Interview with John Redwood




       
       
       
 
 
 
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                                ON THE RECORD 
                           JOHN REDWOOD INTERVIEW
 
RECORDED FROM TRANSMISSION BBC-1                                  DATE: 12.3.95 
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JOHN HUMPHRYS:                         So, Mr Redwood, the Thatcherite 
revolution hasn't run its course.  What we're seeing in Wales is that you are 
determined that it should keep moving forward? 
 
JOHN REDWOOD:                          I don't agree that I'm conducting an 
experiment or running a Thatcherite revolution a decade too late.  What I'm 
doing is developing Conservative policies.  We have a family of Conservative 
policies across the United Kingdom, policies that encourage more people to own 
their own homes, policies that provide better quality and standards in our 
Health Service, policies which mean more parents can choose the school they 
wish their child to go to, and policies which reinforce values and discipline 
and success in our schools.  There are some variations around the different 
parts of the United Kingdom, but there is a strong family resemblance, and I'm 
proud to be carrying the Conservative banner in Wales at this crucial time, to 
strengthen all those things that many people in Wales want, more home 
ownership, better schooling, better public services generally. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              So you're carrying th Conservative 
banner.  You are, if you don't like the phrase "Thatcherite revolution", you 
are still evangelical about it? 
 
REDWOOD:                               I think there are things to be done, 
yes, no-one can rest content when there are still unemployed people, when there 
are still derelict sites to be cleared, when there are still schools producing 
results that are disappointing, when there aren't enough opportunites for some 
of the young children of the valleys and other parts of Wales where there is 
still deprivation.  Of course I crusade to deal with that, and I think the 
objectives I have, a more prosperous Wales, a Wales with more choice and 
success, would go way across the political spectrum, way beyond by own party 
and would be shared as an aspiration by those in many other parties. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Right, so your crusade in Wales, the 
banner for your crusade in Wales ought to be carried right across Britain, 
that's what you're saying. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well it is, I'm saying it's a common 
family of policies and sometimes England is a bit ahead, sometimes Scotland is 
a bit ahead, sometimes Wales is a bit ahead, but we're all working together, we 
have the same general ideas.  My initiative for example with popular schools is 
one area where I am trying something in Wales which I think is specifically 
relevant to the Welsh problem.  There are a number of schools where a lot of 
parents would like their children to go, and they can't get in, and so I'm 
saying, right let's make some capital money available, so that you can put on 
the extra classroom or expand the gym or the library or whatever might need 
doing if the school wishes, and this money goes to the school even though it's 
a local education authority school, because I think people going to LEA 
schools, people who wish their children to go there should have that access, 
that opportunity which is what they want. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              And that's a good example of the sort of 
thing you're doing in Wales that isn't yet - I say yet, put the word in 
inverted commas if you like - isn't yet happening in England? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Yes, that's one of the things, but there 
are other ways in England in which choice is being strengthened in schools, and 
of course it's still open in England for local authorities to do the decent 
thing and to apply for the monies direct through the normal procedures in order 
to expand popular schools, and I hope they will do just that.  I know in my own 
constituency in England as well as in my big Welsh constituency that there are 
parents who are frustrated because there is a good school down the road, their 
child can't go there, and if money can solve the problem let's solve it. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But you'd also know that there are those 
of your colleagues who would agree with the headmaster from whom we heard in 
that film, who said that the danger, and he stood to benefit from your policy, 
that he recognised that the danger was that the worst schools would grow worse 
still because all the emphasis, all the concentration, all the resources will 
be applied on to the best schools. 
 
REDWOOD:                               I think the children of Wales stand to 
benefit from the policies.  I don't know whether the headmaster who has a 
school which is growing is a particular beneficiary.  In a way he has a more 
difficult management task then, because he has a bigger school to run, and he 
has all the hassle of the capital investment.  What I hope will happen is that 
the schools that aren't doing so well will get a grip on the situation.  I said 
a lot about that, I've offered support in a variety of ways.  Very often the 
schools that do worst get more money than the schools that do better.  It's a 
question of how they spend it, and the aspirations they set out through the 
teachers for the pupils, and I'm desperately concerned that we don't allow sink 
schools to develop, that's why I and my colleagues in England and elsewhere in 
the UK have put in policies which allow us to intervene if a school is doing 
very badly.  It is so important, children only get one chance and we must do 
something to make sure that is a good chance. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              You recognise the danger of sink schools 
developing, but that's precisely the risk that you encourage is it not.  If you 
say to one school: you're a popular school, you're a good school, we'll give 
you a lot more money, the other school down the road that is not a good school 
is inevitably going to suffer because yet more of the brightest and best of the 
children go to that better school because their parents are ambitious for them, 
quite rightly, the other school suffers inevitably. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Why should it be just the brightest
and the best that want to choose to go to the good school? 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              They will have the most ambitious 
parents. 
                                                                                
REDWOOD:                               I don't think that's necessarily true. I 
think a lot of parents will want their children to go to the best school, and 
it won't always be just the children with the most able, but let's go back to 
your basic point.  You're quite right that we don't want schools to do badly, 
but surely the answer must lie in the schools, and if they begin to see that 
more parents are taking their children away, or saying, we don't want our 
children to go there in the first place, that I trust will make the governors 
sit down with the head teacher and say: Right, we've got to stop this, and the 
only way we can stop it is by raising our standards.  And that's exactly what I 
want them to do, and that's what parents want them to do. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well, yes of course it is, but how are 
they going to raise their standards if they see the resources going to the best 
schools, and you talk about parents, all parents wanting their children to go 
to the best school, well of course they do, but many of them don't have the 
choice.  If you're a single mother for instance, you don't have a car, you 
don't have much money, and the best school happens to be five miles away, you 
can't get the child there, you're stuck with sending the child to what may be a 
sink school to use your expression. 
 
