26/12/20 - Boris Johnson's Honours scandal
The Times
Sir, Boris Johnson’s shamelessness has created the worst honours scandal since Lloyd George. It began with his list in the summer that included a supporter of the IRA. It is a pity that members of the appointments commission did not resign en masse over the nomination of Peter Cruddas to underline the outrage across the House. The statutory body for which my colleagues have called should be established as soon as possible, preferably composed of very senior privy counsellors, to prevent further scandal. Our constitution is not safe in Mr Johnson’s hands.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
21/12/20 - Johnson and sovereignty
The Sunday Times
Once again, Boris Johnson misleads the country when he boasts of safeguarding British sovereignty. He has compromised it severely through the Northern Ireland protocol, which keeps the north in the single market.
An accord with the EU on what should happen if a free trade agreement seemed to have been infringed would involve a much smaller compromise.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
15/12/20 - Final words on that Thatcher statue
The Daily Telegraph
SIR -The statue of Margaret Thatcher which loyal Tories want to erect in Grantham does not deserve the support of her school contemporary, Professor M J Sewell (Letters, December 10). Whoever paid £300,000 to have it made wasted their money.
The so-called “state robes” which adorn it bear no more than a passing resemblance to the actual robes worn by members of the House of Lords. They turn her into dowdy provincial mayoress.
The face has a bland, slightly troubled expression. It lacks the rather fierce, penetrating eyes which unnerved so many Cabinet ministers. There is no trace of her resilience and determination, brilliantly captured by Oscar Nemon in his 1979 bust of her at the Carlton Club.
Mark and Carol Thatcher have failed to give this statue their blessing. The controversy that continues to surround Lady Thatcher needs to recede before any statue is erected in a public place. Then a work should be commissioned that does justice to one of Britain’s greatest prime ministers.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
07/12/20 - Mrs Thatcher demeaned by statue
The Times
Sir, Of course Mrs Thatcher should have a statue (Thunderer, Dec 4), but not the one turned down in 2018 by Westminster city council which has ended up in Grantham. It is nowhere good enough. There is no hint of the iron lady in this bronze monstrosity. She looks like the demure mayoress of a modest provincial town. Westminster council asked Mark and Carol Thatcher to signify their approval. The council made clear it had not received this approval when they turned down the object.
Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian
22/11/20 Carrie's novel inspiration
The Sunday Times
In a letter published in The Sunday Times on November 22, Alistair Lexden wondered if a famous novel had contributed to the extraordinary events at 10 Downing Street nine days earlier, which ended with the sudden resignation of Dominic Cummings after bitter arguments involving Boris Johnson’s partner, Carrie Symonds.
Last weekend Carrie Symonds emerged triumphant from a power struggle at No 10. In Barchester Towers, Mr Slope, a radical with good press connections, is said to have the weak-willed Bishop Proudie “in his pocket”. Mrs Proudie rounds on her husband, shouting that her rival “has gone mad with arrogance”, and he tells Slope he “should leave the palace at the earliest possible moment”. The ineffectual bishop “never again aspired to disobey“ her. Could Symonds be a fan of Anthony Trollope?
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
09/11/20 - The real Neville Chamberlain
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Neville Chamberlain died 80 years ago today. The erection of a plaque at Birmingham City Council where, as Lord Mayor in the First World War he pioneered urban planning and health services for all, was postponed because of the current crisis.
The finest administrator of his time, he worked round the clock until a few weeks before his death running the home front so that Churchill, his successor as Prime Minister in May 1940, could concentrate on the war.
Churchill had hoped that they would “go on together through the storm”.
Bitter arguments of the Thirties over Chamberlain’s quest for a settlement with Hitler had been replaced by a wartime partnership. Chamberlain’s unprecedented expenditure as Prime Minister on defence, rising to nearly 50 per cent of GNP, made possible Churchill’s war to destroy Hitler.
Before 1940,Churchill urged pouring money into building bombers. Chamberlain backed the fighter aircraft that won the Battle of Britain just before his death.
Unfounded attacks on his foreign policy as nothing but “appeasement” have cast his work as an architect of the welfare state into oblivion. He was the greatest Minister of Health the Tories have ever produced. He prepared the way for “the whole nation being brought under medical care” through the NHS.
In the Commons he was unchallenged as master of the latest medical research, expounded simply, without a note. Could we not do with someone like that today?
