-Caveat Lector-

http://www.spectator.co.uk/article.php3?table=old&section=current&issue=2002-12-
28&id=2624

COVER STORY
 The secret of Churchill�s gold
He may have been the greatest ever Briton, but his financial dealings would never
have survived the scrutiny of today�s sleaze-obsessed media, says Andrew Roberts

Never in the course of parliamentary history has the personal honour of MPs been
more widely doubted and discounted than it is today. Last week the Speaker of the
House of Commons announced that, from 2004, not just the Register of Members�
Interests but even their expenses claims will be made available to public scrutiny.
Will it ultimately work in the public�s favour to subject our politicians to ever more
rigorous audits of their financial affairs?

It is not just MPs who are being investigated � always with the automatic
assumption of guilt until innocence is proven � by ever-nosier public bodies. Our
very parish councillors, whose work is largely unremunerated, have been asked to
declare any �interests�, and to register gifts of more than �25 in value. The new rules
insisting that peers also announce publicly all their business interests and activities
have led Lord Cranborne, for one, to give up active participation in the House of
Lords.

Are we really happy to go down the American route, by which the Bush
administration was forced to forgo employing so experienced a public servant as
Henry Kissinger in its 11 September inquiry because of an insistence on the public
disclosure of all his business activities and clients? And where are the MPs of the
intellectual calibre of Enoch Powell, who resolutely refused to fill in his Register of
Members� Interests, and who successfully dared Parliament to penalise him for it?

It seems that all sense of proportion has deserted our public authorities � primarily
the Commons Fees Office and the Committee of Standards and Privileges � when it
comes to demanding disclosures supposedly for suppressing �sleaze�. I suspect that
financial sleaze in politics committed by individual MPs, as opposed to the
generalised kind committed by government, such as in the Ecclestone affair, is so
rare as not to justify the present massive over-reaction that is putting off talented,
public-spirited people from engaging in political life. It is bad enough that Robin
Cook�s reforms of the Commons timetable will deter businessmen and others who
have outside experience; now the Fees Office seems poised to make matters worse.
Since the victims of these ritual smellings-out are overwhelmingly Tories, it is hard 
to
believe that this is not deliberate.

Yet historically there has been � at least until the Major ministry of 1990�97 �
comparatively little financial sleaze in British public life. Bob Boothby had to resign
from the Ministry of Food in January 1941 over the Czech assets affair; Reginald
Maudling went in July 1972 over pay-offs from John Poulson; Lord Brayley and John
Stonehouse were involved in financial scandals. Following Michael Mates�s
resignation over his connection with Asil Nadir in September 1992 there was a spate
of scandals, but none of these would have come to light more quickly as a result of
public knowledge of MPs� expenses claims.

Insisting on knowing what Charles Kennedy does with his fee for appearing on Have
I Got News For You (he announced that he would give it to charity; whether out of
genuine altruism or from a craven desire to suck up to the media, I leave it to you to
decide) does not advance the democratic process an inch. Yet if good people are put
off entering Parliament because of the way that chippy media inquisitors insist on
knowing the age of the malt whisky that was given by the Licensed Victuallers�
Association to an MP who addressed their annual dinner � then British public life will
have suffered a serious blow. For centuries it was expected that an MP should
�declare an interest� if he had a financial one, at some stage towards the beginning of
his speech. It is still the best system for maintaining trust in the integrity of our
politicians.

When Michael Trend, Conservative MP for Windsor, got into trouble last week over
his expenses, no one thought him corrupt. Instead they saw how mired he had
become in a system that he failed to comprehend: one that virtually forces everyone
to leap through its hoops. In fact, the real sadness is not that Trend and other 
(mainly
Labour) MPs have been caught out. It is that these various sources of state funding
exist at all. This system assumes that anyone receiving money from any source
other than the taxpayer is somehow suspect. It derives from the sociological
assumption that merely to receive an income, from whatever source, renders one a
spokesman for that particular interest. Renaissance men, capable of speaking
honestly in a disinterested way about issues, are unknown to this theory, as a glance
at the Marxist assumptions of too many university history departments will illustrate.

Yet Renaissance men are what our politicians sometimes are and always should be.
We do not think of those MPs who were contacted by the undercover Sunday Times
team and who refused to accept cash for questions, yet they hugely outnumbered
the two hapless Tories who agreed to do it. (Nor, by the way, was anyone
significantly worse off because those questions were posed and answered.)

If the present ludicrously stringent parliamentary rules had been in place in the first
half of the last century, there can be little doubt that the man recently voted our
Greatest Briton, Winston Churchill, would never have become prime minister. If the
press�s present vicious and unforgiving attitude towards politicians receiving income
from unusual and extraneous sources pertained in the 1920s and 1930s, Churchill
would have been hounded from office long before he had his chance to save
civilisation. Let us leave on one side his astonishing earnings from journalism,
though it is interesting to contemplate the reaction of modern Fleet Street to a
politician who earned the equivalent of �7,000 per piece � which was what the
Sunday Pictorial paid him for four articles in 1916, a rate that had risen to the
equivalent of �12,000 per piece by the 1930s.

