'Douglas Richard Hurd, Baron Hurd of Westwell',
CH,
CBE,
PC (born
8 March 1930), is a senior
British Conservative politician and
novelist, who served in the governments of
Margaret Thatcher and
John Major between
1979 and his
retirement in
1995. He is a patron of the
Tory Reform Group, and remains an active figure in public life.
Early life
Douglas Hurd was born in
Marlborough,
Wiltshire,
England, in 1930. His father
Anthony Hurd, Baron Hurd and grandfather Sir Percy Hurd had both been members of Parliament. Hurd attended
Eton College and
Trinity College, Cambridge where he was President of the
Cambridge Union Society. In
1952 he joined the
Diplomatic Service, during which time he was posted to
China, the
United States and
Italy, leaving the service in
1966 to enter
politics as a member of the Conservative Party.
Member of Parliament
He became secretary to the then Conservative leader
Edward Heath, and was first elected to Parliament in
1974 to represent the constituency of
Mid Oxfordshire. At the
1983 general election the seat was replaced by
Witney, and he remained MP for the seat until he retired from the
House of Commons in
1997 after 23 years in Parliament.
In government, 1979-90
Hurd was appointed Minister of State at the
Foreign & Commonwealth Office upon the Conservative victory in the
1979 general election, and remained in that post for the duration of the parliament. After the 1983 election Thatcher moved Hurd to the
Home Office, but just over a year later he was promoted to
Cabinet rank, succeeding
James Prior as
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. In this position, his diplomatic skills paved the way for the signing of the
Anglo-Irish Agreement on the future of
Northern Ireland, which marked a turning point in British-Irish co-operation on the
political situation in the troubled region. A month before the agreement was signed, however, Hurd returned to the Home Office, this time as
Secretary of State, following the demotion of
Leon Brittan to the
Department of Trade and Industry. Widely seen as a 'safe pair of hands' and a solid, loyal member of the Cabinet, Hurd's tenure as Home Secretary was largely uncontroversial, although he was notably of the view that the British
prison system did not work effectively and argued for more
rehabilitation of offenders and alternative sentencing.
Candidacy in the 1990 leadership election
After a sound performance as Home Secretary, Hurd's Cabinet career developed further during the turbulent final months of Margaret Thatcher's premiership. On
26 October 1989, Hurd moved
to the Foreign Office, succeeding
John Major whose rapid rise through the Cabinet had seen him become
Chancellor of the Exchequer in the wake of
Nigel Lawson's resignation. This was the post in which Hurd made the greatest political impression. In November 1990, he supported Margaret Thatcher's candidacy as Conservative Party leader against challenger
Michael Heseltine, but on her withdrawal from the second round of
the contest, Hurd decided to enter the race as a moderate centre-right candidate, drawing on his reputation as a successful 'law-and-order' Home Secretary. He was seen as an outsider, lagging behind the more charismatic Heseltine and the eventual winner, John Major, who shared the moderate centre-right political ground with Hurd but had the added advantages of youth and political momentum. Hurd came third, winning 56 of the 372 votes cast and, together with Heseltine, conceded defeat to allow Major, who had fallen just three votes short of an outright majority, to return unopposed. Hurd was gracious in defeat and, on the formation of Major's first Cabinet, was returned to his position as Foreign Secretary.
Foreign Secretary
Hurd was seen as a
statesmanlike Foreign Secretary and his tenure was particularly eventful. He oversaw Britain's diplomatic responses to the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991, as well as the first
Gulf War to drive
Iraqi troops out of
Kuwait. Hurd cultivated good relations with the
United States under
President George Bush Sr., and sought a more conciliatory approach to other members of the
European Economic Community, repairing relationships damaged during the increasingly
Eurosceptic tone of Margaret Thatcher's final years. Hurd welcomed a reunified
Germany into the European political community in 1990.
One of the defining features of Hurd's tenure as Foreign Secretary was the British reaction to the increasingly vicious
Yugoslav Wars. During the war in
Bosnia, Hurd was seen as a leading voice among
European politicians arguing against sending military aid to the
Bosniaks, in defiance of the line taken by US President
Bill Clinton, and arguing that such a move would only create a 'level killing field' and prolong the conflict unduly. During this period the fractious relations between European and US leaders threatened the stability of the trans-Atlantic alliance and delayed any co-ordinated response to the bloodshed taking place in the collapsing
Yugoslavia.
Shortly after his retirement from politics, Hurd travelled to
Serbia to meet
Slobodan Milošević on behalf of the British bank
NatWest (see below), fuelling some speculation that Hurd had deliberately taken a pro-Serbian line. There has been criticism of the policies promoted by Hurd with regard to the war. The Bosnian government even threatened to charge Hurd as an accomplice to
genocide before the war tribunal in
The Hague, though this came to nothing.