Lord Lexden
London SW1
08/11/20 - Winston's words of warning
The Sunday Times
Robert Colvile comes gamely to Boris Johnson’s defence, claiming that “Tory voters still back their man” (Comment, November 1). Not so, according to polls conducted by the ConservativeHome website. In the Commons and the Lords, despair reigns.
Would someone of even modest parliamentary talent have given such a huge hostage to fortune by crudely dismissing Keir Starmer’s call for a national lockdown? Or pushed ahead with the Internal Market Bill, which the Lords will reject?
Perhaps if Johnson had accepted my invitation to join the Conservative Research Department in 1988, something might have been made of him. As it is, he needs to ponder words of his hero Winston Churchill: “If [a leader] makes mistakes they must be covered. If he sleeps he must not be wantonly disturbed. If he is no good he must be pole-axed.”
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
05/11/20 - Captain Anthony Eden M.C.
The Times
Sir, There is no “mystery” about Anthony Eden’s Military Cross (“Auction of Eden’s MC highlights his heroics”, News, Nov 2). He was first recommended for it in August 1916 after rescuing his company sergeant from no man’s land during the Battle of the Somme. (After 33 operations the man recovered and gave Eden “a very pretty gold pen-knife” which was kept on his writing table. “It is always there”, he recorded in old age.) After Eden’s name had been resubmitted the medal was awarded to him in the week of his 20th birthday the next year. His commanding officer wrote to his mother on June 16,1917: “He has worked so hard and has the battalion so very much at heart that all ranks are delighted to hear that he has been given the Military Cross. I do trust that he will come safely through the war and that he will have a very successful career.”
Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian
19/10/20 - Churchill's scheme for English regions
The Times
Sir, On the question of an English parliament, Vernon Bogdanor (letter, Oct 17) echoes conclusions reached over a century ago by Churchill. In a cabinet paper of February 24, 1911, he described it as “absolutely impossible.” He went on to outline a scheme of English devolution, based on seven regions. Each, he said, should have “a legislative and administrative body, separately elected” with wide powers including education, housing, agriculture and the courts. Perhaps his ideas warrant careful consideration, in view of the way in which Andy Burnham and other directly elected regional leaders are now asserting themselves.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
09/10/20 - A doctor in the house?
The Times
Sir, Jenni Russell writes of the limited service provided to prime ministers at No 10. Some still find themselves at a loss when they leave: Margaret Thatcher had to ring up her devoted former private secretary Charles Powell when she needed a plumber. Perhaps there could be a state-employed doctor, subject to official secrecy legislation, in the house. Churchill’s family would probably have agreed. Lord Moran, his personal physician, enraged them shortly after the great man’s death by publishing diaries about his woes in his declining years, embellishing them in the process.
Lord Lexden
Conservative party historian
06/10/20 - Slave trade obsession comes to Westminster
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - The custodians of the parliamentary art collection need to make clear what has become of the “several hundred portraits of people linked to the slave trade” removed from the Palace of Westminster (report, October 1). Have they gone to some secret hall of shame?
Public shame apparently awaits three prime ministers: Liverpool, Gladstone and Peel. The special slave-trade plaques now planned for their portraits would seriously distort historical understanding.
The issue, which has become an overwhelming Left-wing obsession today, did not dominate their lives. They had many other pressing national concerns. Even during the limited time they gave to it, their attitudes did not remain constant.
In the 1790s, Liverpool resisted withdrawal from a trade that would be immediately taken over by our commercial rivals; by 1815 he had been persuaded of the case for abolition.
The young Gladstone argued that Britain should concentrate on improving the living conditions of slaves; later he became a founding member of the Society for the Extinction of the Slave Trade.
In the 1840s, Peel sent the Navy to the African coast to suppress the trade, as part of a sweeping programme of reform at home and abroad.
Plaques focusing unfairly on today’s obsession would dishonour the memory of our statesmen. MPs and peers must put a stop to the plan.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
21/09/20 - Does Boris Johnson have a brilliant mind?
The Sunday Times
Robert Colvile (Comment, Sep 13) claims that Boris Johnson possesses “a brilliant mind”. Johnson’s book on Churchill is littered with factual mistakes. He lauds Roosevelt’s New Deal, but Neville Chamberlain brought Britain out of economic depression in the 1930s far more swiftly .
