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Thatcher 'resisted' chancellor's new kitchen plea | Thatcher 'resisted' chancellor's new kitchen plea |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Margaret Thatcher was reluctant to allow her first Chancellor Sir Geoffrey Howe to spend £4,150 on a new kitchen, newly released papers show. | |
The papers from 1979 show Edna Healey, wife of Sir Geoffrey's predecessor, warned of the "antediluvian" room at 11 Downing Street. | |
Three calls were made to "nag" Mrs Thatcher to approve the refurbishment. | Three calls were made to "nag" Mrs Thatcher to approve the refurbishment. |
Replies from a private secretary suggest the PM may have been reluctant to become involved amid spending cuts. | Replies from a private secretary suggest the PM may have been reluctant to become involved amid spending cuts. |
The exchanges are revealed in the late chancellor's secret papers in the National Archives from 1979-83. | |
They show his predecessor Denis Healey was the first person to contact Sir Geoffrey after he was appointed following the Conservative landslide general election win. | |
But the new chancellor was said to be even more surprised to hear Mr Healey was passing on a message from his wife, Edna, to Sir Geoffrey's wife, Elspeth, warning her not to move into the flat at No 11 unless the kitchen was updated. | |
'Chancellor's discretion' | 'Chancellor's discretion' |
An estimate for the work was submitted but it took three calls by Treasury officials over a three-month period to elicit a reply from Mrs Thatcher's staff. | |
In his reply, one of Mrs Thatcher's private secretaries, Colin Paterson, wrote: "I am very sorry that this has been so long outstanding. I was under the impression that the prime minister had had a word with the chancellor. | In his reply, one of Mrs Thatcher's private secretaries, Colin Paterson, wrote: "I am very sorry that this has been so long outstanding. I was under the impression that the prime minister had had a word with the chancellor. |
"If not, I am sure that she would wish to leave this to the chancellor's discretion, keeping in mind how sensitive expenditure of this kind can be." | "If not, I am sure that she would wish to leave this to the chancellor's discretion, keeping in mind how sensitive expenditure of this kind can be." |
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Another document in the National Archives outlines radical plans to end universal free healthcare. | Another document in the National Archives outlines radical plans to end universal free healthcare. |
The document stamped "secret" was called, in keeping with films and books of that era, "The Omega Project". | The document stamped "secret" was called, in keeping with films and books of that era, "The Omega Project". |
Civil servants noted that "for the majority it would represent the abolition of the NHS". | Civil servants noted that "for the majority it would represent the abolition of the NHS". |
But in spite of what was described as the nearest thing to a Cabinet riot in the history of the Thatcher administration, the prime minister secretly pressed ahead with the plans - later backing down. |