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Cecil Parkinson

 
Political Biography: Cecil Edward Parkinson

(b. Lancashire, 1 Sept. 1931) British; chairman of the Conservative Party 1981 – 3 and 1997 – 9, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry 1983 – 4, Secretary of State for Energy 1986 – 9, Secretary of State for Transport 1989 – 90; Baron (life peer) 1992 Educated at the Royal Lancaster Grammar School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he achieved distinction as an athlete, Parkinson was a management trainee with the Metal Box Company before training as a chartered accountant. In 1967 he founded Parkinson Hart Securities Ltd. Though initially a Labour supporter, he became a committed Conservative and served as chairman of the Hemel Hempstead Conservative Association. In the 1970 general election he unsuccessfully contested Northampton but was elected at a by-election later that year as MP for Enfield West. He served as a parliamentary private secretary to Michael Heseltine, the Aerospace Minister, for two years from 1972 to 1974 before entering the Conservative whips' office. In 1976 he was made an Opposition spokesman on trade and, following the Conservative election victory in 1979, he was appointed Minister of State for Trade. In 1981 he was plucked from relative political obscurity by Margaret Thatcher and made chairman of the Conservative Party. He was given the ministerial post of Paymaster-General and then Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Reputedly promoted because of his good looks, he none the less proved a highly successful party chairman — he was popular with constituency parties — and was widely credited with having masterminded the Conservative victory in the 1983 general election. Following the election, he was appointed Secretary of State for Trade and Industry but was soon engulfed in a scandal about his private life, demonstrating indecisiveness when torn between staying with his wife or moving to be with a long-standing lover who had just given birth to his child. Press speculation about his future became intense during the Conservative Party conference that October and, despite the Prime Minister's support for him staying in his post, he resigned from the government. He was brought back by Margaret Thatcher in 1987, serving first as Energy Secretary (1987 – 9) and then Transport Secretary (1989 – 90), but provided a lacklustre performance, especially as Transport Secretary. He resigned from the government on the day that Margaret Thatcher gave up the premiership. He returned to business but did not abandon politics. He was a founder member of the Conservative Way Forward, a body set up to promote the principles espoused by Margaret Thatcher. He left the House of Commons in 1992, taking a life peerage. To great surprise William Hague in 1997 recalled him to be party chairman.

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Quotes By: Cecil Parkinson
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Quotes:

"It is better to be a has-been than a never-was."

"In politics people give you what they think you deserve and deny you what they think you want."

Wikipedia: Cecil Parkinson
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The Right Honourable
 The Lord Parkinson 
PC

In office
June 1997 – 2 December 1998
Preceded by Brian Mawhinney
Succeeded by Michael Ancram
In office
14 September 1981 – 11 June 1983
Preceded by Peter Thorneycroft
Succeeded by John Gummer

In office
24 July 1989 – 28 November 1990
Preceded by Paul Channon
Succeeded by Malcolm Rifkind

In office
13 June 1987 – 24 July 1989
Preceded by Peter Walker
Succeeded by John Wakeham

In office
12 June 1983 – 14 October 1983[1]
Preceded by Francis Cockfield (Trade)
Patrick Jenkin (Industry)
Succeeded by Norman Tebbit

In office
6 April 1982 – 11 June 1983
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Preceded by Janet Young
Succeeded by Francis Cockfield

Born 1 September 1931 (1931-09-01) (age 78)
Carnforth, Lancashire, UK
Political party Conservative
Spouse(s) Anne Jarvis (1957-Present)

Cecil Edward Parkinson, Baron Parkinson, PC (born 1 September 1931 in Carnforth, Lancashire), is a British Conservative politician and former Cabinet Minister.

Contents

Early life

Parkinson had humble origins, being the son of a railway worker and educated at Lancaster Royal Grammar School, from where he won a scholarship to Emmanuel College, Cambridge to read English, later switching to read Law. At University he was a Labour supporter and in fact for a time was a member of the Labour Party. He did National Service as an NCO in the Royal Air Force. He married Anne Mary Jarvis in 1957. They have three daughters: Mary, Emma and Joanna.

After University Parkinson worked as a manager for the MetalBox Company, later becoming a consultant. He trained and qualified as a Chartered Accountant and in 1961 founded Parkinson-Hart securities.

Member of Parliament

In the June 1970 general election he stood as candidate for Northampton but was not elected. Parkinson was elected as MP for Enfield West at a by-election in November 1970, following the death of Iain Macleod. When that constitituency was abolished for the February 1974 general election he was elected for the new South Hertfordshire constituency. After the 1979 General Election, he was made a junior trade minister. In September 1981 he was made Chairman of the Conservative Party, and Paymaster-General with a seat in the cabinet and in 1982 was given the added official title of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Despite his relatively junior status, he was a member of the small War Cabinet which Mrs Thatcher set up to run the Falklands War.

In government

He worked on the Conservative Party's 1983 election campaign, standing in the new Hertsmere constituency after Hertfordshire South's abolition. As a result of his success on the campaign, Mrs Thatcher had intended to promote him to Foreign Secretary, but instead, after being forewarned of certain developments in his private life, she appointed him Secretary of State for Trade and Industry.

