. It reads: "Think of Prague!" In
1974, Kerpel became a Conservative councillor for
Camden London Borough Council, He was previously the personal assistant of
Edward Heath, who was serving as
Prime Minister (June 1970–March 1974) and
Leader of the Conservative Party at the time. He then stood in the
1983 general election as the Conservative candidate for the newly created
Holborn and St Pancras constituency, but lost to Labour candidate
Frank Dobson. He remained opposition leader in Camden until July 1985, when he resigned after being disillusioned by perceived corruption and intimidation in the council, which he blamed on "the loathsome nature of the
Socialists". Kerpel planned to set up a national campaign group to fight corruption in
the local government. From 1986 to 1992, Kerpel was the special adviser to Kenneth Baker. But, Baker and Kerpel were some of the few supporters of the
City Technology Colleges programme inside the government. He also helped Baker write his autobiography
The Turbulent Years: My Life in Politics. From 1993, Kerpel served in the
final Apartheid government of South Africa as an adviser to State President F. W. de Klerk. Kerpel continued to advise de Klerk after Apartheid's fall, helping prepare a critical report of the economic policies of the
newly elected Black majority government. In 2019 de Klerk claimed to have not known of Kerpel. In the late 1990s Kerpel was the adviser to
Shirley Porter, attempting to defend her reputation from the
Homes for votes scandal, of which Shirley was involved. Since his retirement, Kerpel has been president and chairman of the North London Bowling Club. He has also expressed opinion on modern political events, such as when he commented on Prime Minister
Boris Johnson's failure to nominate
Chris Grayling as Chair of the
Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament in 2020. == Coalition for Peace Through Security ==