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Geoffrey Howe, former Conservative chancellor, dies aged 88 | Geoffrey Howe, former Conservative chancellor, dies aged 88 |
(35 minutes later) | |
Former Conservative chancellor Geoffrey Howe has died at the age of 88 after suffering a suspected heart attack, his family has announced. | |
Lord Howe, who served as chancellor for four years under Margaret Thatcher, died on Friday night. | Lord Howe, who served as chancellor for four years under Margaret Thatcher, died on Friday night. |
His resignation speech in 1990 is widely seen as a key factor in Baroness Thatcher's downfall as prime minister. | |
David Cameron led tributes to Lord Howe, saying: "The Conservative family has lost one of its greats." | David Cameron led tributes to Lord Howe, saying: "The Conservative family has lost one of its greats." |
The former MP for the East Surrey, Reigate and Bebington constituencies played a "vital" role in "turning the fortunes of our country around" as chancellor, the prime minister added. | |
Lord Howe's family said he had died at his home in Warwickshire after attending a jazz concert with his wife Elspeth. | |
Lord Geoffrey Howe: Obituary | Lord Geoffrey Howe: Obituary |
During his time as an MP, Lord Howe also served as foreign secretary, deputy prime minister and leader of the House of Commons and was Lady Thatcher's longest-serving cabinet minister. | |
But BBC political correspondent Robin Brant said his resignation as deputy prime minister - shortly after Mrs Thatcher declared that the UK would never join a single currency project - had been a "devastating blow" to her premiership. | |
In a famous speech to the Commons, he used a cricket metaphor to describe Mrs Thatcher's attitude to British negotiations in Europe. | |
"It is rather like sending your opening batsmen to the crease, only to find... that their bats have been broken before the game by the team captain," he said. | "It is rather like sending your opening batsmen to the crease, only to find... that their bats have been broken before the game by the team captain," he said. |
'Quiet hero' | 'Quiet hero' |
She later said he had become a "source of division and a focus of resentment". | |
Denis Healey, who himself served as Labour chancellor, joked that being attacked by Howe was like being "savaged by a dead sheep". | |
Mr Cameron described Lord Howe - who retired from the Lords in May - as "the quiet hero of the first Thatcher government". | |
"Geoffrey Howe was a kind, gentle and deeply thoughtful man - but at the same time he had huge courage and resolve," the prime minister said. | "Geoffrey Howe was a kind, gentle and deeply thoughtful man - but at the same time he had huge courage and resolve," the prime minister said. |
He added: "He loved his politics and never stopped giving strong and sound advice. George Osborne and I benefited greatly from his wisdom and determination to improve the state of the country." | |
Mr Osborne tweeted: "I will miss Geoffrey Howe. He was a great source of advice to me; a quietly-spoken radical, whose bitterly contested budgets rescued Britain." | |
Lord Lamont, another former Conservative chancellor, said he was "deeply saddened" by Lord Howe's death. | |
"He was a Tory with a social conscience, who wanted opportunity for all. He was also a great friend and mentor to me for over 50 years," he said. | |
Former Deputy Prime Minister Lord Heseltine said Lord Howe had been a "political rock". | |
"He carried huge personal strain for the success of that government," Lord Heseltine added. "They were very controversial times, controversial policies but Geoffrey was unbending and unyielding but he was a very kind, courteous and gentle man." | |
Tory MP Kenneth Clarke said: "He had very strong views about how best to serve the national interest - that's what he saw himself as doing, and having thought through his views with a very good, clear intellect he then stuck to them and succeeded in delivering them." | |
Welsh Secretary Stephen Crabb said Lord Howe - who was born in Port Talbot - had been a "towering" political figure who always had a great affection for Wales. | |
A statement from Lord Howe's family said a private family funeral, followed by a memorial service, would take place in due course. |