Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Walker of Worcester | |
Office: | Secretary of State for Wales |
Primeminister: | Margaret Thatcher |
Term Start: | 13 June 1987 |
Term End: | 4 May 1990 |
Predecessor: | Nicholas Edwards |
Successor: | David Hunt |
Office1: | Secretary of State for Energy |
Primeminister1: | Margaret Thatcher |
Term Start1: | 11 June 1983 |
Term End1: | 13 June 1987 |
Predecessor1: | Nigel Lawson |
Successor1: | Cecil Parkinson |
Office2: | Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food |
Primeminister2: | Margaret Thatcher |
Term Start2: | 4 May 1979 |
Term End2: | 11 June 1983 |
Predecessor2: | John Silkin |
Successor2: | Michael Jopling |
Office3: | Shadow Secretary of State for Defence |
Primeminister3: | Edward Heath |
Term Start3: | 29 October 1974 |
Term End3: | 18 February 1975 |
Predecessor3: | Ian Gilmour |
Successor3: | George Younger |
Office4: | President of the Board of Trade |
Primeminister4: | Edward Heath |
Term Start4: | 5 November 1972 |
Term End4: | 4 March 1974 |
Predecessor4: | John Davies |
Successor4: | Tony Benn |
Office5: | Secretary of State for Trade and Industry |
Primeminister5: | Edward Heath |
Term Start5: | 5 November 1972 |
Term End5: | 4 March 1974 |
Predecessor5: | John Davies |
Office6: | Secretary of State for the Environment |
Primeminister6: | Edward Heath |
Term Start6: | 15 October 1970 |
Term End6: | 5 November 1972 |
Predecessor6: | Position established |
Successor6: | Geoffrey Rippon |
Office7: | Minister of State for Housing and Local Government |
Primeminister7: | Edward Heath |
Term Start7: | 19 June 1970 |
Term End7: | 15 October 1970 |
Predecessor7: | Tony Crosland (Secretary of State for Local Government and Regional Planning) |
Successor7: | Position abolished |
Office8: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start8: | 8 July 1992 |
Term End8: | 23 June 2010 Life peerage |
Office9: | Member of Parliament for Worcester |
Term Start9: | 16 March 1961 |
Term End9: | 16 March 1992 |
Predecessor9: | George Ward |
Successor9: | Peter Luff |
Birth Name: | Peter Edward Walker |
Birth Date: | 25 March 1932 |
Birth Place: | Brentford, England |
Death Place: | Worcester, England |
Nationality: | British |
Party: | Conservative |
Children: | 5 (including Robin) |
Education: | Latymer Upper School |
Peter Edward Walker, Baron Walker of Worcester, (25 March 1932 – 23 June 2010) was a British Conservative politician who served in Cabinet under Edward Heath and Margaret Thatcher. He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Worcester from 1961 to 1992 and was made a life peer in 1992.
Walker became the youngest National Chairman of the Young Conservatives in 1958.[1] He was a founder of the Tory Reform Group, and served as Chairman of the Carlton Club.
Born in Middlesex, younger son of Sydney Walker, a capstan operator at HMV's factory at Hayes, and his wife Rose (née Dean),[2] [3] [4] Walker was privately educated at Latymer Upper School in London. He did not go to college or university.[5]
Walker rose through the ranks of the Conservative Party's youth wing, the Young Conservatives. He was a branch chairman at the age of 14, and later National Chairman. He fought the Parliamentary seat of Dartford in the general elections of 1955 and 1959, being beaten each time by Labour's Sydney Irving.
Walker was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1960 Birthday Honours for political services. Within four years of his election to Parliament in a by-election in 1961, he had entered the Shadow Cabinet. He later served under Prime Minister Edward Heath as Minister of Housing and Local Government (1970), Secretary of State for the Environment (1970–72), the first person in the world to hold such a position, and Secretary of State for Trade and Industry (1972–74). From late 1974 to February 1975, Walker served as Shadow Defence Secretary. When Margaret Thatcher became the party leader, Walker did not serve in her Shadow Cabinet. But when the party came to power in 1979, he returned to the Cabinet as Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, in 1979. He later served as Secretary of State for Energy (1983–87). Whilst at the Department for Energy he played an important role in the Government's successful opposition to the 1984–85 miners' strike.
Walker then served as Secretary of State for Wales between 1987 and 1990. Although the role of Welsh Secretary was ostensibly one of the most junior jobs in the Cabinet, Walker claimed it gave him more influence as it gave access to key economic committees. He stood down from the Cabinet shortly before Thatcher herself was ousted in 1990. Though he had previously been a close ally of Heath's and was generally considered to be on the left of the party, he was nevertheless one of the longest-serving Cabinet members in Thatcher's government, serving during the entirety bar the last six months of her premiership. In October 1985, however, he had hit out at Thatcher's reluctance to inject money into the economy in order to ease mass unemployment, speaking of his fears that she could lose the next general election if unemployment did not fall. However, the Tories were re-elected in 1987, by which time unemployment was falling.[6]
As noted above, Walker's 1970 appointment as Secretary of State for the Environment was notable in that he became the world's first Environment Minister, and was thus a source of considerable interest at the 1972 Stockholm Conference. The creation of the Department of the Environment came in response to the growing environmental concerns of the 1960s (not least the Torrey Canyon oil spill of 1967), and one of Walker's immediate concerns was to clean up the nation's waterways. The measures put in place have had substantial results for river life. For instance, the Thames was declared biologically dead in 1957 but today many species of fish thrive in the river, including wild salmon and trout.[7]
Walker was a determined supporter of the hospice movement, becoming a patron of St Richard's Hospice in Worcester when it was founded in 1984. He campaigned determinedly for greater NHS support for St Richard's and the wider hospice movement, which is staffed largely by dedicated volunteers. During a House of Lords debate in 2000, Lord Walker stated: "Anyone who visits hospices and meets the volunteers—the people running them and guiding them—will recognise their unique spiritual and compassionate contribution to the health service."[8]
Upon his retirement from Parliament, he was appointed a life peer in the 1992 Dissolution Honours, as Baron Walker of Worcester, of Abbots Morton in the County of Hereford and Worcester.
During the 1960s he was the junior partner in Slater Walker, an asset stripping vehicle used by Jim Slater to generate immense paper profits until 1973. An ill-timed attempt to take over Hill Samuel resulted in the loss of city confidence in Slater Walker and Jim Slater became for a time a "minus millionaire". Peter Walker's political career survived and after retirement from politics he returned to the City as Chairman of Kleinwort Benson.[9]
Other business positions Walker held included: Chairman of Allianz Insurance plc, Vice Chairman of Dresdner Kleinwort and non-executive director of ITM Power plc.
Walker and his wife had five children. His son Robin Walker was elected MP for the Worcester constituency in the 2010 general election.
He died at St Richard's Hospice, Worcester, on 23 June 2010, after suffering from cancer.[10] [11]
Crest: | Growing from a grassy mound Proper over which curls a footpath a cedar tree all Proper irradiated Or.[12] |
Coronet: | A Coronet of a Baron |
Escutcheon: | Per pale Sable and Or semy of Portcullises and three turreted towers all counterchanged. |
Supporters: | Dexter a dragon Gules sinister a sea-lion Proper the head and mane Or supporting a trident also Proper the whole upon a compartment per bend dexter a grassy mound growing therefrom Red and Yellow cowslips all Proper sinister water barry wavy Azure and Argent over all in bend a footpath Proper |
Motto: | Diligentia Cum Humanitate (Diligence With Humanity) |
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