Vanneck became involved in Municipal affairs through the
City of London Corporation (as
Alderman for
Cordwainer Ward and a member of many
Livery Companies). After a year serving as a
Sheriff of London in 1974, he was elected the 650th
Lord Mayor of London in November 1977, towards the end of the
Queen's Silver Jubilee year. He made an eloquent speech at the
Guildhall in which he recalled the first time he had met
The Queen, who accompanied her father during a visit to the Royal Naval College when Vanneck was a young cadet there. A popular Lord Mayor, Vanneck declared that despite his interesting careers, he had missed out on the one he would most like, which was to be a tug-boat skipper on the Thames. He made excellent contacts with his
Paris counterpart
Jacques Chirac and arranged an official visit to visit (one of only two that had taken place since the French revolution). Vanneck was a Francophile who was fluent in
French. At the end of his Lord Mayoral term, Vanneck was adopted as
Conservative candidate for the
European Parliament for
Cleveland. He won the seat at the
1979 election, enjoying his time in the European institutions. He was vice-chairman of the Political Affairs committee and served on Energy Resources and Technology. After keeping his seat by only 2,625 votes in 1984, he lost in the
1989 election, and then retired from public life. ==Later life==