His knowledge of conservatism seems to be limited to the hackneyed phrase “one nation”, which he repeats endlessly. He appointed himself minister for the Union, but has become a pariah in Scotland. Could there possibly be some hidden brilliance in giving a peerage to Claire Fox, an apologist for the IRA and Slobodan Milosevic?
Alistair Lexden
House of Lords
07/09/20 - Boris Johnson and the Lords - More trouble ahead?
The New Statesman
In his article on the Lords (“A house derided”, 14 August), Robert Saunders draws out “the problems of a chamber stocked by prime ministerial patronage”. The only existing curb on his patronage is the House of Lords Appointments Commission, a cross-party body with an independent element. Its job is to ensure that “the past conduct of the nominee would not reasonably be regarded as bringing the House of Lords into disrepute”. It has been at loggerheads with Boris Johnson over some of his nominees, whom it excluded from his recent list, though shamefully letting thorough an IRA apologist. It is not impossible that Johnson will put forward his rejects again, hoping to browbeat the commission into accepting them. This could lead to a complete breakdown in trust between the Prime Minister and Lords members. That would be quite an achievement for the head of the Conservative and Unionist Party, whose historic mission has always been to uphold the constitution.
Alistair Lexden
House of Lords
02/09/20 - The Second Festival of Britain
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - It is alarming that the Government is wasting time trying to reach agreement with the SNP in Edinburgh (“National festival must not mention ‘Britain’ or ‘UK’, SNP tells PM”, August 31) about how our country should be celebrated at the second Festival of Britain, which is planned for 2022.
Those who want to destroy our national unity should be excluded from the festival, the first of which, in 1951, was inspired by Prince Albert’s Great Exhibition of 1851.
The new venture was announced as an occasion to strengthen the union of all four parts of our kingdom. Boris Johnson has made himself Minister for the Union, but it has been conspicuously weakened on his watch. His Government must now formulate a plan that will enable us to restate our national pride in terms that are appropriate to the times.
Speaking in Glasgow in the year of the first Festival of Britain, Churchill recalled the “liberal trend of British history across three centuries, and the message and guidance that the British people have always given to the world”. These are the themes that need to be recaptured in 2022.
Lord Lexden (Con)
London SW1
07/08/20 - An IRA apologist for the Lords
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Last week’s Honours List included a peerage for Claire Fox, a woman notorious for defending the right of the IRA to commit murder during the long bloody period before the Belfast Agreement of 1998.
She has called IRA terrorism over the preceding 30 years “ their struggle for freedom.” By elevating her, Boris Johnson has shown indifference to the memory of those who died, and to the grief of those who suffered, to uphold Northern Ireland’s right to remain part of our United Kingdom in accordance with the wishes of a majority of its people. Those who paid the ultimate price included prominent members of the Conservative and Unionist Party.
The House of Lords Appointments Commission also seems to have erred. It is required to ensure that “ the past conduct of the nominee would not reasonably be regarded as bringing the House of Lords into disrepute.” How can Ms Fox fail to do that ?
Mary Bowman (Letter, August 3) asks how many have left the Lords. Since 2017, 92 have departed. Others can be expected to follow.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
03/08/20 - Boris Johnson and the Lords
The Times
Sir, It seems we are going back to the days of mass peerage creations, begun by Tony Blair and continued by David Cameron who nominated 639 people (including me) between them. Over their premierships new arrivals in the Lords averaged nearly 40 a year, a volume seen before only during Harold Wilson’s second term, from 1974 to 1976. By contrast David Lloyd George, widely thought of as recklessly profligate, created peers at the quite modest rate of 16 a year.
Theresa May’s government brought restraint with 43 creations in three years. But in one year Boris Johnson has now added 57. His new list takes the Conservative total in the Lords to 263, against Labour’s 179. This would have to be rebalanced if Labour returned to power as it would need a large influx to get its legislation through. The prospects of stabilising, let alone reducing, the overall size of the House of Lords do not look good.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
16/07/20 - Good Lord deliver us
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Charles Moore (Comment, July 14) urges us to visit Battle Abbey in Sussex and savour its delights.
Not all those who went there in the 19th century, when it was owned by the last Duke of Cleveland, were enraptured. His wife redecorated it at great expense but with little taste.
After a rather dull young guest had departed, the Duchess rushed to the visitors’ book to see what banality he had written in it. The house party laughed disloyally as she read out: “From Battle, and murder and from sudden death, Good Lord deliver us.”
