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'Mrs Thatcher asked if I was Jewish'

Interview: Malcolm Rifkind

July 21, 2016 11:09
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ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

5 min read

On the morning of July 5 1995, Malcolm Rifkind sat behind the foreign secretary's desk for the first time. As he admired the way the light fell from the tall windows overlooking Horse Guards and St James' Park, Britain's first Jewish foreign secretary since Rufus Isaacs's two-month tenure six decades previously, felt as if he had come home.

The sense of "deep and tranquil satisfaction," which Rifkind relates in his newly published memoirs, Power and Pragmatism, was probably not shared by Boris Johnson when he arrived at King Charles Street last week. Neither "deep" nor "tranquil" are adjectives often applied to Britain's new foreign secretary. Beyond their liberal Tory instincts, it is difficult to think of two politicians whose public personas are less alike. When, for instance, Rifkind committed a rare public gaffe as foreign secretary over the then-contentious issue of Britain's entry into the European single currency, his predecessor and former boss, Geoffrey Howe, refused to accept it as such. Rifkind was so careful with words and clear in thought, Howe suggested to journalists, that he must have intended to say precisely the words he had uttered.

The one cloud on his reputation was the Daily Telegraph and Channel 4 sting, accusing him of accepting money for lobbying, resulting in the Tory whip being withdrawn. Today, Rifkind refuses to condemn the party for the way it treated him. "There was nothing personal about it," Rifkind argues, "they had a general election coming up and they just wanted to have the issue closed." He was later exonerated.

Rifkind's memoirs - which went to press after Johnson had withdrawn from the Conservative party leadership race but before Theresa May sent him to the Foreign Office - do not disguise his doubts about the new foreign secretary. Johnson, he accepts, is "ferociously intelligent, extremely well read and entirely civilised". A "serious question mark", however, hangs over his judgment. "Many people would not, at present," he writes, "be comfortable with Boris as Chancellor of the Exchequer, or Foreign Secretary, or with his finger on the button of our Trident nuclear missiles".