| You are in: UK: Politics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuesday, 12 October, 1999, 08:26 GMT 09:26 UK Hague: Mandelson job 'arrogant' William Hague: Ministers need "integrity and a record of truthfulness" William Hague has accused the prime minister of "extraordinary arrogance" in bringing Peter Mandelson back to government only 10 months after he quit in disgrace.
"If Roland Rat was appointed Northern Ireland secretary I would say everybody should work with him, but I would still point out that he was a rat."
"He resigned in disgrace, he resigned for good reasons and if it was right for him to resign then I think it is wrong to bring him back now without him having faced election," he said. "In the Conservative government when someone resigned in difficult circumstances, they were only ever brought back once they had faced the electorate and that will be the case in future Conservative governments. "I think integrity and a record of truthfulness should be factors in holding government office." But Mr Mandelson countered by claiming that his Conservative opponents were trying to "destabilise" him before he had got started in his new job. He suggested his resignation when the details of his �373,000 home loan from a fellow minister became known set a higher standard for public life than had previously been followed. "I did pay a very heavy price for it. I am absolutely clear it was the right thing to do at the time. I feel in a sense chastened by it," he said.
The Standards and Privileges Committee of the House of Commons had concluded his actions in seeking a mortgage for his Notting Hill house had not been dishonest, the Northern Ireland secretary said. But the Tory leader said questions remained over areas such as tax liability. "And I think the whole atmosphere and questions that arose at the time of his resignation have not been satisfactorily answered. "A minister who resigns in those circumstances by common consent and agreement should not be returned 10 months later. "It shows extraordinary arrogance on the part of the prime minister."
"It is undoubtedly time for the paramilitary organisations to really play their part in the agreement," he said. But Mr Mandelson had words of caution for those who hope he can clinch a breakthrough in the peace process because he is more highly regarded by unionists than his predecessor Mo Mowlam. He said: "There is nothing that I can do in Northern Ireland except build on the basis of what Mo Mowlam has already achieved. "I have to do exactly as she did - keep working to show a determination and bring people together to enable people to understand not only that there is a way of living together but to do so on the basis of trust. "That is what I am going to do, to spare no effort, no ounce of energy that I have inside me to make that agreement stick." |
See also: 11 Oct 99 | UK Politics 11 Oct 99 | Talking Point 11 Oct 99 | N Ireland 12 Oct 99 | N Ireland 12 Oct 99 | N Ireland Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() | ||
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> | To BBC World Service>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |