building a housing estate at Tenterden in Kent, which failed to sell and which was beset with repairs problems until after his election to Parliament, he founded the magazine publishing company Haymarket in collaboration with another Oxford friend Clive Labovitch, and early in the 1960s acquired the famous (but never profitable) magazine "Man About Town", which he changed to "Town". In 1962 he also briefly published a well-received weekly newspaper, "Topic", which folded but whose journalists later became the "Sunday Times Insight" Team. Between 1960 and 1964 he also somehow found the time to be a part-time interviewer for ITV.

After such rapid expansion, Heseltine's businesses were badly hit by the Selwyn Lloyd credit squeeze of 1962; he owed £250,000 (millions in 2006 prices), and claims that he was lent £60,000 by a bank manager who retired the same day. During the 1990s Heseltine was later to joke about how he had avoided bankruptcy by such stratagems as only paying bills when threatened with legal action, or by sending out insufficiently completed cheques, although it has never been suggested that he did not pay off all his debts eventually. It was during this period of stress that he took up gardening as a serious hobby.

In 1967 Heseltine secured Haymarket's financial future by selling a majority stake to the British Printing Corporation, retaining a large shareholding himself. Although his associates have testified to Heseltine's entrepreneurial courage and deal-making skills, it was only after Heseltine's election to Parliament that Haymarket, under the management of Lindsay Masters, grew into the company which has made Heseltine very rich, publishing a series of profitable yet unglamorous management and advertising journals.

[edit] Life as an MP

He contested Gower (safe Labour) in 1959, then a Coventry seat (marginal) in 1964, before being elected as a Member of Parliament (MP) in 1966 for Tavistock in Devon, subsequently representing Henley from 1974. Following the Conservative victory in the 1970 General Election, he was promoted to the ranks of government by Prime Minister Edward Heath. In 1970, he served briefly as a junior minister at the Department of Transport, before moving to the Department for the Environment, where he was partly responsible for shepherding the Local Government Act 1972 through Parliament. He then moved to the Department of Industry from 1972 onwards.

As Minister for Aerospace in 1973 Heseltine was responsible for flying around the world attempting to persuade other governments to buy Concorde, but was accused of misleading the House of Commons when he stated that government were still considering giving financial support to the Hovertrain, when the decision to pull the plug had already been taken by the Cabinet. Although his chief critic Airey Neave disliked Heseltine as a brash arriviste, his real target, in the view of Heseltine's PPS Cecil Parkinson, was the Prime Minister Edward Heath, whom Neave detested and later helped to topple as party leader in 1975.

He became Shadow Industry Secretary in the Conservative's 1974 - 1979 opposition, gaining notoriety following a 1976 incident in the House of Commons during the debate on measures introduced by the Labour Government to nationalise the shipbuilding and aerospace industries. Accounts of exactly what happened vary, but the most colourful image portrayed Heseltine seizing the mace and brandishing it towards Labour left-wingers who were celebrating their winning the vote by singing the Red Flag, his long fair hair flowing elegantly behind him. Heseltine subsequently acquired the nickname Tarzan or, on occasion, Hezza, in imitatation of "Gazza".

He was appointed to the cabinet of Margaret Thatcher as Secretary of State for the Environment in 1979. He was a key figure in the sale of council houses and was sent in as a troubleshooter to deal with the explosion of violence in Britain's inner cities in the aftermath of the Brixton and Toxteth riots during the early 1980s. Heseltine was responsible for developing the policies that led to five bi-annual National Garden Festivals, starting in 1984. He established Development Corporations that were directly appointed by the minister and empowered to circumvent local authority planning controls. This measure proved controversial as in areas such as East London, Merseyside and North East England the local authorities were Labour strongholds. He then served as Secretary of State for Defence from January 1983 - his presentational skills were used to take on the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in the June 1983 General Election - until 1986, when he resigned over the bitter dispute with the prime minister over the Westland Affair.

[edit] Life at the backbench, and his return

He then returned to the backbenches, where he became increasingly critical of Margaret Thatcher's performance as prime minister, although he abstained in November 1989 when Sir Anthony Meyer challenged for the party leadership. At one point during a carefully worded statement he repeatedly insisted that he could "not foresee the circumstances" in which he would challenge her for the leadership. But circumstances altered dramatically following Sir Geoffrey Howe's resignation speech [1] in November 1990, and Heseltine announced his candidature. He did well enough in the first round of voting to prevent an outright Thatcher victory, and at one point appeared on course to beat her in the second ballot; but faced with humiliation and the bitter prospect of a Heseltine premiership, Thatcher resigned and the second ballot – which Douglas Hurd also entered – was topped by John Major. As Major was only two votes short of an overall majority, Heseltine immediately and publicly conceded defeat, announcing that he would vote for Major if the third ballot went ahead (it did not). Although for the rest of his career Heseltine's role in Mrs Thatcher's downfall earned him raw hatred from certain sections of the Conservative Party, this was not universal: in a reference to the reluctance of the Cabinet to support her on the second ballot, Thatcherite Edward Leigh said of Heseltine "At least he stabbed her in the front".

Afterwards Heseltine returned to government as Secretary of State for the Environment (with particular responsibility for replacing the poll tax; he allegedly declined an offer of the job of Home Secretary). After the 1992 general election, he was appointed Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, but chose to be known by the archaic title of President of the Board of Trade promising to intervene "before breakfast, dinner and tea" to help British companies. In 1992, when plans were made for the privatisation of British Coal, Heseltine announced that 31 collieries were to close[2], including many of the mines in Nottinghamshire that had worked on during the 1984-5 strike under the impression that their future was safe. Although this policy was seen as a betrayal by the Nottinghamshire miners and the threatened miners had much more public sympathy than in 1984, there was hardly any organised resistance to the programme. This may have been partly due to the Board's threat to cut redundancy payments to any miners who would attempt a strike and partly due to a general lack of union organisation and energy after the 1985 defeat.

