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Reginald Maudling

Reginald Maudling (7 March 1917 – 14 February 1979)[1] was a British politician who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1962 to 1964 and as Home Secretary from 1970 to 1972. From 1955 until the late 1960s, he was spoken of as a prospective Conservative leader, and he was twice seriously considered for the post; he was Edward Heath's chief rival in 1965. He also held directorships in several British financial firms.

Reginald Maudling
Maudling in 1974
Home Secretary
In office
20 June 1970 – 18 July 1972
Prime MinisterEdward Heath
Preceded byJames Callaghan
Succeeded byRobert Carr
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
13 July 1962 – 16 October 1964
Prime MinisterHarold Macmillan
Alec Douglas-Home
Preceded bySelwyn Lloyd
Succeeded byJames Callaghan
Secretary of State for the Colonies
In office
9 October 1961 – 13 July 1962
Prime MinisterHarold Macmillan
Preceded byIain Macleod
Succeeded byDuncan Sandys
President of the Board of Trade
In office
14 October 1959 – 9 October 1961
Prime MinisterHarold Macmillan
Preceded byDavid Eccles
Succeeded byFrederick Erroll
Paymaster General
In office
14 January 1957 – 14 October 1959
Prime MinisterHarold Macmillan
Preceded byWalter Monckton
Succeeded byThe Lord Mills
Minister of Supply
In office
7 April 1955 – 14 January 1957
Prime MinisterAnthony Eden
Preceded bySelwyn Lloyd
Succeeded byAubrey Jones
Economic Secretary to the Treasury
In office
24 November 1952 – 7 April 1955
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byJohn Edwards
Succeeded byEdward Boyle
Member of Parliament
for Chipping Barnet
Barnet (1950–1974)
In office
23 February 1950 – 14 February 1979
Preceded byStephen Taylor
Succeeded bySydney Chapman
Shadow Cabinet positions
Shadow Foreign Secretary
In office
11 February 1975 – 11 April 1976
LeaderMargaret Thatcher
ShadowingJames Callaghan
Anthony Crosland
Preceded byGeoffrey Rippon
Succeeded byJohn Davies
In office
27 July 1965 – 11 November 1965
LeaderAlec Douglas-Home
Edward Heath
ShadowingMichael Stewart
Preceded byRab Butler
Succeeded byChristopher Soames
Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
In office
21 April 1968 – 28 February 1969
LeaderEdward Heath
ShadowingDenis Healey
Preceded byEnoch Powell
Succeeded byGeoffrey Rippon
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
16 October 1964 – 27 July 1965
LeaderAlec Douglas-Home
ShadowingJames Callaghan
Preceded byJames Callaghan
Succeeded byEdward Heath
Personal details
Born(1917-03-07)7 March 1917
North Finchley, Middlesex, England
Died14 February 1979(1979-02-14) (aged 61)
Hampstead, London, England
Political partyConservative
Spouse
Beryl Laverick
(m. 1939)
Children4
Alma materMerton College, Oxford

As Home Secretary, he was responsible for the UK Government's Northern Ireland policy during the period that included Bloody Sunday. In July 1972, he resigned as Home Secretary due to an unrelated scandal in one of the companies of which he was director.

Early life edit

Reginald Maudling was born in Woodside Park, North Finchley, and was named after his father, Reginald George Maudling, an actuary at R. Watson & Sons and Public Valuer,[2] who contracted to do actuarial and financial calculations as the Commercial Calculating Company Ltd. The family moved to Bexhill to escape German air raids; Maudling won scholarships to the Merchant Taylors' School and Merton College, Oxford.[3]

He stayed out of undergraduate politics at Oxford, and studied the works of Hegel; he was to formulate his conclusions later as to the inseparability of economic and political freedom: "the purpose of State control and the guiding principle of its application is the achievement of true freedom". He obtained a first class Greats degree.[4]

Political career edit

Shortly after graduating, Maudling set up a meeting with Harold Nicolson to discuss whether it would be better, as a moderate conservative, to join the Conservative Party or National Labour; Nicolson advised him to wait. Maudling was called to the Bar at the Middle Temple in 1940. However, he did not practise as a barrister, having volunteered for service in the Royal Air Force (RAF) in the Second World War.[citation needed]

Owing to poor eyesight he took desk jobs in the RAF intelligence branch, where he rose—as a "Wingless Wonder", as officers who were not qualified to wear pilot's wings were nicknamed—to the rank of Flight Lieutenant; he was then appointed Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Air, Sir Archibald Sinclair.[5]

Parliamentary candidate edit

Maudling wrote an essay on Conservative policy in November 1943, recommending that the Conservatives neither imitate the Labour Party nor reflexively oppose all controls; in the general election of July 1945, he was selected as parliamentary candidate for Heston and Isleworth, a newly created constituency in Middlesex, although there were four applicants and he had no ties to that constituency. In the subsequent Labour landslide Maudling was defeated like many others, although Heston and Isleworth had been expected to be a safe Conservative seat. After its defeat in the 1945 general election, the Conservative Party engaged in an extensive rethink of its policy. Maudling argued that the Party had depended excessively on outdated economic slogans and the popularity of Winston Churchill.

In November 1945, Maudling became the first staff member of the Conservative Parliamentary Secretariat, later the Conservative Research Department, where he was head of the Economic Section. He persuaded the party to accept much of the Labour government's nationalisation programme and social services while cutting government spending. In March 1946, Maudling was chosen as the prospective candidate for Barnet, close to his birthplace in Finchley, and began giving speeches there. Labour had unexpectedly won the seat in 1945, but it was considered to be marginal. In 1950, Maudling was elected as Member of Parliament with an absolute majority.[6]

Member of Parliament and Cabinet edit

Following the 1951 election, Churchill made Maudling a junior Minister at the Ministry of Civil Aviation. However, his experience of preparing economic policy led to his speaking on behalf of the Treasury on the 1952 budget and thus to an appointment, later that year, as Economic Secretary to the Treasury. With his mentor Rab Butler as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Maudling worked to reduce taxes and controls in order to move from post-war austerity to affluence. When Anthony Eden took over as Prime Minister in 1955, Maudling was promoted to head a department as Minister of Supply. He supported the invasion of Suez.

