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Remembering 'Super Mac' 20 Years On

It's the 20th anniversary on December 29 of the death of former Tory Prime Minister Harold Macmillan who was born in Brixton in 1894. Many Lambeth residents associate Sir John Major with Brixton in the ranks of our former prime ministers, but 'Super Mac' as he was labelled by the cartoonist 'Vicky' was by common consent the greater of the two.

Like the current leader of the Conservative Party, Macmillan went to Eton followed by Balliol College, Oxford, but also served in the Grenadier Guards during the First World War and was wounded on three occasions. During the Battle of the Somme, he spent an entire day wounded and lying in a foxhole with a bullet in his pelvis reading the Greek writer Aeschylus in the original language.

Coming to power after the Suez Crisis, Macmillan presided over a period of prosperity in the late 1950s best paraphrased as 'You've never had it so good,' although his exact words were "let me be frank about it - most of our people never had it so good." He was witty and famously unflappable. Responding to a remark by the Labour Leader Harold Wilson about not having any boots in which to go to school, Macmillan retorted, "If Mr Wilson did not have boots to go to school, it is because he was too big for them." When asked what was the greatest challenge for a statesman, Macmillan replied, "Events, my dear boy, events." Asked by President Kennedy whether it was true that his wife [Lady Dorothy] liked a drink or two, Macmillan replied, "If you think she's bad, you should have known her mother."

Macmillan retired from politics in 1964 and it was a decade later when he accepted a peerage as Earl of Stockton. A year before his death at the age of 92, Macmillan made a memorable speech at a dinner held by the Tory Reform Group (TRG) in which he appeared to criticise the Thatcher government's privatisation policy. "First of all the Georgian silver goes. And then all that nice furniture that used to be in the saloon. Then the Canalettos go." Profitable parts of the steel industry, and the railways had been privatised, along with British Telecom. "They were like the two Rembrandts still left." A few days later, he went to the Lords and explained that he was not against privatisation, but critical of the way the proceeds had been used as 'revenue'. Click here to hear the speech in full on the TRG weblog.

But like an old fox, Macmillan was wily and not afraid to stir controversy. In the Lords, he praised the miners then on strike, asserting that they had "beaten the Kaiser's Army" and "beaten Hitler's Army." In the last month of his life, he observed of his first parliamentary constituency: "Sixty three years ago...the unemployment rate in Stockton-on-Tees was then 29 per cent. Last November [1986] the unemployment rate [there] is 28 per cent. A rather sad end to one's life."

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Bah Humbug to the Labour Lambeth Xmas

Our diverse borough, with more churches than any other in London, is being treated to a display of Christmas humbug by the Labour Party not known since the civic service was abolished in Ted Knight's time. First the Comrades put up last year's 'Happy Christmas' banner over the entrance to the Town Hall, which was commissioned by the Tory-Lib Dem administration in 2005, and then Labour's spin doctors claimed they'd restored Xmas. Next a Labour Cabinet member went to a Xmas service at a Lambeth crematorium and in a joint welcome with a senior member of the clergy started off by emphasising her Labour Party credentials - many eyebrows were raised in shock. In death there are no political parties. In remembrance of loved ones, we are all 'one nation' from the Cenotaph to Lambeth Cemetery. What is all the more remarkable is that this is the Party that until recently, and with honourable individual exceptions in Lambeth, rarely went to church, and still has an ideological dislike of church schools and faith-based education from the relevant Children's and Young Persons Cabinet member downwards.

As we look towards the New Year, our long-suffering citizens have little cheer to anticipate. We are living under a tax and spend administration that rarely listens to reasoned argument. Former Labour councillor in Lambeth Ken Livingstone is proposing an inflation busting 5.3 per cent tax rise from City Hall. Labour's highly paid officers also tell us that 'not enough people are dying because of the mild autumn and that funeral charges may rise'. Was that a day, perhaps, to bury bad news - tucked away on an inside page of the Tuesday South London Press which few people read? We have also discovered, via official reports, that the cost per head of accommodating our bureaucrats in the Town Hall is GB pounds 3,600 a year. The principal council buildings are collectively only 70 per cent occupied - wasting GB pounds 2 million a year of our money.

In the meantime a tide of anger rises among our 33,000 tenants who are still being denied a ballot on whether or not the Labour Party should sell the roofs from over their heads. Even the Labour MP for Vauxhall, 60-year-old Kate Hoey, thinks they are making a mistake, but our New Labour leaders dismiss her as a fiery maverick. Perhaps that's why some Tories vote for her.

Finally, as Xmas gets under way - a traditional time for caring for the homeless whether in a manger in the Holy Land or a shelter run by the Sally Army - let's spare a thought for 'Puss'. That's a feral tabby cat which has taken up residence in the underground car park of the Town Hall - it had heard that fat cats occupy office space in the Town Hall. Despite my finding it there overnight for the past week, Labour spin doctors deny it is resident. When I e-mail them about it there is a deafening silence. As for me - I'm going to call up the cat rescue service, if it hasn't gone by Boxing Day. The Labour spin doctors won't be around then having all disappeared to the ski slopes.

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