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The Right Honourable
The Lord Baker of Dorking
CH PC
Official portrait of Lord Baker of Dorking 2020 crop 2
Official portrait, 2020
Secretary of State for the Home Department

In office
28 November 1990 – 10 April 1992
Prime Minister John Major
Preceded by David Waddington
Succeeded by Kenneth Clarke
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster

In office
24 July 1989 – 28 November 1990
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Preceded by Tony Newton
Succeeded by Chris Patten
Chairman of the Conservative Party

In office
24 July 1989 – 28 November 1990
Leader Margaret Thatcher
Preceded by Peter Brooke
Succeeded by Chris Patten
Secretary of State for
Education and Science

In office
21 May 1986 – 24 July 1989
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Preceded by Keith Joseph
Succeeded by John MacGregor
Secretary of State for the Environment

In office
2 September 1985 – 21 May 1986
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Preceded by Patrick Jenkin
Succeeded by Nicholas Ridley
Kenneth Baker, Baron Baker of Dorking
Minister of State for Local Government

In office
11 September 1984 – 1 September 1985
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Sec. of State Patrick Jenkin
Preceded by The Lord Bellwin
Succeeded by William Waldegrave
Minister of State for Industry and Information Technology[a]

In office
5 January 1981 – 10 September 1984
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
Sec. of State Sir Keith Joseph
Patrick Jenkin
Cecil Parkinson
Norman Tebbit
Preceded by The Viscount Trenchard
Succeeded by Geoffrey Pattie
Parliamentary Secretary for the Civil Service Department

In office
7 April 1972 – 4 March 1974
Serving with Geoff Johnson-Smith (1972-1974)
Prime Minister Edward Heath
Preceded by David Howell
Succeeded by Robert Sheldon

Kenneth Baker, Baron Baker of Dorking
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Incumbent
Assumed office
18 June 1997
Life Peerage
Member of Parliament
for Mole Valley

In office
9 June 1983 – 8 April 1997
Preceded by Constituency created
Succeeded by Paul Beresford
Member of Parliament
for St Marylebone

In office
22 October 1970 – 13 May 1983
Preceded by Quintin Hogg
Succeeded by Constituency abolished
Member of Parliament
for Acton

In office
28 March 1968 – 29 May 1970
Preceded by Bernard Floud
Succeeded by Nigel Spearing

Personal details Born 3 November 1934(1934-11-03) (age 90)
Newport, Monmouthshire, Wales Political party Conservative Spouse(s) Mary Elizabeth Gray-Muir (m. 1963) Children Oswin · Sophia · Amy Alma mater Magdalen College, Oxford (BA, MSc) Signature Kenneth Baker signature Website Official website a. ^ Minister of State for Industry: 5 January 1981 to 12 June 1983

Kenneth Wilfred Baker, Baron Baker of Dorking, CH PC (born 3 November 1934)[1] is a former British politician, Conservative Member of Parliament from 1968 to 1997, and a cabinet minister, including holding the offices of Home Secretary, Education Secretary and Conservative Party Chairman. He is a life member of the Tory Reform Group.

Early life[]

The son of a civil servant, Baker was born in Newport, Monmouthshire. He was educated at Hampton Grammar School between 1946 and 1948, a boys' voluntary aided school in West London (now Hampton School, an independent school). He then went on to study at St Paul's School, a boys' public school then in Hammersmith, London and at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1958 with a BA Degree in History. Whilst at Oxford, Baker served as Secretary of The Oxford Union. Four years later he graduated with a MSc degree in International Law and Regulations. He did National Service in the Royal Artillery, reaching the rank of lieutenant, and worked for Royal Dutch Shell before being elected as a Member of Parliament at a by-election in March 1968.[2]

Career[]

Political career[]

Member of Parliament[]

Having unsuccessfully contested Poplar in 1964 and Acton in 1966, Baker was first elected to Parliament when he won Acton at a March 1968 by-election, gaining it from Labour following the suicide of Bernard Floud.[3] However, at the 1970 general election he was defeated by Labour's Nigel Spearing. At an ensuing by-election, held on 22 October 1970—caused by the elevation to the Lords (as a life peer) of Quintin Hogg, so that he could become Lord Chancellor after the surprise Conservative victory at the 1970 election—Baker was elected for the safe Conservative seat of St Marylebone in central London. In the parliamentary seat redistribution of the early 1980s, St Marylebone was abolished and Baker was defeated by Peter Brooke for the Conservative nomination at the nearby new safe seat of Cities of London & Westminster. However he successfully obtained nomination at Mole Valley, a safely-Conservative rural seat in Surrey, which he held until his retirement in 1997. He was succeeded there by Sir Paul Beresford.

