The Trusty Servant Nov 2018 No. 126 | Page 13

N o .126 T he T rusty S ervant The Winchester College Parliamentary Dinner Charles Stewart- Smith (G, 74-79) reports: The place of its genesis tells how long ago it was. In the final stages of a dinner following the annual awards ceremony for the British Video Association, I was seated next to John Whittingdale (A, 73-77). He had been a Furleyite while I was a Philite, though we had not known each other at school. We were talking of Win Coll when John said to me, ‘Do you know I’m the only Wykehamist in the House of Commons?’ This rather took me aback. I had always thought we had an honourable tradition of parliamentarians. My own father was an MP when I went to school, and I can remember hearing of his defeat in 1974 on a clandestine radio in my dorm. During the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet was driven by a triumvirate of OWs: Willie Whitelaw, Geoffrey Howe and George Younger (with John as her Political Secretary in the later years); and, of course, there is a much-vaunted tradition of Winchester equipping the intellectual Left: Sir Stafford Cripps, Hugh Gaitskell and Dick Crossman. I agreed with John there and then that I would organise and pay for an annual dinner to encourage an interest in politics for the boys at the college, and so the Winchester College Parliamentary Dinner was born, or rather, re-born, as there had been one before in the 1980s heyday, but it had fallen into abeyance. It had been quite a starchy affair with formal speeches by the Aulae Prae and Headmaster. John and I wanted something more engaging, more reflective of the knockabout debate that is the joy of political discourse. We wanted the boys to be the drivers of discussion, not the victims of it. There were usually seven or so boys from school, an organising don and sometimes the Headmaster – Tommy Cookson was an early attendee. From our end, because John was the only MP, we initially had to be fairly generous in our qualification for being a Win Coll-connected political figure. Of course, the Lords gave us rich pickings – not least Geoffrey Howe who continued to show his immense intellect and extraordinary memory for detail, but also George Younger’s son, James, and David Montgomery, telling of what it was like to be at school during World War II when your father was the nation’s favourite military leader. Also Nigel Lawson, whose son Tom was Furley’s housemaster and for many years the organising don. At one memorable dinner, Geoffrey and Nigel locked horns with Francis Maude, then a shadow chancellor with a son at the school. The local MP for Winchester often came, with the current incumbent, Steve Brine, being a particular stalwart. We also stepped into the world of the Civil Service and media. So Michael Jay, former Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office, and a good smattering of journalists: OWs such as Edward Lucas, then of The Economist, and James Forsyth, Political Editor of The Spectator; or those who had had sons at school, such as Peter Oborne or my old colleague, ITN’s Alastair Stewart. Over time the debate has evolved noticeably. It started in the Blair years and often in the early days caused the older statesmen around the table to reflect how much less combative politics was compared to when they had entered the House of Commons. Then there were the big debates over the power of unions, privatisation and the enormity of the communist threat and the Cold War. Now, they reflected, people tended to disagree on little things. And so we probably spent more time talking about what a career in politics 13 might look like and whether it was desirable. We were not trying to turn them into politicians, but it would have been a nice outcome if some had. On the whole, the advice to the boys was that it was a good way of providing public service, that being a constituency MP could be very satisfying, but the common recommendation was to go and do something else first to get a taste of the real world before stepping onto the political ladder. However, two occupations were generally discouraged as preparation for political life: being an army officer, or an entrepreneur. Both gave you far too much ability to get your own way; politics is about nothing if not constant compromise. But the financial crisis of 2008, Brexit, the rise of Corbyn and Trump have inevitably spiced the debate up a bit. The boys have generally been fairly free- market Tories, almost entirely remainers – but with, as one would hope, a few individuals who have challenged that consensus view. But all debate has been entered into in a spirit expressed by one Aulae Prae: ‘These issues are some of the most complex in the world and we as Wykehamists should relish the chance to tackle such intellectual challenges.’ After about ten years, the Lords thought they better catch up and instituted their own biannual dinner – a bit more like the more formal ones of before. More speeches, and definitely including the Headmaster. Ralph Townsend delighted his audience with the observation that evidence of the need for more Wykehamical thinking in politics could be found in the Life and Death of Rochester Sneath by Humphrey Berkeley. These were a series of letters, written by the fictional Rochester Sneath pretending to be the Headmaster of Selhurst School, to the great and the good asking for particular