Lord Lexden
London SW1
24/06/20 - Dizzy's wise words
The Times
Sir, Richard Barber (letter, Jun 22) writes that a forebear used the word “anecdotage” in 1890, but the quotation by which he attributed its origin to Disraeli is not accurate. What Disraeli, writing in 1870, said was that “when a man fell into his anecdotage it was a sign for him to retire from the world.” It is a pity that more people do not take that wise advice.
Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian
18/06/20 - Ted Heath's day of triumph
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Fifty years ago, Cecil King, a former press magnate, made the following entry in his diary: “On Thursday evening we went to the Telegraph [election] party expecting a Labour majority of somewhere between 30 and 150. The first four results showed that a Tory victory was almost certain. And it was.”
Thursday June 18 1970 brought one of the greatest surprises in modern electoral history. Throughout the preceding campaign the Tories had trailed badly in the opinion polls. The party reconciled itself to certain defeat. Only its leader, Ted Heath, remained undaunted, exuding a confidence that no one else shared.
To universal amazement, he was proved right. A Labour majority of 74 was replaced by a Tory majority of 30, the only time since 1945 that one Party has gained a working majority from another which had had one at a single election. Heath won 46.4 per cent of the popular vote, which no one since then has even matched.
Is it not tragic that, on the 50th anniversary of this great victory, Heath’s reputation should remain tainted by seven unproven allegations of child sex abuse left over from a deeply flawed police investigation because this Government refuses to institute an independent inquiry?
Lord Lexden
London SW1
01/06/20 - How Boris Johnson could follow in Stanley Baldwin's footsteps
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Should the rich set an example when the nation’s debts soar? Stanley Baldwin, the first Tory leader to use the phrase “one nation”, thought so.
In a famous anonymous letter of June 1919, signed FST—he was Financial Secretary to the Treasury at the time—he announced that he was giving a fifth of his wealth, £120,000 (some £6.5 million today) to help his debt-ridden country after the First World War. He added “the wealthy classes have today an opportunity of service which is so vital at the present time.” He looked to them for at least £1,000 million; no more than £500,000 was received.
Would the rich do better today? It would be interesting to find out. Our wealthy prime minister and his well-heeled adviser could show the way, with the support of those who find they can spare millions for the Conservative Party at election time.
Lord Lexden (Con)
London SW1
21/05/20 - A most peculiar parson - Rev David Johnson
The Times
This bizarre clergyman spent some time in bondage. Kidnapped while vice-president of the Cambridge Union by daredevils from Oxford, he was paraded around their union chamber tightly bound up in a shopping trolley. He took his revenge by hiring burly guardsmen to bundle Churchill’s grandson, Rupert Soames, the Oxford Union president, into a van that was unloaded at the shop of Cambridge’s leading academic outfitters. Displayed tied to a chair in the shop window, he was rescued by the passing master of Jesus, Cambridge, who just happened to due to speak at the Oxford Union that very evening. “Rupert still talks to me,” Johnson said with some amazement afterwards.
21/05/20 - Intolerable rudeness about Dizzy
The Spectator
Disraeli would have smiled indulgently at Simon Heffer’s attack on him (April issue). He was bombarded with similar insults throughout his career. Most had an element that Heffer could not get away with. One of his senior backbenchers, Sir Rainald Knightley, never ceased railing against “that hellish Jew”. He was amazingly forgiving. When he died, a young gay Liberal admirer, Reggie Brett, wrote in his diary: “he was the most magnanimous statesman of our time” who in the end prevailed over “all but his most bigoted opponents”.
A bigoted opponent like Heffer will never find it difficult to be rude about him. There is material to spare. In 1841 he asked Peel for office, but flatly denied doing so in the Commons during the Corn Laws crisis, a classic Victorian high political drama with no holds barred. Peel showed himself the lesser figure in the merciless world of party politics by letting Disraeli get away with it.
Gladstone praised Dizzy as the master of the Tory party “which he understood perfectly and governed completely”. It has profited hugely from his richly varied legacy, emphasising imperialism in one era and social reform in another while turning time and again to his great theme of national unity. All are documented in a slim volume of his wit and wisdom published in 1992 by his brilliant biographer, Robert Blake, and recently reissued (to be extolled by Andrew Gimson as the best book on politics he has read recently).
Though deplorable in its mean-spiritedness, Heffer’s diatribe is in a perverse way a testament to his enduring importance. Who today would bother to launch an onslaught on Gladstone?