The Ministry was responsible for aircraft production and supplying the armed forces, and Maudling came to agree with critics who argued that it was an unnecessary intermediary; he therefore recommended its abolition. Although supportive of Harold Macmillan's appointment as Prime Minister over the rival claims of Butler in 1957, Maudling found himself in difficulties over his position in the new government. He refused to continue at the Ministry of Supply and also rejected an offer of the Ministry of Health because Iain Macleod, with whom he had a rivalry, had held the post five years earlier and Maudling did not want to be seen as five years behind him.

Macmillan appointed Maudling to the post of Paymaster General and spokesman in the House of Commons for the Ministry of Fuel and Power, which was technically a demotion. Nine months later, Maudling had proved his usefulness; Macmillan brought him into the Cabinet on 17 September 1957, where he acted more as a Minister without Portfolio: he had specific responsibility for persuading the six members of the embryonic European Economic Community, who had recently signed the Treaty of Rome, to abandon their proposal for a customs union in favour of a wider free-trade area where each country would preserve their own external tariffs. However, Maudling's lack of international experience led him to underestimate the importance of the nascent Community and what was constructive in it. Faced with widespread rejection of the proposals, Maudling aroused hostility in Bonn and Paris by seeking to play off the Germans against the French.

On 14 November 1958, six months after the election of General de Gaulle as premier, Jacques Soustelle, the French Minister of Information, confirmed to the Press that France would reject the Maudling plan. Two days later, the British delegation to the Community formally called an end to accession negotiations. Maudling later revised his proposals, which were to form the basis of the European Free Trade Association.[7]

Meanwhile, Maudling became an underwriting member of Lloyd's of London in December 1957, although his assets were somewhat below average for other 'names'.[8]

President of the Board of Trade edit

Maudling entered the front line of politics after the 1959 election when appointed President of the Board of Trade. He was responsible for introducing the government's proposals to help areas of high unemployment. This was achieved by paying grants to companies to create new plants in these deprived areas, and also by the government taking over unused land for development. Maudling also succeeded in negotiating a free trade agreement between the countries outside the Common Market; this became the European Free Trade Association and was some compensation for his failure to negotiate a free trade area with the Common Market. Maudling was opposed to any proposal to join the Common Market on the basis that it would end Britain's right to make commercial agreements with New Zealand and Australia. He was later to remark that "I can think of no more retrograde step economically or politically". This comment was to be quoted against him when, less than two years later, he was Chancellor of the Exchequer at the time of the reopening of negotiations for Common Market membership.[9]

Colonial Secretary edit

Reginald Maudling was for a short time, as Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1961, responsible for the process of decolonisation. In this position he chaired constitutional conferences for Jamaica, Northern Rhodesia and Trinidad and Tobago which prepared them for independence; his plan for Northern Rhodesia was controversial and he had to threaten resignation before it was approved. However, Maudling was keen to return to economic policy, and seized his opportunity when Macmillan made it clear in private that he supported a voluntary incomes policy. Maudling promptly made his case in public, and three weeks later was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in Macmillan's "Night of the Long Knives" attempt to rejuvenate his Cabinet.[10]

Chancellor of the Exchequer edit

As Chancellor, Maudling soon cut purchase tax and bank interest rates.[11] His 1963 budget[12] aimed at "expansion without inflation". Following a period of economic difficulty, with a growth target of 4%, Maudling was able to remove income tax from owner-occupiers' residential premises. He also abolished the rate of duty on home-brewed beer which in effect legalised it. This was the period in which Maudling was at his most popular within the Conservative Party and in the country.

However, later commentators have been less kind to Maudling: Harold Wilson and his Chancellor James Callaghan (who nevertheless sounded out Maudling for the governorship of the Bank of England in 1966)[13] blamed the "dash for growth" that followed the 1963 budget for increasing sterling's chronic instability between 1964 and 1967 and by greatly increasing domestic demand the budget certainly exacerbated the existing balance of payments problem. Maudling largely recognised this himself by the time of the 1964 budget and, although he increased taxes, he did little to subdue demand in an election year.

First unsuccessful leadership bid edit

By 1963, during the Profumo affair, there was talk, encouraged by Martin Redmayne (Chief Whip) and Lord Poole (Party Chairman), of Maudling succeeding Macmillan as Prime Minister. Maudling visited Butler (Deputy Prime Minister) and obtained a mutual promise that they would, if necessary, agree to serve under one another – Maudling believed that he had gained an advantage in obtaining the agreement of Butler, his senior, to serve under him if necessary. William Rees-Mogg claimed in The Times on 28 July that Butler led Maudling by 2:1 in the Cabinet, although Maudling had more support amongst backbench MPs.[14]

Macmillan's sudden illness and announcement of his resignation in October 1963 came at a time when Maudling's support had fallen. He was also poorly received at the Conservative Party conference, which had become a hustings for the leadership, despite coaching from Iain Macleod, in how to deliver his speech. Back in London the following week, a process of "consultation" by Lord Chancellor Dilhorne and by Redmayne declared Foreign Secretary Lord Home, rather than Maudling or Butler, to be the compromise candidate. Enoch Powell, Macleod, Hailsham and Maudling (known as "the Quad" in some accounts of the following days) sought to persuade Butler to refuse to serve under Home, so that Butler rather than Home would have to become Prime Minister. Macleod and Maudling demanded that Dilhorne lay the results of his consultations before the Cabinet but he refused.[15] Maudling attended the meeting at Powell's house late in the evening of 17 October, "well-refreshed" after attending a formal dinner and seems to have "gone along with it" rather than being a ringleader, although he and Hailsham agreed to serve under Butler.[16] On the morning of Saturday 19 October Butler then Maudling agreed to serve under Home, enabling him to accept office as Prime Minister.[15]

Maudling retained his post as Chancellor under the new Prime Minister and in the 1964 election, Maudling had a prominent role at the helm of the party's daily press conferences, while Douglas-Home toured the country. On the BBC's election results programme, the journalist Anthony Howard said that he believed that if Maudling had been leader, the narrow Conservative defeat would have been a narrow Conservative victory.[17] Upon being forced out of the post by the election defeat, Maudling left a note to his successor, James Callaghan, simply stating "Good luck, old cock.... Sorry to leave it in such a mess".[18]

Second unsuccessful leadership bid edit

Out of office, Maudling accepted the offer of a seat on the board of Kleinwort Benson in November 1964, one of the factors which led to his being shifted to spokesman on Foreign Affairs in early 1965. Unlike other potential leadership contenders, Maudling publicly maintained his loyalty to Douglas-Home as criticisms of his leadership mounted. When Douglas-Home resigned, after putting in place a system in which the leadership was directly elected, Maudling fought against Edward Heath for the position of candidate to the party centre-right.

