Michael Heseltine: ‘Signing article
50 is the worst decision we’ve made’
Lord Michael Heseltine, 84, the
senior politician and businessman, reflects on what he owes his dyslexia, his
fears over Brexit and why he has no plans to retire
Tim Adams
Saturday 29 April 2017 14.00 BST Last modified on Saturday
29 April 2017 15.02 BST
At my age there is no such thing as a good winter. There is
a wonderful day in mid-March when you feel the sun on your back for the first
time, and it straightens you.
I was no good at games and the only time I came top of the
form was when my parents offered to buy me a new bike if I did so. I found an
outlet for my energy by going to the local post office, buying as much lemonade
as I could carry, and selling to the hearties by the glass what I’d bought by
the bottle.
There have been two moments in my life when I have witnessed
real history. First, my parents happened to have booked us into a hotel on
Piccadilly Circus on VJ night. And then, by chance, I was in Berlin the day the
Russians closed the Wall. I think we are at one of those moments again. I think
[signing Article 50] is the worst decision we’ve made since the war.
I am appalled by people who pretend to regret the decline in
standards of public life and only exacerbate them. The bigotry of the editor of
the Daily Mail, coupled with that of Nigel Farage, have been among the most
potent driving forces of this tragedy.
People were looking for a scapegoat and Europe was the
convenient candidate
The garden has been my therapy. No matter what has happened
in my political life I can be potting out some seedlings and it is all
forgotten. I think you can link my work in creating the garden to the work I
did in urban deprivation. Both are about changing perspective, introducing new
visuals, getting rid of mess.
Good news occasionally comes around the corner for
everybody. It is up to you to be prepared for it and grab it.
I am worried when people want to use me as a role model for
dyslexia. My problem is that I see it mostly as a help. It taught me to short
circuit procedures which were time consuming.
I was ambitious. But you aren’t interested in power for its
own sake, only for what it will allow you to do. Power allows you to
contribute.
I had only been in parliament a year when I voted twice
against my party on race issues. The feeling that Enoch Powell’s speech evoked
was far more divisive than anything in Britain since.
I think you can link our work in creating the garden to the
work I did in urban deprivation. Both are about changing perspective,
introducing new visuals, getting rid of mess.
Wales is still where my heart beats fastest, the land of my
fathers. I am very proud to be patron of the Morriston Orpheus choir.
Life has pretty much gone to plan. Looking back, I don’t
think I could have asked for any more.
I was devoted to my father, but I don’t think his premature
death changed me. I had already been president of the Oxford Union, and started
my own business. The die was cast.
Referenda seldom reflect the issue under discussion. This
one was no exception. People didn’t like eight years of frozen living standards
and they were anxious about immigration. They were looking for a scapegoat and
Europe was the convenient candidate.
You have only one choice when things aren’t going well: find
a way to pay the bills.
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