Clark's first foray into politics was on the issue of the
Common Market, which he opposed. With those beliefs, he joined the
Conservative Monday Club in 1968, and was soon chairman of its Wiltshire branch. In 1971 he was blacklisted by Conservative Party Central Office for being too right-wing, but after representations by him, and others, he was removed from the blacklist. He unsuccessfully sought the Conservative selection for
Weston super-Mare in 1970, missing out to
Jerry Wiggin. He subsequently became MP for
Plymouth Sutton at the
February 1974 general election with a majority of 8,104, when
Harold Wilson took over from
Edward Heath as prime minister of a minority Labour government. At the General Election in October 1974, when Labour gained a small overall majority, Clark's vote fell by 1,192 votes, but he still had a comfortable majority with 5,188. His first five years in parliament were spent on the Conservative opposition benches. He was still a member of the Monday Club in May 1975. It is unclear when he let his membership of the club lapse, but possibly it was upon becoming a government minister. He continued to address Club events until 1992. During the subsequent Party leadership contest he was urged by
Airey Neave to vote for Margaret Thatcher, but he is thought to have favoured
Willie Whitelaw. Although he was personally liked by
Margaret Thatcher, for whom he had great admiration, and the columnist George Hutchinson (who, writing in
The Times, tipped him for inclusion in the Shadow Cabinet), Clark was never promoted to the cabinet, remaining in mid-ranking ministerial positions during the 1980s.
First portfolios Clark received his first ministerial posting as a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the
Department of Employment in 1983, where he was responsible for moving the approval of regulations relating to equal pay in the House of Commons. His speech in 1983 followed a
wine-tasting dinner with his friend of many years standing, Christopher Selmes. Irritated by what he regarded as a bureaucratically written civil-service speech, he galloped through the script, skipping over pages of text. The then-opposition MP
Clare Short stood up on a
point of order and, after acknowledging that MPs cannot formally accuse each other of being drunk in the House of Commons, accused him of being "incapable", a euphemism for drunk. Although the government benches were furious at the accusation, Clark later admitted in his diaries that the wine-tasting had affected him. To date, he is the only Member of Parliament to have been accused in the House of Commons of being drunk at the
despatch box. In 1986, Clark was promoted to
Minister for Trade at the
Department of Trade and Industry. It was during this time that he became involved with
the issue of export licences to Iraq, the Matrix-Churchill affair. In 1989, he became Minister for Defence Procurement at the
Ministry of Defence. When Clark was Minister for Trade, responsible for overseeing
arms sales to foreign governments, he was interviewed by journalist
John Pilger who asked him: :JP "Did it bother you personally that this British equipment was causing such mayhem and human suffering (by supplying arms for
Indonesia's
war in
East Timor)?" :AC "No, not in the slightest, it never entered my head. You tell me that this was happening, I didn't hear about it or know about it." :JP "Well, even if I hadn't told you it was happening, the fact that we supply highly effective equipment to a regime like that is not a consideration, as far as you're concerned. It's not a personal consideration. I ask the question because I read you are a vegetarian and you are quite seriously concerned about the way animals are killed." :AC "Yeah." :JP "Doesn't that concern extend to the way humans, albeit foreigners, are killed?" :AC "Curiously not. No." In November 1990, when Margaret Thatcher was challenged for the leadership of the Conservative Party, Clark told Thatcher to 'fight on at all costs' even though he thought she would lose, because it was better to go out in a 'blaze of glorious defeat than to go gentle into that good night'. Thatcher later withdrew from the leadership contest.
Departure and return Clark left Parliament in 1992 following Margaret Thatcher's fall from power. His admission during the
Matrix Churchill trial that he had been "economical with the
actualité" in answer to parliamentary questions about what he knew with regard to arms export licences to Iraq, caused the collapse of the trial and the establishment of the
Scott Inquiry, which helped undermine
John Major's government. Clark became bored with life outside politics and returned to Parliament as member for
Kensington and Chelsea in the
election of 1997, becoming critical of
NATO's campaign in the Balkans. Clark held strong views on
British unionism, racial difference, social class, and was in support of animal rights,
nationalist protectionism and
Euroscepticism. He referred to
Enoch Powell as "The Prophet". Clark once declared: "It is natural to be proud of your race and your country", and in a departmental meeting, allegedly referred to Africa as "
Bongo Bongo Land". When called to account, however, Clark denied the comment had any racist overtones, claiming it had simply been a reference to the president of
Gabon,
Omar Bongo. Clark argued that the media and the government failed to pick out the racism towards white people and ignored any racist attacks on white people. He also, however, described the National Front chairman,
John Tyndall, as "a bit of a blockhead" and disavowed his ideas. On his death in 1999, figures from all sides of politics paid tribute to Clark, though his critics remained. Prime Minister
Tony Blair spoke of Clark as "extraordinary, amusing, irreverent, but with real conviction and belief, and behind the headlines, kind and thoughtful." And the Liberal Democrat,
Simon Hughes, described him as "courageous, idiosyncratic, talented and principled. and outside the
House of Commons in support of
Animal Liberation Front hunger-striker
Barry Horne. Charles Moore once asked Clark whether he was in love with Margaret Thatcher, to which he replied 'I don't want actual penetration, just a massive snog'. == Diaries ==