Unfortunately for Maudling, Enoch Powell also stood, but he was a candidate supporting monetarist and proto-Thatcherite economics, which at that time had little support. Powell won 15 votes. Maudling won 133 votes against Heath's 150; Powell's 15 votes were seen as more likely to have gone to Maudling had Powell not stood, but they would have made no difference to Heath's narrow majority. This was a moment of philosophical instability for the Conservatives. Their historic scepticism of Keynesianism began to grow through the 1960s because there was little to distinguish between the policies of the Conservatives and Labour. The cross-party support for economic planning and union negotiation was becoming increasingly unable to stimulate high levels of economic growth.

Maudling's business directorships with Kleinwort Benson and others were mentioned by his opponents as evidence of his lack of commitment for the role, and he was criticised as too close to the Macmillan/Douglas-Home style of politics.

Deputy Leader and Home Secretary edit

Maudling served as Deputy Leader under Heath, and was also a prominent member of the Shadow Cabinet. However, he was neither personally nor politically close to Heath, and as a consequence his influence declined; his support for an incomes policy now went against party policy. He also tended to make gaffes, as for example when he said Harold Wilson had been following the same policy as the Conservatives on Rhodesia and "I can't think of anything he has done wrongly". After Enoch Powell had been sacked from the Shadow Cabinet in 1968 for his controversial Rivers of Blood speech, Maudling was moved from the position of Shadow Commonwealth Secretary to become Shadow Defence Secretary until 1969 when he was replaced by Geoffrey Rippon. When the Conservatives returned to power in 1970, Maudling was appointed Home Secretary; the most pressing problem at the Home Office was tackling the Troubles in Northern Ireland. After boarding the aircraft at the end of his first visit to the region, he remarked "For God's sake bring me a large Scotch. What a bloody awful country."[19] When Iain Macleod, who had been appointed as Chancellor in the new Conservative Government, died after barely a month in office, it was reported in The Glasgow Herald that Maudling "was being consistently tipped" at Westminster to move from the Home Office back to his old post.[20] Ultimately the post went to Anthony Barber.

Maudling's attitude of reassuring calmness in interviews, normally helpful to him, was sometimes damaging. At a 15 December 1971 news conference in Belfast, Maulding said that the British Army had the power to reduce IRA violence to "something which is acceptable", a remark widely regarded as a gaffe.[21] He also tended to trust the Unionist-controlled Government of Northern Ireland and gloss over differences between their approach and that of the United Kingdom government. This backfired when the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, James Chichester-Clark, resigned when denied the full number of troops he requested in March 1971. That August, Maudling authorised the Northern Ireland government to introduce internment without trial for terror suspects, which caused widespread upheaval and anger among the nationalist population due to its exclusive use on that community,[22] and was followed by an already planned massive escalation in the level of violence.

Regarding criminal justice, Maudling made no attempt, despite his personal support, to reintroduce capital punishment after its abolition in 1969. He introduced Community Service, a new alternative to prison, and in 1971 modestly tightened the immigration rules.[23] He was criticised for ordering the deportation of Rudi Dutschke, a leader of the German student movement. Dutschke, who was in Britain to recuperate from an assassination attempt, was considered a student anarchist.[citation needed]

Maudling was often the target of satirical cartoons in major newspapers, and was lampooned in the magazine Private Eye and the television comedy show Monty Python's Flying Circus.[24]

Bloody Sunday edit

After soldiers from the Parachute Regiment shot and killed 14 protestors from a Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) march on 30 January 1972, Maudling gave a statement in the House of Commons, agreeing with statements published by army spokesmen claiming that the regiment had only opened fire in self-defence.[25][26] Northern Irish politician and MP Bernadette Devlin, who had been present in Derry when the incident occurred, attempted to respond to Maudling's statement but was denied by Speaker of the House Selwyn Lloyd; Devlin responded by walking across the commons floor and slapping Maudling. Devlin subsequently told journalists that Maudling's statement contained numerous falsehoods and expressed no regrets for the victims of the incident.[27][28] Eventually, Edward Heath decided to bring in direct rule of Northern Ireland under a separate Secretary of State. In 1974, Shane Paul O'Doherty, an IRA member, sent Maudling a letter bomb, which slightly injured him.[29]

Scandal edit

In 1972, Maudling's business activities were causing considerable disquiet and speculation in the press. In 1966, he had obtained a directorship in the company of John Poulson, an architect Maudling helped obtain lucrative contracts. Poulson routinely did business through bribery and in 1972 was made bankrupt. The bankruptcy hearings disclosed his bribe payments, and Maudling's connection became public knowledge. Maudling came to the decision that his responsibility for the Metropolitan Police, which was beginning fraud investigations into Poulson, made his position as Home Secretary untenable. He resigned on 18 July, to general sympathy from the press.[citation needed]

Shortly after receiving Maudling's resignation, Edward Heath's government performed a 'U-turn' on economic policy and subsequently adopted an approach strikingly similar to Maudling's. Heath advised Maudling not to drop out of the public eye and he continued to make many media appearances. In the year after the Conservative Party's electoral defeat in 1974, Heath was replaced as leader by Margaret Thatcher. She appointed Maudling to the post of Shadow Foreign Secretary. However, Maudling clashed with Thatcher over economics, and after less than two years in the role he was dismissed on 19 November 1976. Departing, Maudling summed up his career as "hired by Winston Churchill, fired by Margaret Thatcher".[citation needed]

Last years edit

In 1969, Maudling had been president of the Real Estate Fund of America, whose chief executive, Jerome Hoffman, had been imprisoned for fraud; Maudling had also been an adviser to the Peachey Property Corporation, whose chairman, Sir Eric Miller, had embezzled company money and later took his own life. He was revealed to have lobbied for more aid to Malta after obtaining a commission for Poulson there, which had led to heavy losses for the Maltese government. These further revelations led to a Parliamentary inquiry into the conduct of Maudling and two other MPs linked to Poulson. This inquiry published its report on 14 July 1977; the report concluded that Maudling had indulged in "conduct inconsistent with the standards which the House is entitled to expect from its members".[citation needed]

When the report was considered by the House of Commons, the Conservative Party organised its MPs to attend the debate to "Save Reggie". An amendment was put down to "take note" of the report, instead of endorsing it, and carried by 230 votes (211 Conservatives, 17 Labour, 2 Liberals and 2 Ulster Unionists) to 207. No punishment was imposed. An attempt by backbench Labour MPs to expel Maudling from the House was defeated by 331 votes to 11, and a move to suspend him for six months was lost by 324 to 97.

