Authors: Gyles Brandreth
All I can say is that in my time in the Whips’ Office we helped people with mental problems, marital problems, drink problems, financial problems, and more besides, but I don’t know of any case where we covered up for anyone who we believed to be guilty of a serious criminal offence.
Reflecting on all this makes me glad that I published this book, even though, in doing
so, I know that I upset colleagues who felt I had betrayed them. I broke the whips’ code of silence – something no whip had ever done before. Whips
never
talk about what they do or how they set about it. That’s the rule. As the Chief Whip pointed out to me at the time, ‘Our mystery is part of our potency.’
But mystery makes for mischief. Do we want government run like an episode of
House of Cards
? The trouble with operating in secret is that it encourages those not-in-the-know to believe that dark deeds are being done in the murky corridors of power. Occasionally perhaps they are, but mostly they are not. On Monday of this week I went to the party for Sandra Howard’s new novel. It was Michael Howard’s birthday and a lot of the old gang were there – Ken Clarke, Norman Lamont, John Gummer, Peter Lilley, Norman Fowler, several of them, of course, whips in their day and all of them, in my estimation, good people. In my experience, most politicians are.
706
It did. Kenneth Clarke and David Willetts were among the ‘male, pale and stale’ members of the government who were dropped in favour of fresher, female faces, and Michael Gove stepped down as Education Secretary to become Chief Whip.
707
Trevor ‘Tim’ Fortescue, 1916–2008, MP for Liverpool Garston 1966–74.