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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-535263,00.html

January 07, 2003

Bill Clinton heads Oxford's wishlist for new Chancellor
By Tony Halpin, Education Editor


BILL CLINTON, who has made no secret of his love for Oxford
and whose daughter is a student there, may be asked to stand for Chancellor of the
university to succeed Lord Jenkins of Hillhead.

The prospect of a Clinton candidacy was greeted enthusiastically yesterday by Professor
Alan Ryan, Warden of New College, who is on a sabbatical year at Stanford University in
California.

He said: “I would love to see Bill Clinton nominated. It would be tremendously good 
fun and
extremely useful if Oxford was going into the fundraising business in a serious 
fashion. I am
sure somebody will put him up.”

The death of Lord Jenkins on Sunday leaves vacant the chancellorship for only the 
fourth
time in 70 years. Sixty-thousand Oxford graduates will vote for his successor. With 
just 50
graduate supporters required for any nomination, the way is open for Britain’s most
intriguing intellectual election campaign this year. The ballot is expected to be held 
in March.

The chancellorship is a lifetime position, elected by members of Convocation. For the 
first
time, the electorate will all be graduates of the university and not just those whose 
degrees
have been converted into an MA after seven years.

The only catch is they have to vote in person at the university. A record 8,300 turned 
out in
March 1987, when Lord Jenkins gained 3,249 votes to beat Sir Edward Heath and Lord
Blake to the post.

The post of titular head of Britain’s oldest university has usually gone in recent 
times to a
heavyweight public figure with strong political connections. In the present financially
conscious era, an ability to pull in big donors is an added attraction.

It traditionally offers elder statesmen — there has not yet been a woman — the 
opportunity
of a prominent position of influence from which to pronounce on anything they like.

Debate about possible contenders will be intense in common rooms across the city,
although names are unlikely to emerge until at least the start of the new term on 
January 19.
Conceivably, Tony Blair could stand, as Harold Macmillan did when he was Prime 
Minister in
1960. The required 50 backers could be gathered from within the corridors of 10 Downing
Street, but a candidacy is thought unlikely.

Mr Clinton is a more realistic prospect, however. If he indicates that he would like 
the post he
would be a hot favourite among younger graduates and dons dazzled by his star appeal.
The former US President, 56, has said that he spent two of the happiest years of his 
life
while a Rhodes scholar at University College.

Lord Jenkins even joked with Mr Clinton during the latter’s visit to the university in 
May 2001
that he was welcome in any capacity provided he did not have premature ambitions 
towards
the chancellorship.

An Oxford University spokesman said that there were no restrictions against a Clinton
candidacy. But he added: “The only thing that might be a barrier would be the need to 
be in
the country for significant amounts of time. That might interfere with his lecture 
tours.”

Discussion at Balliol College could centre on support for the candidacy of Chris 
Patten, a
Balliol man and the European Union’s External Affairs Commissioner.

Balliol could be hoping for an academic hat-trick as the alma mater of the two previous
Chancellors, Lord Jenkins and Macmillan. Mr Patten, 59 this year, is widely viewed as 
Mr
Blair’s favourite Tory and has both the political connections and international 
profile that
Oxford will be seeking.

He may also have had enough of life in the Brussels bureaucracy. He once calculated 
during
a particularly dreary Euro meeting that he had another 175,200 hours to live if he 
survived
20 more years, and intended to put them to better use.

Baroness Williams of Crosby, 72, could be a strong contender as Oxford’s first woman
Chancellor. The former Labour Education Secretary and Lord Jenkins’s fellow “gang of 
four”
founder of the SDP, is a graduate of Somerville. She has an impressive academic 
pedigree
to match her political career, most recently as Professor of Elective Politics at 
Harvard
University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Supporters of Lord Heseltine, a former President of the Oxford Union, may seek to 
secure
his consent to a nomination. But the former Deputy Prime Minister, who has not 
concealed
his despair at the present state of the Conservative Party, may prefer to retain the 
freedom to
campaign for British entry to the euro should Mr Blair call a referendum later this 
year.

An outside contender could be Lord Birt of Liverpool, the former BBC Director-General 
John
Birt, given Oxford’s extensive diaspora of media graduates.

But Mr Blair’s personal “strategy adviser” may feel that he has all the influence he 
needs
without submitting to the risky business of an election by Oxford graduates.

The chancellorship is a largely ceremonial role, although the office-holder is 
expected to
attend major functions and important visits. He also officiates at the annual honorary 
degree
ceremony each June and represents Oxford to the wider world. Candidates must be
nominated at least 17 days before the vote.

Nominations can be made by any member of Convocation, supported by 50 other
graduates, and must be accompanied by a written statement of consent from the 
candidate.
A<:>E<:>R
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