As Lewis Baston's 2004 biography recounts, Maudling and his wife became heavy drinkers once his political career was effectively ended by the scandal. The drinking turned to alcoholism and Maudling's health rapidly deteriorated in the late 1970s. He collapsed in early 1979.[citation needed]

Death edit

Maudling died at the Royal Free Hospital in London, from kidney failure and cirrhosis of the liver, on 14 February 1979; he was 61. His body was buried in the churchyard of Little Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire. A stone seat from his garden was placed beside the grave.

Family life edit

Maudling married actress Beryl Laverick (1919–1988) in 1939.[3] They had three sons and a daughter, Caroline Maudling, who became a journalist in the 1960s as the "travelling teenager" of the Daily Mail and, among other things, appeared alongside John Lennon on BBC TV's Juke Box Jury in 1963.[30]

Maudling's mother had disowned him as a result of his marriage, and Maudling did not attend her funeral in 1956.[31] When Caroline aroused comment by having a child out of wedlock in the late 1960s, Maudling was staunch in her defence, publicly expressing paternal pride.[30] Beryl Maudling's body was buried next to her husband's at Little Berkhamsted.[32]

In popular culture edit

Maudling was portrayed by actor Michael Culkin in the BBC-produced 2018 limited television series A Very English Scandal.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The Papers of Reginald Maudling 29 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine Churchill Archives Centre, Archivesearch. Retrieved 29 October 2021
  2. ^ "No. 30501". The London Gazette. 29 January 1918. p. 1439.
  3. ^ a b Levens, R.G.C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. p. 267.
  4. ^ Shepherd 2004
  5. ^ Baston, Reggie, Chapter 2
  6. ^ Baston, Reggie, Chapters 3–5; "professional politician" (as opposed to gentleman amateur, born to politics, p. 49. Maudling had 53% of the vote in a three-party contest; the Conservative lead was 10,534 out of 70,687.
  7. ^ Beloff, Nora (1963). The General Says No. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. pp. 78–80.
  8. ^ Baston, Reggie, Chapter 6–8
  9. ^ Beloff, N., p. 87.
  10. ^ Baston, Reggie, Chapters 9 and 10
  11. ^ Edmund Dell, The Chancellors: A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer, 1945-90 (HarperCollins, 1997) pp 283-303, covers his term as Chancellor.
  12. ^ "April – The Chancellor, Reginald Maudling, announces the Budget" 28 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Illingworth Exhibition: Cartoons of the 1960s. Contemporary cartoon of the budget announcement. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  13. ^ Baston, Chapter 16
  14. ^ Howard 1987, p. 300-2
  15. ^ a b Howard 1987, p. 316-21
  16. ^ Sandford 2005, pp. 705
  17. ^ Baston, Reggie, chapters 11–13. Howard quoted from Maudling's autobiography.
  18. ^ Owen, Paul (17 May 2010). "Ex-Treasury secretary Liam Byrne's note to his successor: there's no money left". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  19. ^ Sunday Times Insight Team, Ulster (Penguin, 1972), page 213; The politics of drinking in power 10 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online, 6 January 2006. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  20. ^ Warden, John (22 July 1970). "Maudling tipped as Chancellor". The Glasgow Herald. p. 1.
  21. ^ Mansbach, Richard (1973), Northern Ireland: Half a Century of Partition, Facts on File, Inc, New York, pg 123, ISBN 0-87196-182-2
  22. ^ Biographies of Prominent People – 'M' 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine, CAIN Web Service. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  23. ^ 1971: UK restricts Commonwealth migrants 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  24. ^ Larsen, Darl (2008). Monty Python's Flying Circus: An Utterly Complete, Thoroughly Unillustrated, Absolutely Unauthorized Guide to Possibly All the References. Scarecrow Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-1461669708. from the original on 17 February 2017. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  25. ^ , www.time.com. Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  26. ^ Siddique, Haroon; French, Megan (15 June 2010). "Bloody Sunday inquiry: key findings". The Guardian. from the original on 27 October 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  27. ^ "Bernadette Devlin delivers a proletarian protest (31/01/1972)". from the original on 9 December 2018. Retrieved 19 January 2019 – via YouTube.
  28. ^ Maiden speeches in short supply 23 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online, 6 April 2001 Retrieved 25 February 2008.
  29. ^ Horsnell, Michael (2 February 1974). "Mr Maudling slightly hurt by letter bomb". The Times. p. 1. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  30. ^ a b Baston, Chapter 13
  31. ^ Baston, Chapter 2
  32. ^ "Little Berkhamsted". Hartford Hundred West Group of Parishes. from the original on 27 September 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Reginald Maudling
  • BBC News 'On this Day', includes a 1971 filmed interview on the Immigration Bill
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Barnet

19501974
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament
for Chipping Barnet