Parkinson was forced to resign in October 1983 after it was revealed that his former secretary, Sara Keays, was carrying his child, Flora Keays (born Merton, Greater London).[2] Subsequently, as a result of a dispute over child maintenance payments, Parkinson (with Keays' initial consent) was able to gain an injunction in 1993, forbidding the British media from making any reference to their daughter. Flora Keays has learning difficulties and Asperger syndrome and had an operation to remove a brain tumour when she was four, which is thought[by whom?] to have caused her problems.[dubious ] This court order was the subject of some controversy, until Flora Keays reached her majority at the end of 2001, when the court order expired. Upon Flora turning 18, it was noted in the press that Parkinson had never met his child and presumably had no intention of doing so. While he had assisted with Flora's education and financially her upkeep, it was publicly pointed out that he had not ever sent her a birthday card and that her mother assumed that Flora could not ever expect to receive one.[3] At the time of the revelation of Parkinson's relationship with Sara Keays in 1983, Parkinson made much of what he described as the volume of supportive letters which he had received. By 2001, however, the media focussed more upon Flora and her difficulties than in protecting Parkinson's reputation, so more voices were raised in criticism of Parkinson.

After four years on the back benches, he was appointed Secretary of State for Energy in 1987 (having been tipped as a potential Chancellor of the Exchequer), and for Transport in the July 1989 reshuffle. One of the highlights in the latter job was announcing new main-line rail tunnels across London, called Crossrail. He resigned along with Margaret Thatcher when she was replaced by John Major. Parkinson knew that whoever succeeded Thatcher, whether it was Major, Michael Heseltine or Douglas Hurd, was unlikely to have kept him in the Cabinet anyway. He stood down at the 1992 general election.

He was created Baron Parkinson, of Carnforth in the County of Lancashire, after the 1992 elections. Shortly afterwards he made a daring appearance on the BBC topical panel show Have I Got News For You, which at the time - Edwina Currie apart - was still awaiting its first truly top-level Conservative guest who had some history to them. Parkinson, who partnered Paul Merton on the episode, took considerable ribbing (although the injunction prevented any reference to his major scandal) but emerged from the programme intact - even opposing captain and satirist Ian Hislop admitted afterwards that he had come across very well.[citation needed] Parkinson's appearance opened the floodgates for other very high-profile politicians to appear on the programme and display a lighter side to their personalities.

Parkinson also published his memoirs in 1992, in which he claimed that with a determined campaign Mrs Thatcher would have won the Second Ballot of the Conservative Leadership election in 1990, which her Cabinet had warned her she would lose in a successful bid to persuade her to stand down.

Shadow Cabinet

Parkinson returned to front-line politics when he was made Conservative Party Chairman again by William Hague in June 1997. He retired from this role in 1998 and has since kept a low profile, although he is a vice-chairman of the Conservative Way Forward group.

Parkinson's affair with Sara Keays was a running joke with the satirical magazine "Private Eye" for over a decade, with the magazine seldom passing up an opportunity to portray Parkinson as blessed with a voracious sexual appetite. In 1997, when William Hague promised to "bring Unity to the Party", the front cover showed Parkinson adding "she sounds like a splendid girl". In the late 1980s, when Parkinson had objected to Norman Tebbit's treatment of the issue on his memoirs ("Upwardly Mobile"), the front cover had shown each man telling the other "I told you not to stick it in".

In the media

Parkinson was interviewed about the rise of Thatcherism for the 2006 BBC TV documentary series Tory! Tory! Tory!.

Footnotes

  1. ^ The Guardian on 15 October 1983
  2. ^ Births England and Wales 1984-2006
  3. ^ Angela Levin "The brutal sex attack that nearly destroyed Cecil Parkinson's child" Daily Mail, 14 November 2008. Article about Flora and Sara today, still focusing on Flora's medical condition.

References

  1. ^ The Guardian on 15 October 1983
  2. ^ Births England and Wales 1984-2006
  3. ^ Angela Levin "The brutal sex attack that nearly destroyed Cecil Parkinson's child" Daily Mail, 14 November 2008. Article about Flora and Sara today, still focusing on Flora's medical condition.

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Iain Macleod
Member of Parliament for Enfield West
1970February 1974
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for South Hertfordshire
February 19741983
Member of Parliament for Hertsmere
19831992
Succeeded by
James Clappison
Party political offices
Preceded by
The Lord Thorneycroft
Chairman of the Conservative Party
1981–1983
Succeeded by
John Gummer
Preceded by
Brian Mawhinney
Chairman of the Conservative Party
1997–1998
Succeeded by
Michael Ancram
Political offices
Preceded by
Francis Pym
Paymaster-General
1981–1983
Vacant
Title next held by
John Gummer
Preceded by
The Baroness Young
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
1982–1983
Succeeded by
The Lord Cockfield
Preceded by
The Lord Cockfield
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
1983
Succeeded by
Norman Tebbit
Preceded by
Peter Walker
Secretary of State for Energy
1987–1989
Succeeded by
John Wakeham
Preceded by
Paul Channon
Secretary of State for Transport
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Malcolm Rifkind

 
 
Learn More
Norman Parkinson (photography)
Northaw
Enfield West (UK Parliament constituency)

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