Early ministerial career[]

Baker's first government post was in the Heath ministry; in 1972 he became Parliamentary Secretary at the Civil Service Department, and in 1974 Parliamentary Private Secretary to Edward Heath. Having become closely associated with Heath, he was overlooked for office when Margaret Thatcher became Prime Minister in 1979, but in 1981 he was appointed Minister for Information Technology, in the then Department of Trade and Industry. Having been sworn of the Privy Council in the 1984 New Year Honours,[4] he entered the Cabinet as Secretary of State for the Environment in 1985.[5]

Education Secretary[]

Baker served as Secretary of State for Education from 1986 to 1989. His most noted action in his time at the Department of Education was the introduction of the controversial "National Curriculum" through the 1988 Education Act. He also introduced in-service training days for teachers, which became popularly known as "Baker days".[5] At this time Baker was often tipped as a future Conservative leader, including in the 1987 edition of Julian Critchley's biography of Michael Heseltine. Critchley quoted one journalist's witticism "I have seen the future and it smirks" (a reference to the famous line "I have seen the future and it works" written by Lincoln Steffens, an American visitor to Lenin's USSR in 1921). Baker's mannerisms were unpopular with some people: he dressed his hair with Brylcreem, and by the late 1980s he had come to be portrayed by the satirical programme Spitting Image as a slimy slug.[6]

Party Chairman[]

In the July 1989 reshuffle Baker was appointed Chairman of the Conservative Party, with the intention that he should organise a fourth consecutive General Election victory for Margaret Thatcher. He managed to steer the government through the otherwise disastrous local elections of May 1990 by stressing the good results for Conservative "flagship" councils in Westminster and Wandsworth, i.e. supposedly demonstrating that the poll tax—a source of great unpopularity for the government—could be a vote-winner for Conservative councils who kept it low. He was still Party Chairman at the time Margaret Thatcher resigned in November 1990.[5]

Home Secretary[]

After the change of regime, Baker was promoted to Home Secretary, dealing with prison riots and introducing the Dangerous Dogs Act.[7]

After his term of office he was also found (M v Home Office 1994) to have been in contempt of court for having deported a man back to Zaire in 1991,[8] in breach of an interim injunction and while proceedings were pending. "It would be a black day for the rule of law and the liberty of the subject", the Court of Appeal ruled, "if ministers were not accountable to the courts for their personal actions." This was the first time the courts had reached such a finding against a minister for exercise of Prerogative Powers, something previously thought to be impossible.

After 1992[]

Official portrait of Lord Baker of Dorking crop 2

Baker in 2018

After the 1992 general election Baker left the government rather than accept demotion to the job of Welsh Secretary.[citation needed] He was appointed a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH) on 13 April 1992.[9] He proposed the Loyal Address in the Queen's Speech debate on 6 May 1992, following the general election. He chose not to stand for re-election to the House of Commons in 1997, and on 16 June was created a life peer as Baron Baker of Dorking, of Iford in the County of East Sussex.[10][11]

Baker was interviewed in 2012 as part of The History of Parliament's oral history project.[12][13]

Since 2019, Baker has campaigned for the abolition of General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) examinations, which he introduced as Secretary of State for Education. Baker believes the certificate to be redundant as it fails in creating skills wanted by employers, is incompatible with the new age 18 school leaving age and causes poor mental health in the youth.[14] When the annual GCSE examinations were cancelled twice during the COVID-19 pandemic, Baker believed there to be increasing opposition to their return and considered it a "great opportunity" to abolish them.[15] Baker also criticised government plans to replace Business and Technology Education Council (BTEC) qualifications with T-Levels as "vandalism", instead preferring to maintain the status quo where both BTECs and T-Levels are available to students.[16]

