Julian Critchley

Julian Critchley

Sir Julian Michael Gordon Critchley (8 December 1930 – 9 September 2000) was a British Conservative politician.

The son of a distinguished neurosurgeon, as a boy Critchley was brought up in Swiss Cottage, north London, and Shropshire, where he attended preparatory school, and later Shrewsbury School. He returned to London to take his Higher Certificate, and was rejected from National Service after contracting polio. After a year living and studying in Paris, he went up to Pembroke College, Oxford in 1951, where he read PPE.

He served as a Conservative Member of Parliament, firstly for Rochester and Chatham from 1959 to 1964, and then for Aldershot from 1970 until his retirement at the 1997 election. While out of parliament from 1964 to 1970, he worked as a journalist, including as a TV critic for The Times; he continued to be active as a journalist and author throughout the remainder of his career.

He was considered to be on the left wing of the Conservative Party (one of the 'wets' in Thatcherite terminology), and never attained ministerial rank. He became identifed as a prominent Tory critic of Mrs Thatcher. In 1980 he sparked controversy by writing an anonymous article in The Observer, signed 'by a Tory', in which he criticised Thatcher's 'A level economics' and called her 'didactic, tart and obstinate'. He was later forced to admit authorship. He also memorably referred to Mrs Thatcher as 'the great she-elephant', and claims responsibility for the currency of the phrase 'one of us', which Mrs Thatcher used privately to refer to colleagues whom she saw as loyal and supportive of her policies. This later became used by Hugo Young as the title of his biography of Thatcher. Critchley was, however, supportive of Thatcher's stance at the time of the Falklands War.

Critchley was a long-standing friend of Michael Heseltine, having met him first at preparatory school. Both then went on to Shrewsbury and Pembroke College, Oxford, and Critchley was best man at Heseltine's wedding. Their friendship waned in the 1960s, but Critchley supported Heseltine in the 1990 leadership election.

From the early 1990s Critchley became severely restricted in mobility due to complications arising from the polio from which he had suffered as a young man. Despite this, he successfully re-contested his Aldershot seat at the 1992 election, but became an infrequent attender at the House of Commons until his retirement in 1997. He was knighted in 1995.

After his retirement he was expelled from the mainstream Conservative party for backing the Pro-Euro Conservative Party in the 1999 European Parliament election. He died the next year from prostate cancer aged 69. He was married twice, and had four children.

Critchley became highly regarded as a witty and acerbic political writer and journalist, increasingly so towards the end of his life. His 1994 volume of memoirs, A Bag of Boiled Sweets, was described by Jeremy Paxman as 'The most entertaining set of political memoirs to have been published in years.'

Publications

* Critchley Julian "Westminster Blues" London 1981
* Critchley Julian "The Palace of Varieties" London 1983
* Critchley, Julian, "Heseltine - The Unauthorised Biography", André Deutsch, London, September 1987, ISBN 0-233-98001-6
* Critchley, Julian, "A Bag of Boiled Sweets", Faber and Faber, London, 1994, ISBN 0-571-17496-5

External links

* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/918695.stm Former MP Critchley dies]
* [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4061854-108996,00.html Guardian Obituary]


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