If one wanted a convenient and unoriginal label to describe Mr Roy Hattersley, Labour's new education spokesman, one could classify him as a whizz‐kid. He is young (just 40), bright, ambitious, full of ideas and anxious to get things done. He is a brilliant Parliamentary performer. He is tipped as a future Prime Minister and, therefore, has political weight. Edward Short, Michael Stewart, Patrick Gordon Walker — none of these worthy people, for reasons that we need not labour, could be described as whizz‐kids. Sir Edward Boyle of course, was young (39 when he became Minister of Education in 1962), bright and full of ideas. But he was not ambitious and did not have the professional politician's killer‐instinct. Mrs Thatcher, it is true, has many whizz‐kid qualities and she is certainly ambitious; but she is a woman and, in the Tory Party, it is still not acceptable for a woman to display such things too publicly.
Article navigation
1 February 1973
Editors
Review Article|
February 01 1973
Roy Hattersley, the Labour Party’s new education spokesman
Interviewed by Peter Wilby
Interviewed by Peter Wilby
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6127
Print ISSN: 0040-0912
© MCB UP Limited
1973
Education + Training (1973) 15 (2): 48–49.
Citation
by Peter Wilby I (1973), "Roy Hattersley, the Labour Party’s new education spokesman". Education + Training, Vol. 15 No. 2 pp. 48–49, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb001751
Download citation file:
100
Views
Suggested Reading
Going for a song
Education + Training (April,1979)
VIEW
Technical Education and Industrial Training (November,1968)
Teachers
Technical Education and Industrial Training (May,1969)
A comparison of leadership roles in internal IT projects versus outsourcing projects
Industrial Management & Data Systems (December,2005)
Direct grant schools at ministerial mercy
Education + Training (January,1975)
Related Chapters
Piercy Ravenstone: Tory democrat and physiocratic anti-capitalist
English, Irish and Subversives among the Dismal Scientists
Conservatives and the Constabulary in Great Britain: Cross-Dressing Conundrums
The Politics of Policing: Between Force and Legitimacy
References
Clash!: Superheroic Yet Sensible Strategies for Teaching the New Literacies Despite the Status Quo
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