19741979
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Economic Secretary to the Treasury
1952–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Supply
1955–1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by Paymaster General
1957–1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Board of Trade
1959–1961
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for the Colonies
1961–1962
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1962–1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
1964–1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by Shadow Foreign Secretary
1965
Succeeded by
Deputy Leader of the Opposition
1965–1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
1968–1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home Secretary
1970–1972
Succeeded by
Preceded by Shadow Foreign Secretary
1975–1976
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New title Deputy Leader of the Conservative Party
1965–1972
Vacant
Title next held by
The Viscount Whitelaw

reginald, maudling, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Reginald Maudling 7 March 1917 14 February 1979 1 was a British politician who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1962 to 1964 and as Home Secretary from 1970 to 1972 From 1955 until the late 1960s he was spoken of as a prospective Conservative leader and he was twice seriously considered for the post he was Edward Heath s chief rival in 1965 He also held directorships in several British financial firms The Right HonourableReginald MaudlingMaudling in 1974Home SecretaryIn office 20 June 1970 18 July 1972Prime MinisterEdward HeathPreceded byJames CallaghanSucceeded byRobert CarrChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 13 July 1962 16 October 1964Prime MinisterHarold MacmillanAlec Douglas HomePreceded bySelwyn LloydSucceeded byJames CallaghanSecretary of State for the ColoniesIn office 9 October 1961 13 July 1962Prime MinisterHarold MacmillanPreceded byIain MacleodSucceeded byDuncan SandysPresident of the Board of TradeIn office 14 October 1959 9 October 1961Prime MinisterHarold MacmillanPreceded byDavid EcclesSucceeded byFrederick ErrollPaymaster GeneralIn office 14 January 1957 14 October 1959Prime MinisterHarold MacmillanPreceded byWalter MoncktonSucceeded byThe Lord MillsMinister of SupplyIn office 7 April 1955 14 January 1957Prime MinisterAnthony EdenPreceded bySelwyn LloydSucceeded byAubrey JonesEconomic Secretary to the TreasuryIn office 24 November 1952 7 April 1955Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byJohn EdwardsSucceeded byEdward BoyleMember of Parliament for Chipping BarnetBarnet 1950 1974 In office 23 February 1950 14 February 1979Preceded byStephen TaylorSucceeded bySydney ChapmanShadow Cabinet positionsShadow Foreign SecretaryIn office 11 February 1975 11 April 1976LeaderMargaret ThatcherShadowingJames CallaghanAnthony CroslandPreceded byGeoffrey RipponSucceeded byJohn DaviesIn office 27 July 1965 11 November 1965LeaderAlec Douglas HomeEdward HeathShadowingMichael StewartPreceded byRab ButlerSucceeded byChristopher SoamesShadow Secretary of State for DefenceIn office 21 April 1968 28 February 1969LeaderEdward HeathShadowingDenis HealeyPreceded byEnoch PowellSucceeded byGeoffrey RipponShadow Chancellor of the ExchequerIn office 16 October 1964 27 July 1965LeaderAlec Douglas HomeShadowingJames CallaghanPreceded byJames CallaghanSucceeded byEdward HeathPersonal detailsBorn 1917 03 07 7 March 1917North Finchley Middlesex EnglandDied14 February 1979 1979 02 14 aged 61 Hampstead London EnglandPolitical partyConservativeSpouseBeryl Laverick m 1939 wbr Children4Alma materMerton College Oxford As Home Secretary he was responsible for the UK Government s Northern Ireland policy during the period that included Bloody Sunday In July 1972 he resigned as Home Secretary due to an unrelated scandal in one of the companies of which he was director Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Parliamentary candidate 2 2 Member of Parliament and Cabinet 2 3 President of the Board of Trade 2 4 Colonial Secretary 2 5 Chancellor of the Exchequer 2 6 First unsuccessful leadership bid 2 7 Second unsuccessful leadership bid 2 8 Deputy Leader and Home Secretary 2 9 Bloody Sunday 2 10 Scandal 3 Last years 4 Death 5 Family life 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editReginald Maudling was born in Woodside Park North Finchley and was named after his father Reginald George Maudling an actuary at R Watson amp Sons and Public Valuer 2 who contracted to do actuarial and financial calculations as the Commercial Calculating Company Ltd The family moved to Bexhill to escape German air raids Maudling won scholarships to the Merchant Taylors School and Merton College Oxford 3 He stayed out of undergraduate politics at Oxford and studied the works of Hegel he was to formulate his conclusions later as to the inseparability of economic and political freedom the purpose of State control and the guiding principle of its application is the achievement of true freedom He obtained a first class Greats degree 4 Political career editShortly after graduating Maudling set up a meeting with Harold Nicolson to discuss whether it would be better as a moderate conservative to join the Conservative Party or National Labour Nicolson advised him to wait Maudling was called to the Bar at the Middle Temple in 1940 However he did not practise as a barrister having volunteered for service in the Royal Air Force RAF in the Second World War citation needed Owing to poor eyesight he took desk jobs in the RAF intelligence branch where he rose as a Wingless Wonder as officers who were not qualified to wear pilot s wings were nicknamed to the rank of Flight Lieutenant he was then appointed Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Air Sir Archibald Sinclair 5 Parliamentary candidate edit Maudling wrote an essay on Conservative policy in November 1943 recommending that the Conservatives neither imitate the Labour Party nor reflexively oppose all controls in the general election of July 1945 he was selected as parliamentary candidate for Heston and Isleworth a newly created constituency in Middlesex although there were four applicants and he had no ties to that constituency In the subsequent Labour landslide Maudling was defeated like many others although Heston and Isleworth had been expected to be a safe Conservative seat After its defeat in the 1945 general election the Conservative Party engaged in an extensive rethink of its policy Maudling argued that the Party had depended excessively on outdated economic slogans and the popularity of Winston Churchill In November 1945 Maudling became the first staff member of the Conservative Parliamentary Secretariat later the Conservative Research Department where he was head of the Economic Section He persuaded the party to accept much of the Labour government s nationalisation programme and social services while cutting government spending In March 1946 Maudling was chosen as the prospective candidate for Barnet close to his birthplace in Finchley and began giving speeches there Labour had unexpectedly won the seat in 1945 but it was considered to be marginal In 1950 Maudling was elected as Member of Parliament with an absolute majority 6 Member of Parliament and Cabinet edit Following the 1951 election Churchill made Maudling a junior Minister at the Ministry of Civil Aviation However his experience of preparing economic policy led to his speaking on behalf of the Treasury on the 1952 budget and thus to an appointment later that year as Economic Secretary to the Treasury With his mentor Rab Butler as Chancellor of the Exchequer Maudling worked to reduce taxes and controls in order to move from post war austerity to affluence When Anthony Eden took over as Prime