In September 2019, Baker criticised attempts by Prime Minister Boris Johnson to deselect rebel Conservative MPs at the next general election.[17]

Baker Dearing Educational Trust[]

Kenneth Baker and Akshata Murty

Baker (left) attends a meeting with Akshata Murty and representatives of the London Design and Engineering UTC, 2023

Baker was co-founder along with the late Ronald Dearing of the Baker Dearing Educational Trust, an educational trust set up to promote the establishment of University Technical Colleges in England as part of the free school programme. He is also Chair of the independent education charity Edge Foundation which campaigns for a coherent, unified and holistic education for all young people.[citation needed]

Personal life[]

Until 1995 Baker lived in Station Road in the village of Betchworth, 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Dorking. He now lives in the hamlet of Iford near Lewes, East Sussex.

In 2005 he published a book on King George IV, George IV: A Life in Caricature, followed by King George III: A Life in Caricature in 2007 (Thames & Hudson). Other publications include several compilations of poetry,[18][19][20][21] a history of political cartoons and his autobiography.

In 2006 Lord Baker announced that he was introducing a bill into the House of Lords to address the West Lothian question.[22] This would prevent Scottish and Welsh MPs from voting on legislation which affects England alone as a result of devolution to the Scottish Parliament or the Welsh Assembly.

Baker's son, Oswin, is a leading member of the Greenwich and Woolwich Labour Party.[23]

According to his entry in Who's Who, Baker enjoys collecting books and political caricatures.[1]

In the media[]

Baker was interviewed about the rise of Thatcherism for the 2006 BBC TV documentary series Tory! Tory! Tory!. Baker was portrayed as a slug in the political satire television show Spitting Image.

Baker was invited on the 31 January 2023 by BBC Newsnight[24] to comment on the forthcoming, Teachers Strike and on PM Rishi Sunak's management of his Cabinet appointments. Presenter Victoria Derbyshire, at one point was forced to remove Baker's incessantly ringing mobile phone, which continually interrupted the latter part of the live studio interview, during which he quipped that the PM was insistent in attempting to reach him.

Honours[]

In 1994 Baker was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Richmond, The American International University in London.[25]

In 2013 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Education from Plymouth University.[26]

He was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Education from Brunel University in 2016.[27]

Arms[]

Coat of arms of K
Coronet of a British Baron
Baker of Dorking Escutcheon
Crest
Upon two closed books each fesswise the upper Azure the lower Gules both garnished and titled Or a cock also Or combed jelopped and legged Gules.
Escutcheon
Gyronny of eight Gules and Azure a roundel also Azure surmounted by an annulet enfiling the rings of the chains of three portcullises in pairle points inwards Or.
Supporters
On either side a male griffin reguardant Azure armed forelegged and rayed Or the dexter grasping in the beak a thistle flowered Gules slipped and leaved Or and the sinister a daffodil slipped and leaved Or.
Motto
Bene Tentare [28]