Hurd was involved in a public scandal concerning the UK funding of a Hydroelectric dam on the Pergau River in Malaysia, near the Thai border. Building work began in 1991 with money from the UK foreign aid budget. Concurrently, the Malaysian government bought around £1 billion worth of arms from the UK. The suggested linkage of arms deals to aid became the subject of a UK government inquiry from March 1994. In November 1994, after an application for
Judicial Review brought by the
World Development Movement, the High Court
[1] held that the British Foreign Secretary, Douglas Hurd had acted
ultra vires (outside of his power and therefore illegally) by allocating £234 million towards the funding of the dam, on the grounds that it was not of economic or humanitarian benefit to the Malaysian people.
[2] In 2002 the administration of the UK's aid budget was removed from the Foreign Secretary's remit (previously the Overseas Development Administration had been under the supervision of the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office). The new department, The
Department for International Development (DfID), has its own
Secretary of State who is a member of the
Cabinet.
In 1995, during the Cabinet reshuffle widely seen as setting up the Conservative team which would contest the next election, Hurd retired from frontline politics after eleven years in the Cabinet and was replaced by
Malcolm Rifkind.
Retirement
Hurd was generally a well-respected politician and parliamentarian, seen as an intellectual and old-school party grandee. After his retirement as Foreign Secretary, he remained a key supporter of John Major, and kept a range of active political involvements as well as taking on some business appointments, most notably as a deputy chairman of
NatWest Markets and a board Director of the NatWest group, posts he held from October 1995 until
1999.
He left the
House of Commons at the 1997 general election, and was created 'Baron Hurd of Westwell', of Westwell in the
County of Oxfordshire, entitling him to remain in Parliament as a member of the
House of Lords.
In December 1997 he was appointed Chairman of
British Invisibles (now
IFSL), and was Chairman of the judging panel for the
1998 Booker Prize for Fiction. He became a member of the Royal Commission on the Reform of the House of Lords in February 1999, and in September 1999 he was appointed High Steward of
Westminster Abbey, reflecting his long active membership of the
Church of England. He later went on to chair the Hurd Commission which produced
a review of the roles and functions of the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
During the
2005 Conservative Party leadership contest, Hurd supported
David Cameron, the eventual winner, who is the
incumbent MP for Hurd's former seat of Witney.
Personal life
Hurd's son,
Nick Hurd, is also a Conservative politician and was elected
Member of Parliament for
Ruislip-Northwood at the
May 2005 general election.
Douglas Hurd is also well known as a writer of political thrillers including ''Scotch on the Rocks'' (1971), ''Truth Game'' (1972), ''Vote To Kill'' (1975), ''An End To Promises'' (1979), ''Palace of Enchantments'' (1985, with Stephen Lamport), ''The Shape of Ice'' (1998), ''Truth Game'' (1999) and ''Image in the Water'' (2001).
His non-fiction works include ''The Arrow War'' (1967),
''The Search for Peace'' (1997), ''Memoirs'' (2003) and
''Robert Peel, a Biography'' (2007).
[1]
Another of Hurd's sons, Thomas, joined the
Diplomatic Service. His name appeared on a list of suspected
MI6 operatives which was published on the Internet, supposedly the work of disgruntled former SIS (
MI6) or Security Service (
MI5) employees. The authenticity of several entries on the list is questionable, leading to speculation that it was in fact compiled by a poorly informed amateur. The format of the list is taken from
The Diplomatic Service List - an annual official publication (known within the Foreign and Commonwealth Office as 'The Green Book') listing all members of the
Diplomatic Service.
Source
1. Robert Peel, a Biography, Orion Books, [3]
Quotations
★ "We should be wary of politicians who profess to follow history while only noticing those signposts of history that point in the direction which they themselves already favour."
★ "People are very interested in politics, they just don't like it labelled 'politics'."
★ "Prison is an expensive way of making bad people worse."
Further reading
★ ''Memoirs'' by Douglas Hurd (Little, Brown, 2003)
★ ''The Search for Peace'' by Douglas Hurd (Little, Brown, 1997)
Trivia
★ An often used slang term for using the lavatory is going for a "Douglas (Hurd)".
★ In the TV series,
Spitting Image, Hurd's hair resembles the shape of a Mr Whippy cone.
★ In British rhyming slang, a Third-class university degree is often called a Douglas (Hurd - Third)
See also
★
Thatcher Ministry (1979-90) and
Major Ministry (1990-97), governments in which Hurd served
★
Order of the Companions of Honour
★
List of political families in the United Kingdom
★
Tory Reform Group
★
America All Party Parliamentary Group
External links
★
The text of 'To Lead and to Serve', the Hurd Report into the operation of the Archbishopric of Canterbury
★
Hurd's memories of his assignment Beijing in the 1950s
★
Hurd intervenes in the 2001 General Election campaign on European policy
★
BBC reports on the findings of Hurd's commission into the role of the Archbishop of Canterbury
★
An article by Douglas Hurd on peace in the Middle East
★
Speech by Hurd on Britain and Europe
★ ''Daily Telegraph'' review of ''Robert Peel, a Biography''
xml=/arts/2007/06/28/bohur223.xml class=wikiexternal target=_blank>[4]
★
Economist Review of "Robert Peel, a Biography"
★
Daily Mail Review of "Robert Peel, A Biography"