It’s not easy being
Charles Clarke. When he started in politics a heavyweight
bruiser was a fine thing to be and the Labour party his
natural home. It was a club where ungainly but clever members
found a warm welcome, where a beer belly was no disadvantage.
Alas, it is no longer a hiding place for the hefty and
bearded, though 51-year-old Clarke has kept his neat whiskers
while those around him have strategically shaved theirs.
As a backroom boy, Neil Kinnock’s chief of staff or even an
education minister, his image didn’t much matter — indeed it
added to the impression of a fearsome troubleshooter. But as a
member of the smartest cabinet since Chippendale, the chairman
is not quite in the image of his maker.
And now it seems that the knives are out. Last week he had
just returned from the TUC conference in Blackpool, a foray
into enemy territory if we are to believe the gossip.
In theory, a man with his no-frills style ought to be a
splendid negotiator with unreconstituted union lads nostalgic
for ballots, beery intrigue and deals brokered on the back of
fag packets. But he has never been a lefty, or a faux-prole;
even as a Cambridge student and National Union of Students’
president he was a moderate Tribunite; he has always been
associated with the modernising project, if not its sharp
tailoring.
Now, with strikes threatened and funding scrutinised, the
unions are his big problem. They feel ignored, I suggest, they
stump up to get the party elected and get no favours. “They
may feel ignored, but they are not justified in feeling it,”
he replies. With cheeky aplomb he puts the unrest down to
higher employment under Labour and a corresponding increase in
union membership; and to Labour’s fearless reform of public
services, which demands that people change and therefore
annoys them.
But shouldn’t he be providing aspirin for the migraine
Derek Simpson of the Amicus union has threatened to give the
government, rather than scoring points? In the same job Tony
Blair would be at least pretending to feel their pain.
As party chairman since the last election, Clarke is
charged with a raft of responsibilities (funding reform,
election spokesman, party revitalisation) that depend largely
on good relations with sometimes alienated supporters. In
essence it is a public relations portfolio, and one wonders if
he is temperamentally suited to it.
“Keeping people as friends is not the important thing,” he
says of his relationship with union leaders. So Labour and the
unions no longer need to be friends? “You can have a working
relationship without being friends.”
This attitude might explain the whispering campaign. For
the past few weeks anti-Clarke stories have appeared, best of
which is a claim that he barged into a private dinner at Pizza
Express, denounced John Prescott and Gordon Brown to their
parliamentary private secretaries, and scoffed two pizzas.
I expected him to shrug off this monstrous slur, but the
element of truth means he can’t; besides it was not the
accusation of disloyalty that needled him but the hint of poor
table manners. “I can never recall ordering two pizzas. I
might eat one, and then feel like eating another. But to order
two would seem a basic discourtesy, like claiming one knew
that one wouldn’t be enough.”
Did he say Prescott was useless? “I really can’t recall.”
Is he of that opinion now? “Not really.” Not really?
And that Gordon would never lead the party? “I don’t remember
. . . All that was over two years ago so it’s extraordinary it
has been recycled now.”
Doesn’t it mean someone is out to get him? “I don’t think
it’s a Prescott-Brown plot, it’s not how they operate. There
are people who are cross with things I’ve done or said but I
don’t think the unions dislike me. Besides, a paranoid
politician is one who can’t get things done, so I intend to
remain confident and optimistic.”
He is bolstered by his wife Carol and sons aged 12 and 15
whom he tries never to mention in public. The son of Sir
Richard “Otto” Clarke, a Whitehall permanent secretary, he
attended the private Highgate school, London, and read
mathematics and economics at Cambridge. Affluent, intellectual
and well-connected, then. Yes, but upwardly mobile, he quickly
adds: his mother was the first person to go to university
“from her valley”.
How does he define his class? “All politicians are upper
middle-class, well-paid people. John Prescott is. Didn’t he
have a row with his father about it? We’re all middle class.”
He denies that a caucus of disaffected lefty MPs ever
attempted to propose him as deputy prime minister or that he
wants the top job. To illustrate his lack of ambition, he says
that having tried for a seat in 1983 he ignored other chances
because his work in Kinnock’s office was more important for
the cause. Believe me, if he had a shot at the big time, he’d
grab it.
We are talking in his party’s new Westminster headquarters
where his office is on the top floor. The lift is out of
action, but since he arrives without a wheeze he must be
fitter than he looks. He is one of only two cabinet members to
have dispensed with the ministerial car.
He has never been advised to shed stones for presentational
enhancement but has often tried for the sake of his health,
and is oddly sensitive about his weight, murmuring that I
might be “polite enough not to mention it”. No chance: the
unmistakable silhouette of the Westminster operator, rotund,
powerful, with the sort of unruly ears for which schoolboys
get tormented, is very much the point.
He denies that he is abrasive, rough-tongued or a big
boozer — three units a day he promises, ho-hum. “If I am, it
comes from impatience. I’m a politician, I live in a political
world, I have to be concerned with what is politically
achievable as opposed to what is desired. But we all have our
weaknesses.” Even the boss, he seems to imply. “There is no
perfect person to lead us, there are right people for
different times, that’s all.”
One can’t help contrasting this with his roaring enthusiasm
for the prime minister Kinnock would have made. “Absolutely
outstanding. He had the passion, purpose, decisiveness and
courage without which the party would have fallen apart after
’79 and ’83. But Tony speaks for middle England in the way a
Celtic politician never can.”
Clarke has been about as abrasive as treacle sponge but he
can infuriate without even knowing it. When he talks, the
mouth moves at a sprint, producing an effortless flow of
reasonable-sounding sentences that defy interruption, but you
feel the brain might be engaged somewhere more interesting,
that there is nothing you could ask or observe that he
couldn’t deal with in his sleep.
At the end, he announces that this had been a “relatively
routine” interview — clearly pleased I have been efficiently
dispatched — for which I could have cheerfully choked him with
a quattro stagione or two. If that is the party
conciliator’s idea of a charming adieu, don’t hold your breath
for happy families.