Bibliography[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Baker of Dorking, Baron, (Kenneth Wilfred Baker) (born 3 Nov. 1934)" (in en). 2007. Digital object identifier:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u6215. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4. https://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-6215. 
  2. "OPC Committee list". Old Pauline Club. http://old.stpaulsschool.org.uk/about-opc/committee-list/biographies/lord-baker-of-dorking. 
  3. "Mr Kenneth Baker (Hansard)". https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/people/mr-kenneth-baker/index.html. 
  4. "No. 49583". 30 December 1983. p. 1. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/49583/supplement/1 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Kenneth Baker: 'People told me to abandon Thatcher but I stood by her'" (in en). 20 January 2013. http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/jan/20/kenneth-baker-abandon-margaret-thatcher-stood-by-her. 
  6. Macdonald, Marianne (15 May 1996). "Baker spits back at 'Image' cartoonists". London. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/baker-spits-back-at-image-cartoonists-1347371.html. 
  7. "Lord Baker of Dorking". http://old.stpaulsschool.org.uk/about-opc/committee-list/biographies/lord-baker-of-dorking. 
  8. "Baker rejects contempt ruling: Former minister says he had judicial". 14 May 1993. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/baker-rejects-contempt-ruling-former-minister-says-he-had-judicial-immunity-in-asylum-case-2322708.html. 
  9. "No. 52911". 5 May 1992. p. 7755. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/52911/page/7755 
  10. "No. 54811". 19 June 1997. p. 7123. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/54811/page/7123 
  11. "Lord Baker of Dorking - UK Parliament". www.parliament.uk. http://www.parliament.uk/biographies/lords/lord-baker-of-dorking/1028. 
  12. "Oral history: BAKER, Kenneth (b.1934)". The History of Parliament. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/oral-history/member/baker-kenneth-1934. 
  13. "Baron Baker interviewed by Mike Greenwood". British Library Sound Archive. http://cadensa.bl.uk/uhtbin/cgisirsi/?ps=7BqfKR0esX/WORKS-FILE/212900022/9. 
  14. Baker, Kenneth (11 February 2019). "Opinion: I introduced GCSEs in the 1980s – but now it's time to scrap them" (in en). https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/gcses-exams-education-skill-shortages-business-schools-robert-halfon-a8774141.html. 
  15. Mintz, Luke (24 April 2021). "Lord Baker: The pandemic is a good opportunity to scrap my GCSE revolution" (in en-GB). The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/family/schooling/lord-baker-pandemic-good-opportunity-scrap-gcse-revolution/. 
  16. "Kenneth Baker: plan to scrap BTecs is an act of vandalism" (in en). 29 July 2021. http://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/jul/29/kenneth-baker-scrapping-btecs-act-of-vandalism. 
  17. "Lord Kenneth Baker slams Johnson over treatment of rebel MPs". 4 September 2019. https://londonlovesbusiness.com/lord-kenneth-baker-slams-johnson-over-treatment-of-rebel-mps/. 
  18. Faber Book of English History in Verse, 1989, ISBN 9780571150625
  19. Faber Book of War Poetry, 1997, ISBN 9780571174546
  20. Faber Book of Childrens English History in Verse, 1999, ISBN 9781422390122
  21. Faber Book of Landscape Poetry, 2000, ISBN 9780571200719
  22. "Baker seeks end to West Lothian question". Telegraph.co.uk. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1508017/Baker-seeks-end-to-West-Lothian-question.html. 
  23. "Politics Diary". 11 October 2002. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2002/oct/11/1. 
  24. "Newsnight - Strikes - lessons from history?" (in en-GB). https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001hs63/newsnight-strikes-lessons-from-history. 
  25. "Honorary Degree Recipients – Richmond University". https://www.richmond.ac.uk/about-richmond/honorary-degree-recipients/. 
  26. "Lord Kenneth Baker". https://archivesit.org.uk/interviews/lord-kenneth-baker/. 
  27. "Honorary Graduates". Brunel.ac.uk. https://www.brunel.ac.uk/about/people/Honorary-graduates. 
  28. Debrett's Peerage & Baronetage. 2000. 

External links[]

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Bernard Floud
Member of Parliament for Acton
1968–1970
Succeeded by
Nigel Spearing
Preceded by
Quintin Hogg
Member of Parliament for St Marylebone
1970–1983
Constituency abolished
New constituency Member of Parliament for Mole Valley
1983–1997
Succeeded by
Paul Beresford
Political offices
Preceded by
Patrick Jenkin
Secretary of State for the Environment
1985–1986
Succeeded by
Nicholas Ridley
Preceded by
Keith Joseph
Secretary of State for Education and Science
1986–1989
Succeeded by
John MacGregor
Preceded by
Tony Newton
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Chris Patten
Preceded by
David Waddington
Home Secretary
1990–1992
Succeeded by
Kenneth Clarke
Party political offices
Preceded by
Peter Brooke
Chairman of the Conservative Party
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Chris Patten
Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom
Preceded by
The Lord Hurd of Westwell
Gentlemen
Baron Baker of Dorking
Followed by
The Lord Patten
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