The government believed that since the pits were money losers they could only be sustained through unjustifiable subsidies. Mine supporters pointed to the mines' high productivity rates and to the fact that their monetary losses were due to the large subsidies that other European nations were supplying their coal industries. Whilst Heseltine is generally seen as a moderate in the whole of Britain, his reputation in the coalfields is somewhat different and he is largely thought of as heartless.[citation needed] The band Chumbawamba released the critical song "Mr Heseltine meets the public" that portrayed him as an out-of-touch figure; the same group had once dedicated a song to the village of Fitzwilliam, West Yorkshire, which was reduced to a ghost town following the closure of local pits.

In June 1993, Heseltine suffered a heart attack whilst in Venice, leading to concerns on his ability to remain in government after he was televised leaving hospital in a wheelchair. In 1994, Chris Morris implied on BBC Radio 1 (as a joke) that Heseltine had died, which was sufficiently plausible that fellow MP Jerry Hayes broadcast an on-air tribute. Morris was subsequently suspended for the prank. Nonetheless Heseltine - who after being seen as a brash arriviste in his younger days was now seen as something of a grandee and elder statesman - reemerged as a serious political player in 1994, helped by his flirting with the idea of privatising the Post Office and by his testimony at the Arms to Iraq Inquiry (at which it emerged that he had refused to sign the certificates attempting to withhold evidence): the cover of "Private Eye" announced "A Legend Lives" and one major newspaper ended an editorial by proclaiming that "balance of probability" was that Heseltine would be Prime Minister before the end of the year. The truth of this prediction will never be known, as no leadership election emerged that autumn.

In the summer of 1995, John Major, having found himself consistently opposed by a minority of Eurosceptics in his party, challenged them to "put up or shut up" by resubmitting himself to a leadership election in which he was unsuccessfully opposed by the Secretary of State for Wales, John Redwood. There was speculation that Heseltine's supporters would engineer Major's downfall in the hope that their man would take over, but in the event they stayed loyal, and Heseltine (who voted for Major and showed his ballot paper to the returning officers) was rewarded by promotion to Deputy Prime Minister. In this capacity he chaired a number of key Cabinet committees and was also an early key enthusiast for the Millennium Dome. In December 1996 Heseltine, to the fury of the eurosceptic press, joined with Chancellor Kenneth Clarke in preventing any movement away from the government's official refusal to decide on whether or not to join the Single Currency.

After Labour won the 1997 election, he suffered further heart trouble and was unable to stand for the Conservative Party leadership again, although there was still speculation that Clarke might have stood aside for him to stand as a compromise candidate. He became active in promoting the benefits for Britain of joining the single European Currency, appearing on the same stage as Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Robin Cook as part of an all-party campaign to promote Euro membership. He was also made a Companion of Honour by John Major in the 1997 resignation Honours List.

[edit] Retirement

He resigned his Henley-on-Thames constituency at the 2001 Election but remained outspoken on British politics. He was given a life peerage as Baron Heseltine, of Thenford in the County of Northamptonshire.

In December 2002, Heseltine controversially called for Iain Duncan Smith to be replaced as leader of the Conservatives by the "dream-ticket" of Kenneth Clarke as leader and Michael Portillo as deputy. He suggested the party's MPs vote on the matter, rather than party members as currently required by party rules. Without the replacement of Duncan Smith, the party has not "a ghost of a chance of winning the next election", he said. Duncan Smith was removed the following year. In the 2005 party leadership election, he backed the young moderniser, David Cameron.

Following Cameron's elevation to the leadership, he set up a wide-ranging policy review, covering many issues. Chairmen of the various policy groups included ex-Chancellor Kenneth Clarke and other former cabinet ministers John Redwood, John Gummer, Stephen Dorrell and Michael Forsyth, as well as ex-leader Iain Duncan Smith. Heseltine was appointed to head the cities task force, having been responsible for urban policy twice as Environment Secretary under Margaret Thatcher and John Major.

Member of Parliament from 1966 to 2001:

He was ranked 170th in the Sunday Times Rich List 2004, with an estimated wealth of £240 million.

He is now a keen gardener and arboriculturalist and his arboretum is one of the most important private collections of specimens in the UK. It was featured in a one off documentary on BBC Two in December 2005.[3]

[edit] External links

[edit] Publications

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Henry Studholme
Member of Parliament for Tavistock
1966February 1974
Succeeded by
(constituency abolished)
Preceded by
John Hay
Member of Parliament for Henley
February 19742001
Succeeded by
Boris Johnson
Political offices
Preceded by
Albert Murray
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport
1970
Succeeded by
(position abolished)
Preceded by
Peter Shore
Secretary of State for the Environment
1979–1983
Succeeded by
Tom King
Preceded by
John Nott
Secretary of State for Defence
1983–1986
Succeeded by
George Younger
Preceded by
Chris Patten
Secretary of State for the Environment
1990–1992
Succeeded by
Michael Howard
Preceded by
Peter Lilley
President of the Board of Trade
1992–1995
Succeeded by
Ian Lang
Preceded by
Sir Geoffrey Howe
(1988-1990)
Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1995–1997
Succeeded by
John Prescott
In other languages