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- <text id=90TT3208>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Faces Of The Future
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 64
- COVER STORIES
- Faces of the Future
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Julian Critchey, a Tory M.P., is fond of telling about the
- night he dined with fellow classmate Michael Heseltine at Oxford
- in 1952. Scribbling on the back of an envelope, Heseltine listed
- his ambitions for the second half of the 20th century. Under the
- 1990s he wrote, "No. 10."
- </p>
- <p> Born into a middle-class Welsh family, Heseltine studied
- accounting after Oxford and then went into property development
- and publishing, amassing a fortune worth more than 50 million
- (pounds). Elected to Parliament in 1966, he held various
- non-Cabinet posts under Edward Heath. When Margaret Thatcher
- came to power in 1979, she appointed Heseltine Environment
- Minister, and four years later moved him to Defense. A
- reputation for impetuosity has followed him since an episode in
- the Commons in 1976 when, irate over a demonstration staged by
- Labour M.P.s, he seized the ceremonial mace and brandished it
- over his head. Heseltine's sense of judgment was called into
- question again in 1986 when, after a bitter argument with
- Thatcher over the bailout of the privately owned Westland
- helicopter company--she favored an American, he a European
- partner--Heseltine stalked out of a Cabinet meeting and
- announced his resignation. An able orator and administrator,
- Heseltine, 57, has spent the past four years campaigning quietly
- but persistently against Thatcher, waiting for the right moment
- to achieve his Oxford goal.
- </p>
- <p> In his 1972 thriller Truth Game, one of seven he has
- written in his spare time, Douglas Hurd described a British
- Prime Minister whose Cabinet waffles over a decision to send
- troops to a distant island republic. But the Foreign Secretary's
- firm response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait has united Britain
- behind the government's policies and won him high praise from
- fellow Tories.
- </p>
- <p> The patrician Hurd is the son and grandson of Tory M.P.s.
- After graduating from Cambridge, he joined the diplomatic
- service and served in Beijing, Washington and Rome. Eager to
- break into politics, he joined the Conservative Party's research
- department in 1966, and two years later became Heath's private
- secretary. In 1974 Hurd was elected M.P. for mid-Oxfordshire.
- Under Thatcher he served as Deputy Foreign Secretary, Secretary
- of State for Northern Ireland and Home Secretary. Last year,
- despite Hurd's advocacy of closer ties with Europe, Thatcher
- appointed him to the job he had always wanted, Foreign
- Secretary.
- </p>
- <p> If Margaret Thatcher had a political son, he would be John
- Major, 47, who has been on the fast track ever since she made
- him Foreign Secretary in July 1989 and, the following October,
- Chancellor of the Exchequer. Though he has had relatively little
- Cabinet experience, Major is gunning for the premiership with
- the apparent blessing of his mentor.
- </p>
- <p> Like Thatcher, he rose to the upper political echelons from
- humble beginnings. The son of a circus trapeze artist and
- onetime mercenary in Brazil, Major grew up in a two-room
- apartment in the poor London suburb of Brixton and left school
- at 16 to help support his parents. He drifted for a while before
- starting what turned out to be a successful career in banking.
- During that period, he worked as a laborer and even spent some
- time on the dole. Major later went to Nigeria to do community
- work; there he confirmed his deep hatred of racism. Following
- two failed attempts to reach Parliament, Major was elected in
- 1979 to represent Huntingdon. He is said to have first caught
- Thatcher's eye when he engaged her in a blazing dinner debate
- on economic policy. As Chief Secretary to the Treasury from 1987
- to July 1989, Major gained a reputation for his quick grasp of
- complex issues and steady nerves. Later as Chancellor he
- combined with Douglas Hurd to persuade Thatcher to take Britain
- into the E.C.'s Exchange Rate Mechanism, an achievement of
- considerable political agility.
- </p>
- <p>By Guy D. Garcia. Reported by Anne Constable and Helen Gibson/
- London.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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