Minister in 1955 Maudling was promoted to head a department as Minister of Supply He supported the invasion of Suez The Ministry was responsible for aircraft production and supplying the armed forces and Maudling came to agree with critics who argued that it was an unnecessary intermediary he therefore recommended its abolition Although supportive of Harold Macmillan s appointment as Prime Minister over the rival claims of Butler in 1957 Maudling found himself in difficulties over his position in the new government He refused to continue at the Ministry of Supply and also rejected an offer of the Ministry of Health because Iain Macleod with whom he had a rivalry had held the post five years earlier and Maudling did not want to be seen as five years behind him Macmillan appointed Maudling to the post of Paymaster General and spokesman in the House of Commons for the Ministry of Fuel and Power which was technically a demotion Nine months later Maudling had proved his usefulness Macmillan brought him into the Cabinet on 17 September 1957 where he acted more as a Minister without Portfolio he had specific responsibility for persuading the six members of the embryonic European Economic Community who had recently signed the Treaty of Rome to abandon their proposal for a customs union in favour of a wider free trade area where each country would preserve their own external tariffs However Maudling s lack of international experience led him to underestimate the importance of the nascent Community and what was constructive in it Faced with widespread rejection of the proposals Maudling aroused hostility in Bonn and Paris by seeking to play off the Germans against the French On 14 November 1958 six months after the election of General de Gaulle as premier Jacques Soustelle the French Minister of Information confirmed to the Press that France would reject the Maudling plan Two days later the British delegation to the Community formally called an end to accession negotiations Maudling later revised his proposals which were to form the basis of the European Free Trade Association 7 Meanwhile Maudling became an underwriting member of Lloyd s of London in December 1957 although his assets were somewhat below average for other names 8 President of the Board of Trade edit Maudling entered the front line of politics after the 1959 election when appointed President of the Board of Trade He was responsible for introducing the government s proposals to help areas of high unemployment This was achieved by paying grants to companies to create new plants in these deprived areas and also by the government taking over unused land for development Maudling also succeeded in negotiating a free trade agreement between the countries outside the Common Market this became the European Free Trade Association and was some compensation for his failure to negotiate a free trade area with the Common Market Maudling was opposed to any proposal to join the Common Market on the basis that it would end Britain s right to make commercial agreements with New Zealand and Australia He was later to remark that I can think of no more retrograde step economically or politically This comment was to be quoted against him when less than two years later he was Chancellor of the Exchequer at the time of the reopening of negotiations for Common Market membership 9 Colonial Secretary edit Reginald Maudling was for a short time as Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1961 responsible for the process of decolonisation In this position he chaired constitutional conferences for Jamaica Northern Rhodesia and Trinidad and Tobago which prepared them for independence his plan for Northern Rhodesia was controversial and he had to threaten resignation before it was approved However Maudling was keen to return to economic policy and seized his opportunity when Macmillan made it clear in private that he supported a voluntary incomes policy Maudling promptly made his case in public and three weeks later was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in Macmillan s Night of the Long Knives attempt to rejuvenate his Cabinet 10 Chancellor of the Exchequer edit As Chancellor Maudling soon cut purchase tax and bank interest rates 11 His 1963 budget 12 aimed at expansion without inflation Following a period of economic difficulty with a growth target of 4 Maudling was able to remove income tax from owner occupiers residential premises He also abolished the rate of duty on home brewed beer which in effect legalised it This was the period in which Maudling was at his most popular within the Conservative Party and in the country However later commentators have been less kind to Maudling Harold Wilson and his Chancellor James Callaghan who nevertheless sounded out Maudling for the governorship of the Bank of England in 1966 13 blamed the dash for growth that followed the 1963 budget for increasing sterling s chronic instability between 1964 and 1967 and by greatly increasing domestic demand the budget certainly exacerbated the existing balance of payments problem Maudling largely recognised this himself by the time of the 1964 budget and although he increased taxes he did little to subdue demand in an election year First unsuccessful leadership bid edit By 1963 during the Profumo affair there was talk encouraged by Martin Redmayne Chief Whip and Lord Poole Party Chairman of Maudling succeeding Macmillan as Prime Minister Maudling visited Butler Deputy Prime Minister and obtained a mutual promise that they would if necessary agree to serve under one another Maudling believed that he had gained an advantage in obtaining the agreement of Butler his senior to serve under him if necessary William Rees Mogg claimed in The Times on 28 July that Butler led Maudling by 2 1 in the Cabinet although Maudling had more support amongst backbench MPs 14 Macmillan s sudden illness and announcement of his resignation in October 1963 came at a time when Maudling s support had fallen He was also poorly received at the Conservative Party conference which had become a hustings for the leadership despite coaching from Iain Macleod in how to deliver his speech Back in London the following week a process of consultation by Lord Chancellor Dilhorne and by Redmayne declared Foreign Secretary Lord Home rather than Maudling or Butler to be the compromise candidate Enoch Powell Macleod Hailsham and Maudling known as the Quad in some accounts of the following days sought to persuade Butler to refuse to serve under Home so that Butler rather than Home would have to become Prime Minister Macleod and Maudling demanded that Dilhorne lay the results of his consultations before the Cabinet but he refused 15 Maudling attended the meeting at Powell s house late in the evening of 17 October well refreshed after attending a formal dinner and seems to have gone along with it rather than being a ringleader although he and Hailsham agreed to serve under Butler 16 On the morning of Saturday 19 October Butler then Maudling agreed to serve under Home enabling him to accept office as Prime Minister 15 Maudling retained his post as Chancellor under the new Prime Minister and in the 1964 election Maudling had a prominent role at the helm of the party s daily press conferences while Douglas Home toured the country On the BBC s election results programme the journalist Anthony Howard said that he believed that if Maudling had been leader the narrow Conservative defeat would have been a narrow Conservative victory 17 Upon being forced out of the post by the election defeat Maudling left a note to his successor James Callaghan simply stating Good luck old cock Sorry to leave it in such a mess 18 Second unsuccessful leadership bid edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Reginald Maudling