Lord Lexden
London SW1
16/05/20 - Churchill and the welfare state
The Times
Sir, Andrew Roberts (letter, May 14) quotes Churchill’s ringing declaration of support for a national health service (a concept backed by the Tory leadership since the 1930s) in answer to the charge that his hero opposed the Beveridge Report. Beveridge dealt with social insurance and employment rather than health. The report stirred unease on the Tory benches. Nevertheless, Churchill declared in February 1943 that it “constitutes an essential part of any post-war scheme of national betterment.” The 1945 Conservative manifesto pledged: “one of our most important tasks will be to pass into law and bring into action as soon as we can a nation-wide and compulsory scheme of national insurance based on the plan announced by the government of all parties in 1944.” It is a myth that Churchill and the Tories opposed the welfare state.
Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian
16/05/20 - Disraeli's great biographer
The Spectator
Sir: There is a glaring omission from the political biographies recommended for lockdown reading by Simon Heffer (‘The great and not so good’, 9 May): Robert Blake’s Disraeli (1966), described by Colin Matthew, editor of the Gladstone diaries, as ‘the best single- volume biography of any British prime minister.’ It laid to rest the charge that that Dizzy (as he liked to be known) was no more than a lucky charlatan. Blake showed that the man who invented the political novel invested his writing with inspiring Tory ideals. He was the greatest parliamentary debater of his time, frequently running rings round the ponderous Gladstone. He is the only British statesman to have inspired a political cult; the Primrose League attracted some two million members by 1914. In beautiful prose Blake explains why Dizzy exerts a perennial fascination.
Alistair Lexden
House of Lords
04/05/20 - Tory babies at No 10
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - The baby at No 10 is the third newborn Tory (and the first Tory boy) to arrive there (the Liberal and Labour parties having three between them).
Florence Cameron took up residence in 2010. Just over 130 years earlier, when Disraeli’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir Stafford Northcote, was the occupant (Disraeli himself having declined to move in), a medical team was summoned to deliver the child of his daughter and her husband, Reginald MacLeod, later the Conservative Party’s Principal Agent, who were living with him.
Flora MacLeod, later Dame Flora, born at No 10 on February 3 1878, would grow up to become the 28th Chief of the Clan MacLeod and a famous chatelaine of Dunvegan Castle on the Isle of Skye. She lived to be 98.
Perhaps her two recent Tory successors will be blessed with similar longevity.
Lord Lexden (Con)
London SW1
25/04/20 - Queen Victoria's "Greatest gift to her people"
The Times
Sir, Queen Victoria found the chloroform administered to her in 1853 by Dr John Snow “soothing, quieting and delightful beyond measure.” The famous anaesthetist’s first patient in 1847 was so carried away with enthusiasm that she christened her baby girl Anaesthesia.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
16/04/20 - Opening up independent schools
The Times
Sir, Sir Anthony Seldon claims that the postwar Labour government “ducked” the opening up of independent schools to “a much wider social base” (Thunderer, Apr 13). In fact it entrusted the task to local authorities, which were given powers and funding to provide bursaries. Some responded well: nearly 600 bursaries were being awarded in Middlesex by the early 1950s. Others were less enthusiastic.
Labour’s experience shows that a national scheme is needed. The basis of it should be that places would be opened up at a cost to the state no greater than it pays for them in the maintained sector. Many independent schools have made clear their readiness to embrace such a scheme.
Lord Lexden
President, Independent Schools Association
03/04/20 - Whig and Tory Lotharios - Charles James Fox and Boris Johnson
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - Charles James Fox, who revelled in his reputation as “a notorious Lothario” (report, March 23), would not have wanted kisses to stop being planted on his bust at the National Portrait Gallery once the current crisis is over.
In 1782 he virtually abandoned politics for Perdita Robinson, one of the leading actresses of the day, when his friend the Prince of Wales discarded her with a £20,000 pay-off. “He is all day figuring away with her”, a prominent Whig lady complained.
His most widely admired mistress, the beautiful Duchess of Devonshire, whom her husband happily shared with him, gained political immortality by bestowing kisses on undecided electors in Fox’s Westminster constituency in 1784 (“she supplicates a vote, but steals a heart”).
When blamed for a riot during which his great rival, Pitt, had to be rescued from a shattered carriage, he replied disarmingly: “I was in bed with Mrs Armistead, who is ready to substantiate the fact on oath.”