Consider those sleaze allegations that would have dogged Churchill if he had been
forced to admit the truth about his financial affairs in his Register of Members�
Interests form (which in fact only came into operation in 1975, ten years after his
death). He would have had to admit that in March 1938, a week before his �18,000
debts to his stockbrokers Vickers da Costa were about to force him to sell his
country house, Chartwell, for �20,000, an Anglo-South African businessman called
Sir Henry Strakosch, the chairman of Union Corporation Ltd, had taken on his debts
and guaranteed all his investments against further losses for the next three years.

The Moravian-born Strakosch�s cheque to Vickers of �18,162/1/ 10 � about
�450,000 in today�s money � would have taken some explaining to the Committee
on Standards and Privileges, along with his letter (quoted in Churchill�s official
biography by Sir Martin Gilbert) saying, �My dear Winston, As agreed between us I
shall carry this position for three years, you giving me full discretion to sell or 
vary the
holdings at any time, but on the understanding that you incur no further liability.� On
receipt of the letter, Churchill promptly took Chartwell off the market, even though 
the
Times had already announced it was up for sale.

Although, today, only ex-historians of the extremist kind, like David Irving, claim 
that
because Strakosch was Jewish, Churchill was the �hired help� of the anti-Nazi lobby,
one can only guess what today�s press would make of the Strakosch deal. Imagine
their reaction if it were discovered that Tony Blair was having his stock-market losses
�carried� in such a way by such a person.

Even Blair�s worst enemies cannot argue that Cheriegate showed that the Prime
Minister was manipulating the Bristol property market in such a way as to increase
the value of his wife�s new investment. But on 14 August 1923, Churchill � then out
of office but working hard for certain oil interests � attempted to sound out the prime
minister, Stanley Baldwin, with an agenda that his biographer, Roy Jenkins,
describes as �half-hidden�. It is one that, today, would certainly be emblazoned
across the front page of the Sunday Times with a �Cash for Access�-style headline.

For a fee of �5,000 � worth �125,000 today and equivalent to the annual salary of a
Cabinet minister � Churchill was hired by Royal Dutch Shell and Burmah Oil to
sound out Baldwin about a merger between them and the Anglo-Persian Oil
Company, in which the British government owned a majority of the voting shares. In
a twist that would have had present-day hacks salivating, it was Churchill himself
who, ten years earlier as First Lord of the Admiralty, had suggested that the
government go into the Persian oil business, as a way of protecting naval oil supplies
during the great change from coal-fired ships to oil.

That Churchill knew he was doing something at least slightly outr� was confirmed by
the fact that, as he told his wife Clementine afterwards, �I entered Downing Street by
the Treasury entrance to avoid comment.� He had already asked a senior civil
servant, Sir James Masterton-Smith, about the propriety of what he was doing, and
was urged to fight �very shy of it on large political grounds�. But Churchill was 
short of
money and went ahead, later reporting to his wife, �My interview with the PM was
most agreeable. I found him thoroughly in favour of the Oil Settlement on the lines
proposed. Indeed he might have been Waley-Cohen [Shell�s managing director Sir
Robert] from the way he talked. I am sure it will come off. The only thing I am puzzled
about is my own affair.�

As well he might have been, despite Baldwin helpfully putting him on to both the First
Lord of the Admiralty and the President of the Board of Trade to discuss the merger
further. The �Cash for Access� implications of hiring the former decision-making
minister to sound out the prime minister and, through him, the other two senior
ministerial decision-makers over a huge oil-company merger deal involving
taxpayers� assets were obvious even to sensibilities in the 1920s, let alone to those
of our own �sleaze�- obsessed age.

If either the Strakosch or Shell Oil stories had been picked over in detail in the way
that present-day politicians� business affairs are, Churchill�s career would have
ended before the second world war, with unforeseeable but surely appalling
implications for British and world history. Nor would his financial arrangements with
men such as Sir Ernest Cassel, Bernard Baruch and Charles Schwab probably have
borne the kind of microscopic scrutiny that the modern press and parliamentary
watchdogs seek to impose under our present climate of sleaze-hysteria. If we�d had
these over-strict rules then, we�d probably all be speaking German today.

The argument that we are only subjecting politicians to such inquisitions because
they are elected is wrecked by the extension of the Register of Interests to peers. Yet
if any people in positions of power are to have such transparency forced upon them,
what about making public the exact sources of income � to the nearest �25 �of
newspaper editors and proprietors, radio and television executives, businessmen,
judges, soldiers? It must logically be the next step in a society in which no one 
trusts
anyone.

If we are to try to re-establish trust in our institutions, as Charles Moore rightly 
argued
in this space recently that we should, Parliament is the right place to start. If we
assume that politicians are honourable, then honourable people will become
politicians.

Andrew Roberts�s new book, Hitler and Churchill: Secrets of Leadership, is published
next month.

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