news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Out of office Maudling accepted the offer of a seat on the board of Kleinwort Benson in November 1964 one of the factors which led to his being shifted to spokesman on Foreign Affairs in early 1965 Unlike other potential leadership contenders Maudling publicly maintained his loyalty to Douglas Home as criticisms of his leadership mounted When Douglas Home resigned after putting in place a system in which the leadership was directly elected Maudling fought against Edward Heath for the position of candidate to the party centre right Unfortunately for Maudling Enoch Powell also stood but he was a candidate supporting monetarist and proto Thatcherite economics which at that time had little support Powell won 15 votes Maudling won 133 votes against Heath s 150 Powell s 15 votes were seen as more likely to have gone to Maudling had Powell not stood but they would have made no difference to Heath s narrow majority This was a moment of philosophical instability for the Conservatives Their historic scepticism of Keynesianism began to grow through the 1960s because there was little to distinguish between the policies of the Conservatives and Labour The cross party support for economic planning and union negotiation was becoming increasingly unable to stimulate high levels of economic growth Maudling s business directorships with Kleinwort Benson and others were mentioned by his opponents as evidence of his lack of commitment for the role and he was criticised as too close to the Macmillan Douglas Home style of politics Deputy Leader and Home Secretary edit Maudling served as Deputy Leader under Heath and was also a prominent member of the Shadow Cabinet However he was neither personally nor politically close to Heath and as a consequence his influence declined his support for an incomes policy now went against party policy He also tended to make gaffes as for example when he said Harold Wilson had been following the same policy as the Conservatives on Rhodesia and I can t think of anything he has done wrongly After Enoch Powell had been sacked from the Shadow Cabinet in 1968 for his controversial Rivers of Blood speech Maudling was moved from the position of Shadow Commonwealth Secretary to become Shadow Defence Secretary until 1969 when he was replaced by Geoffrey Rippon When the Conservatives returned to power in 1970 Maudling was appointed Home Secretary the most pressing problem at the Home Office was tackling the Troubles in Northern Ireland After boarding the aircraft at the end of his first visit to the region he remarked For God s sake bring me a large Scotch What a bloody awful country 19 When Iain Macleod who had been appointed as Chancellor in the new Conservative Government died after barely a month in office it was reported in The Glasgow Herald that Maudling was being consistently tipped at Westminster to move from the Home Office back to his old post 20 Ultimately the post went to Anthony Barber Maudling s attitude of reassuring calmness in interviews normally helpful to him was sometimes damaging At a 15 December 1971 news conference in Belfast Maulding said that the British Army had the power to reduce IRA violence to something which is acceptable a remark widely regarded as a gaffe 21 He also tended to trust the Unionist controlled Government of Northern Ireland and gloss over differences between their approach and that of the United Kingdom government This backfired when the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland James Chichester Clark resigned when denied the full number of troops he requested in March 1971 That August Maudling authorised the Northern Ireland government to introduce internment without trial for terror suspects which caused widespread upheaval and anger among the nationalist population due to its exclusive use on that community 22 and was followed by an already planned massive escalation in the level of violence Regarding criminal justice Maudling made no attempt despite his personal support to reintroduce capital punishment after its abolition in 1969 He introduced Community Service a new alternative to prison and in 1971 modestly tightened the immigration rules 23 He was criticised for ordering the deportation of Rudi Dutschke a leader of the German student movement Dutschke who was in Britain to recuperate from an assassination attempt was considered a student anarchist citation needed Maudling was often the target of satirical cartoons in major newspapers and was lampooned in the magazine Private Eye and the television comedy show Monty Python s Flying Circus 24 Bloody Sunday edit After soldiers from the Parachute Regiment shot and killed 14 protestors from a Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association NICRA march on 30 January 1972 Maudling gave a statement in the House of Commons agreeing with statements published by army spokesmen claiming that the regiment had only opened fire in self defence 25 26 Northern Irish politician and MP Bernadette Devlin who had been present in Derry when the incident occurred attempted to respond to Maudling s statement but was denied by Speaker of the House Selwyn Lloyd Devlin responded by walking across the commons floor and slapping Maudling Devlin subsequently told journalists that Maudling s statement contained numerous falsehoods and expressed no regrets for the victims of the incident 27 28 Eventually Edward Heath decided to bring in direct rule of Northern Ireland under a separate Secretary of State In 1974 Shane Paul O Doherty an IRA member sent Maudling a letter bomb which slightly injured him 29 Scandal edit In 1972 Maudling s business activities were causing considerable disquiet and speculation in the press In 1966 he had obtained a directorship in the company of John Poulson an architect Maudling helped obtain lucrative contracts Poulson routinely did business through bribery and in 1972 was made bankrupt The bankruptcy hearings disclosed his bribe payments and Maudling s connection became public knowledge Maudling came to the decision that his responsibility for the Metropolitan Police which was beginning fraud investigations into Poulson made his position as Home Secretary untenable He resigned on 18 July to general sympathy from the press citation needed Shortly after receiving Maudling s resignation Edward Heath s government performed a U turn on economic policy and subsequently adopted an approach strikingly similar to Maudling s Heath advised Maudling not to drop out of the public eye and he continued to make many media appearances In the year after the Conservative Party s electoral defeat in 1974 Heath was replaced as leader by Margaret Thatcher She appointed Maudling to the post of Shadow Foreign Secretary However Maudling clashed with Thatcher over economics and after less than two years in the role he was dismissed on 19 November 1976 Departing Maudling summed up his career as hired by Winston Churchill fired by Margaret Thatcher citation needed Last years editIn 1969 Maudling had been president of the Real Estate Fund of America whose chief executive Jerome Hoffman had been imprisoned for fraud Maudling had also been an adviser to the Peachey Property Corporation whose chairman Sir Eric Miller had embezzled company money and later took his own life He was revealed to have lobbied for more aid to Malta after obtaining a commission for Poulson there which had led to heavy losses for the Maltese government These further revelations led to a Parliamentary inquiry into the conduct of Maudling and two other MPs linked to Poulson This inquiry published its report on 14 July 1977 the report concluded that Maudling had indulged in conduct inconsistent with the standards which the House is entitled to expect from its members citation needed When the report