When his Whig friends commissioned a monument for Westminster Abbey, they could not resist asking for allusion to his lasciviousness. He was placed on a mattress, falling into the arms of Liberty with Peace reclining on his knee. Perhaps Boris Johnson, an 18th century figure in many ways, should be commemorated in a similar manner when the time comes.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
02/04/20 - Finding a new Prime Minister in an emergency
The Times
Sir, Daniel Finkelstein regrets the absence of “a clear plan for replacing the prime minister in an emergency” (“Party members aren’t fit to pick their leader”, Apr 1). No incumbent of No 10 would favour such a plan.
If Lord Liverpool had had George Canning in the wings before his sudden stroke in 1827, he would have split the Tory party, much of which wanted the Duke of Wellington. Even after his 1953 stroke Churchill was determined to hang on, convincing himself that Anthony Eden was not up to the job. Harold Macmillan felt in 1963 that a much younger man, Reginald Maudling or Quintin Hogg, should succeed him, but both failed to fulfil their initial promise.
The lack of an emergency plan may bring grave difficulties, but so too would an attempt to devise one.
Lord Lexden
Conservative Party historian
17/03/20 - Exonerate Heath
The Spectator
Sir: An independent report by the former high-court judge Sir Richard Henriques into the Metropolitan Police documents in horrifying detail the malpractices which meant that ‘the names of Leon Brittan, Lord Bramall and others were dragged through the mud’ (‘Trial and error’, 29 February). Though Sir Edward Heath was also cruelly traduced, the government has rejected the calls I have made in the Lords, in association with Lord Armstrong of Ilminster and Lord Butler of Brockwell, former cabinet secretaries who were his close confidants, with unanimous support across the House for an independent review of Operation Conifer, the widely criticised investigation by the Wiltshire police into the allegations against him.
The biased chief constable, Mike Veale, who was ‘120 per cent’ certain of Heath’s guilt, was only mildly censured by an internal review before moving to Cleveland police, from which he was forced to resign a few months later. The Home Office, which paid most of the £1.5 million cost of Operation Conifer, has the power to establish an inquiry.
It is needed to scrutinise the seven allegations left open at the end of the investigation, almost certainly to save the face of the police. The taint has been removed from the reputations of other leading figures. Sir Edward Heath KG should not be left under any lingering suspicion.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
09/03/20 - A lion's docile cubs
The Times
Sir, Maharajah Ranjit Singh, voted the greatest leader (report, Mar 5, and letter, Mar 6), conspicuously failed to instil martial prowess within his family. His son, Duleep Singh, became a Norfolk landowner and a member of the Carlton Club but was thwarted in his ambition to stand as a Tory candidate against one of Gladstone’s sons. His granddaughter was a leading suffragette. The Lion of the Punjab would have been astounded.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
02/03/20 - How King George VI helped fool the Nazis before D-Day
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - MI5 rightly drew attention during the Queen’s visit to its headquarters (report, February 26) to George VI’s “central role” in misleading the Nazis over plans for D-Day.
His involvement began when two MI5 officers called on the King’s private secretary, Sir Alan Lascelles, on 3 March 1944. In his diary he wrote that they “explained how the King’s visits in the next few months could assist the elaborate cover scheme to bamboozle the German intelligence over the time and place for Overlord”.
Much press publicity was given to visits to troops in the South East to help strengthen the Nazi suspicion that Calais, not Normandy, would be the scene of Allied invasion, and earlier than the actual date in June.
What seemed to be a huge oil-storage complex near Dover also received a royal visit, as M15 has now revealed. It was in fact a complete fake, designed by Basil Spence and built by Shepperton Studios.
An element of the elaborate deception plans to which MI5 did not refer took the KIng to Scapa Flow. There he inspected the fleet at length during a three-day visit in May. Prominent press reports indicated that he had “taken leave” of his fleet in “cold and lonely northern waters” as it prepared for battle. The prospect of a Scandinavian attack was created to deter Nazi troop movement to reinforce northern France.
It is right that this contribution to D-Day’s success made by the Queen’s father, who meant so much to her, should at last be fully acknowledged.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
27/02/20 - Wrangling over the Elgin Marbles
Evening Standard
Discussion of the Elgin Marbles needs the kind of historical perspective that Nico Makris provides (The Reader, February 24). It is important to remember that over the years even senior Conservative politicians have questioned have their British custodianship.
