“But I’m middle-of-the-road myself, practically right wing on some issues.”
“Perhaps. But every party needs a man like you, and at this moment union leaders wouldn’t mind if you were a card-carrying Fascist; they’d still back you.”
“Then what makes you attend the conference?”
“thank God it still gives one a chance to keep in touch with the grass roots, and I live in hope that the extreme left will never be much more than an unruly child that the grown-ups have to learn to live with.”
“Let’s hope you’re right,” said Raymond, “because they’re never going to grow up.” Andrew laughed as Raymond
continued in a different mood. “I still envy you your job at the Home Office. I didn’t go into politics to spend my life on the back benches.”
“There may well come a day when I sit and envy you from those same back benches,” said Andrew.
As he spoke, the chairman of the Boilermakers’ Union shouted across as he passed their table, “Good to see you, Ray.” He showed no recognition of Andrew. Raymond turned and smiled at the man and waved back as Caesar might have done to Cassius.
When they had both rejected the choice of date and walnut pudding or Pavlova, Andrew suggested a brandy.
Raymond hesitated.
“You’ll see more double brandies drunk here than you will at the Conservative party conference next week. Ask any waitress.”
“Have you decided how you’re going to vote in the leadership battle?” asked Fiona over breakfast.
“Yes,” said Charles, “and at this point in my career I can’t afford to make the wrong choice.”
“So who have you decided on?” asked Fiona.
“While there isn’t a serious contender to oppose Ted Heath it remains in my best interest to continue backing him.”
“Isn’t there one Shadow Cabinet minister who has the guts to stand against him?”
“The rumor grows that Margaret Thatcher will act as whipping girl. If she gets close enough to force a second ballot the serious contenders will then join in.”
“What if she won the first round?”
“Don’t be silly, Fiona,” said Charles, taking more interest in his scrambled egg. “The Tory party would never elect a woman to lead them. We’re far too traditional. That’s the sort of immature mistake the Labour party would make to prove how much they believe in equality.”
Simon was still pushing Margaret Thatcher to throw her hat in the ring.
“She certainly has enough of them,” said Elizabeth.
It amused Andrew and Raymond to watch the Tory party leadership struggle while they got on with their respective jobs. Raymond would have dismissed Thatcher’s chances if Kate hadn’t reminded him that the Tories had been the first party to choose a Jewish leader, and also the first to select a bachelor.
“So why shouldn’t they be the first to elect a woman?” she demanded. He would have continued to argue with her but the damn woman had proved to be right so often in the past. “Let’s wait and see,” was all he said.
The 1922 Committee announced that the election for leader would take place on 4 February 1975.
At a press conference in early January at the House of Commons Margaret Thatcher announced she would allow her name to go forward to contest the leadership. Simon immediately spent his time exhorting his colleagues to support “The Lady” and joined a small committee under Airey Neave that was formed for the purpose. Charles Seymour warned his friends that the party could never hope to win a general election with a woman leading them. As the days passed, nothing became clearer than the uncertainty of the outcome.
At four o’clock on a particularly wet and windy day the chairman of the 1922 Committee announced the figures:
Margaret Thatcher 130
Edward Heath 119
Hugh Fraser 16
According to the 1922 Committee rules, the winner needed a fifteen percent majority and so a second round was necessary. “It will be held in seven days’ time,” the Chief Whip announced. Three former Cabinet ministers immediately declared they were candidates, while Ted Heath, having been warned that he would get fewer votes a second time round, withdrew from the ballot.