was considered by the House of Commons the Conservative Party organised its MPs to attend the debate to Save Reggie An amendment was put down to take note of the report instead of endorsing it and carried by 230 votes 211 Conservatives 17 Labour 2 Liberals and 2 Ulster Unionists to 207 No punishment was imposed An attempt by backbench Labour MPs to expel Maudling from the House was defeated by 331 votes to 11 and a move to suspend him for six months was lost by 324 to 97 As Lewis Baston s 2004 biography recounts Maudling and his wife became heavy drinkers once his political career was effectively ended by the scandal The drinking turned to alcoholism and Maudling s health rapidly deteriorated in the late 1970s He collapsed in early 1979 citation needed Death editMaudling died at the Royal Free Hospital in London from kidney failure and cirrhosis of the liver on 14 February 1979 he was 61 His body was buried in the churchyard of Little Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire A stone seat from his garden was placed beside the grave Family life editMaudling married actress Beryl Laverick 1919 1988 in 1939 3 They had three sons and a daughter Caroline Maudling who became a journalist in the 1960s as the travelling teenager of the Daily Mail and among other things appeared alongside John Lennon on BBC TV s Juke Box Jury in 1963 30 Maudling s mother had disowned him as a result of his marriage and Maudling did not attend her funeral in 1956 31 When Caroline aroused comment by having a child out of wedlock in the late 1960s Maudling was staunch in her defence publicly expressing paternal pride 30 Beryl Maudling s body was buried next to her husband s at Little Berkhamsted 32 In popular culture editMaudling was portrayed by actor Michael Culkin in the BBC produced 2018 limited television series A Very English Scandal See also editList of deaths through alcoholReferences edit The Papers of Reginald Maudling Archived 29 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine Churchill Archives Centre Archivesearch Retrieved 29 October 2021 No 30501 The London Gazette 29 January 1918 p 1439 a b Levens R G C ed 1964 Merton College Register 1900 1964 Oxford Basil Blackwell p 267 Shepherd 2004 Baston Reggie Chapter 2 Baston Reggie Chapters 3 5 professional politician as opposed to gentleman amateur born to politics p 49 Maudling had 53 of the vote in a three party contest the Conservative lead was 10 534 out of 70 687 Beloff Nora 1963 The General Says No Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 78 80 Baston Reggie Chapter 6 8 Beloff N p 87 Baston Reggie Chapters 9 and 10 Edmund Dell The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 HarperCollins 1997 pp 283 303 covers his term as Chancellor April The Chancellor Reginald Maudling announces the Budget Archived 28 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Illingworth Exhibition Cartoons of the 1960s Contemporary cartoon of the budget announcement Retrieved 25 February 2008 Baston Chapter 16 Howard 1987 p 300 2 a b Howard 1987 p 316 21 Sandford 2005 pp 705 Baston Reggie chapters 11 13 Howard quoted from Maudling s autobiography Owen Paul 17 May 2010 Ex Treasury secretary Liam Byrne s note to his successor there s no money left The Guardian Retrieved 14 September 2023 Sunday Times Insight Team Ulster Penguin 1972 page 213 The politics of drinking in power Archived 10 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online 6 January 2006 Retrieved 25 February 2008 Warden John 22 July 1970 Maudling tipped as Chancellor The Glasgow Herald p 1 Mansbach Richard 1973 Northern Ireland Half a Century of Partition Facts on File Inc New York pg 123 ISBN 0 87196 182 2 Biographies of Prominent People M Archived 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine CAIN Web Service Retrieved 25 February 2008 1971 UK restricts Commonwealth migrants Archived 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online Retrieved 25 February 2008 Larsen Darl 2008 Monty Python s Flying Circus An Utterly Complete Thoroughly Unillustrated Absolutely Unauthorized Guide to Possibly All the References Scarecrow Press p 221 ISBN 978 1461669708 Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 13 February 2017 The Bitter Road from Bloody Sunday www time com Retrieved 25 February 2008 Siddique Haroon French Megan 15 June 2010 Bloody Sunday inquiry key findings The Guardian Archived from the original on 27 October 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Bernadette Devlin delivers a proletarian protest 31 01 1972 Archived from the original on 9 December 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2019 via YouTube Maiden speeches in short supply Archived 23 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Online 6 April 2001 Retrieved 25 February 2008 Horsnell Michael 2 February 1974 Mr Maudling slightly hurt by letter bomb The Times p 1 Retrieved 31 January 2014 a b Baston Chapter 13 Baston Chapter 2 Little Berkhamsted Hartford Hundred West Group of Parishes Archived from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Further reading editDell Edmund The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 HarperCollins 1997 pp 283 303 covers his term as Chancellor Lewis Baston 2004 Reggie The Life of Reginald Maudling Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 2924 3 Principal source where no other is specified Michael Gillard 1974 A little pot of money The story of Reginald Maudling and the Real Estate Fund of America Private Eye productions Andre Deutsch ISBN 0 233 96444 4 Michael Gillard 1980 Nothing to declare the political corruptions of John Poulson John Calder ISBN 0 7145 3625 3 Howard Anthony RAB The Life of R A Butler Jonathan Cape 1987 ISBN 978 0 224 01862 3 Reginald Maudling 1978 Memoirs Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 0 283 98446 5 Sandbrook Dominic 2005 Never Had It So Good London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 349 11530 6 Robert Shepherd 2004 Reginald Maudling in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Reginald Maudling Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Reginald Maudling BBC News On this Day includes a 1971 filmed interview on the Immigration Bill Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded byStephen Taylor Member of Parliamentfor Barnet1950 1974 Constituency abolished New constituency Member of Parliamentfor Chipping Barnet1974 1979 Succeeded bySydney Chapman Political offices Preceded byJohn Edwards Economic Secretary to the Treasury1952 1955 Succeeded byEdward Boyle Preceded bySelwyn Lloyd Minister of Supply1955 1957 Succeeded byAubrey Jones Preceded byWalter Monckton Paymaster General1957 1959 Succeeded byThe Lord Mills Preceded byDavid Eccles President of the Board of Trade1959 1961 Succeeded byFred Erroll Preceded byIain Macleod Secretary of State for the Colonies1961 1962 Succeeded byDuncan Sandys Preceded bySelwyn Lloyd Chancellor of the Exchequer1962 1964 Succeeded byJim Callaghan Preceded byJim Callaghan Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer1964 1965 Succeeded byTed Heath Preceded byRab Butler Shadow Foreign Secretary1965 Succeeded byChristopher Soames Deputy Leader of the Opposition1965 1970 Succeeded byRoy Jenkins Preceded byEnoch Powell Shadow Secretary of State for Defence1968 1969 Succeeded byGeoffrey Rippon Preceded byJim Callaghan Home Secretary1970 1972 Succeeded byRobert Carr Preceded byGeoffrey Rippon Shadow Foreign Secretary1975 1976 Succeeded byJohn Davies Party political offices New title Deputy Leader of the Conservative Party1965 1972 VacantTitle next held byThe Viscount Whitelaw Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reginald Maudling amp oldid 1220778972, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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