Visiting Athens in 1869, Sir Stafford Northcote, a classical scholar and future Tory leader, referred angrily in his diary to Elgin’s “robbery of the Parthenon”. Another Tory diarist, Lord Crawford, who was a trustee of the British Museum, recorded in 1938 that the marbles “have been dangerously overcleaned by using unauthorised methods and instruments”.
Now is the time to give full and open consideration to arrangements that will best secure the future of the marbles.
Alistair Lexden
10/02/20 - Airey Neave's murder
The Times
Sir, Your obituary of Sir Michael Cummins (Feb 6) asserts that the bomb that killed Airey Neave in 1979 was planted in the Palace of Westminster’s car park by the so-called Irish National Liberation Army. That was the claim made by the terrorists. The Metropolitan Police had no doubt that the bomb was put in place while Neave’s car stood outside his nearby flat during the night with a tilting device that caused the explosion as he drove up the ramp from the car park the following day.
Lord Lexden
Political adviser to Airey Neave,1977-79
10/02/20 - Queen Victoria and Florence Nightingale Queen Victoria
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - The exhibition on Florence Nightingale’s later life (report, February 3) should give prominence to Queen Victoria’s deep and lasting admiration of her.
“I envy her being able to do so much good,” Victoria wrote during the Crimean War. The pair met in 1856. Expecting to encounter a battleaxe, the Queen was enchanted to find the now famous nurse was modest and demure, “refusing all public acclaim”. The sorrowing monarch roused herself from her widow’s seclusion in 1868 to open St Thomas’s Hospital in London “ for Miss Nightingale”.
The bond between them was further strengthened when, a few days later, news arrived that two nurses trained by Nightingale and sent to Sydney Infirmary had ensured the recovery of the Queen’s favourite son, Prince Alfred, after an assassination attempt in Australia.
Recalling her indebtedness to the Lady with the Lamp, the Queen insisted that money sent to her by the public for her Golden Jubilee in 1887 should be used to establish the Queen’s Jubilee Nursing Institute, the world’s first professional nursing organisation.
She would have been appalled by the refusal of her successor, Edward VII, to include the legendary figure in the new Order of Merit which he created in 1902. “ Women are not eligible,” he insisted. He eventually gave way in 1907 after the prime minister, Henry Campbell-Bannerman, had lectured him about “ the revolution which her services and example effected.” It was as Florence Nightingale 0M that she died in 1910.
Lord Lexden
London SW1
16/01/20 - Another Duke of Sussex who went his own way
The Times
Sir, Prince Harry’s Hanoverian predecessor as Duke of Sussex, Prince Augustus, loved breaking the rules. He is the only royal to marry twice without the monarch’s consent required under the Royal Marriages Act. After the death of Lady Augusta Murray (“History repeats itself as the Sussexes fall out of favour”, Jan 13), he married Lady Cecilia Buggin, widow of a London Alderman, in 1831. The match won widespread public support, enhanced by the duke’s endorsement of parliamentary reform and the enfranchisement of Jews to the horror of his right-wing family. Though Lord Melbourne, the prime minister, thought “it would be very ridiculous” to grant the illegal wife any public recognition, in 1840 Queen Victoria created her Duchess of Inverness “as long as she did not go out or take place before any other duchess”. A rebel to the last, her husband rejected in his will a burial at Windsor in favour of Kensal Green cemetery, proving his piety by accumulating some 1,000 editions of the Bible.
Lord Lexden
House of Lords
08/01/20 - George III - a most conscientious king
The Daily Telegraph
SIR - It is very good that George III is to be the subject of an exhibition that will “seek to redefine what is known about the monarch” (report, January 3).
That should include his remarkable stamina and devotion to state affairs. It was his habit to rise at six in the morning to deal with ministerial papers that had arrived overnight. After a morning ride, breakfast and divine service, he worked until eight-thirty in the evening, with a break in the afternoon for public occasions such as receptions for ministers and courtiers. He wrote all his own letters and policy papers until 1805 when failing eyesight compelled him to use a secretary. He was the only Hanoverian monarch to keep up such a strict daily routine, playing the flute, harpsichord or piano in the evenings for recreation.
A leading authority on the period, Professor Peter Jupp, concluded that “ by the end of the 1770s he was probably the best-informed statesman of his time on the full range pf policy issues.” Sadly, mastery of detail was not always rewarded by political success.
Lord Lexden
London SW1