REDWOOD:                               I said we didn't want those to develop.  
I haven't identified any as being sink schools. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But there are some..... 
 
REDWOOD:                               There are some schools in Wales that 
don't do well enough, and I haven't been shy about identifying that problem and 
saying what we can do about it.  There are a limited number of things I can do 
about it as Secretary of State for Education in Wales.  There are a lot of 
things that the local education authority and the schools can do.  The first 
point, to stop truancy.  You often find that the schools with the worst records 
also have the biggest number of absentees, and the children have to go to 
school if they're going to benefit from the schooling.  Secondly, get the 
school to set more ambitious targets for the pupils.  They want to be 
challenged, they want work that is reasonably difficult and interesting, and 
then you begin to get results, that's what I'm trying to get them to understand 
and to get them to help me do it.  They money you, I'm only talking about 
giving capital money, money to build buildings or to expand libraries, they 
won't get any more per pupil than the schools that you are condemning. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              No, no, I'm not condemning anything. 
I'm not condemning anything.  What I'm saying is that there is a danger that 
these schools will worsen because of this policy, and that's a danger...one 
that many people have, including the headmaster of a school that stood to 
benefit as I said. (sic).
 
REDWOOD:                               Yes, well I think they're much more 
likely to improve because I don't think they'll want the children to divert to 
other schools, and I think they will start asking themselves the obvious 
questions - how does this other school do so much better, because there are 
very similar children going to that school.  How do they spend the money so 
well so they get much better results?  And I do detect in Wales a growing 
willingness to ask these difficult questions, and a growing realisation that a 
lot of the answers rest with the school and not higher up in the political 
system.
                
HUMPHRYS:                              But you would like to see, what do you 
call it, the Popular Schools Initiative - you would like to see this develop 
across the country, and there is a real problem with that in England, because 
you can only get more money if there aren't any surplus places, and there are 
of course ruplus places. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well, that's one of the differences
between parts of England and parts of Wales, but I think we have to look 
carefully at whether the surplus place is a major obstacle or not.  In some 
cases it might be, in other cases if the teachers are no longer at the school 
because the number of pupils has reduced and you don't need the same number of 
teachers, the main cost of the surplus place, so-called, has already 
disappeared because mainly, the money is spent on teachers, and quite rightly 
so. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But what you're saying here in essence 
is, if it's right for Wales, given that caveat, if it's right for Wales it's 
right for Britain. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well, I'm saying that Conservative 
policy is to expand choice, there are a number of ways of doing this.  I've 
come up with one in Wales.  If my English colleagues think it can be applied 
across the border, that's a matter for them, that's fine by me.  They are doing
lots of things in England to strengthen choice as well, which I fully support 
and we're all going in the same direction. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Let's look at housing.  The Thatcherite 
revolution began, or at least encompassed the sale of council homes, something 
that you hugely approve of, indeed you were in at the birth of that particular 
policy.  You want to go further, and you are trying to go further in Wales, in 
promoting owner-occupation.  Now, do you have a target.  Mr Hughes I think in 
that film said ninety per cent owner-occupation was your ambition.   Is that 
right? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well, the immediate target is to try and 
match the aspirations of Welsh people.  Eight out of ten would like to own 
their own home, and it's just a little bit over seven out of ten currently do, 
so there is quite a big gap, and I'm looking at ways in which we can help 
people realise their dream.  They would prefer to own, many of them don't 
necessarily want to rent all their lives.  It is actually cheaper to own the 
same house throughout your life which you've bought on a mortgage than it is to 
rent even a subsidised rental property, because of course you pay rent year 
after year, whereas after twenty or twenty-five years you've finished paying 
the mortgage and it's cheaper over your whole lifetime.  It's also more 
flexible, it is actually easier to move usually if you own your own home, 
because there is a big market in homes, than it is if you live in a council 
house where it is extremely difficult to move somewhere else if you wish to get 
a job somewhere else, because it is very restrictive access to council housing 
in many parts of the United Kingdom, so I'm saying it's more flexible, it's 
what many people want, we must see if we can help them, because the issue now 
is how can they afford it, because the people who now want to own are finding 
it difficult very often because they're on low incomes or they have no 
accumulated capital, so we've thought up a number of schemes across the United 
Kingdom, and I'm promoting these very vigorously in Wales, cheaper housing by 
making sure that reasonably priced land is available for development, making 
sure that there are low cost home ownership schemes and making sure that 
something like the tenants incentive scheme for example can be used, so it's 
actual financial help for someone who wishes to move out of a rented house into 
a home of their own.                                                
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But one way you're doing it is stopping 
housing associations buying existing homes and therefore pushing up prices.  
Now a lot of people would say, many people again in your party, would say 
there's a danger here.  It makes it more difficult for women like Gale Silva, 
her in the film, to get a better environment for her children. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Yes, well that I think is where your 
film was very misleading, uncharacteristically so perhaps, but what I am doing 
is making sure that the money that goes to the housing associations builds 
extra homes.  If a housing association.... 
                                                                                
HUMPHRYS:                              Green field homes?
 
REDWOOD:                               Well, they may be brown field sites. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Or brown field sites, but nonetheless 
new houses. 
                                           
REDWOOD:                               Some of them will be in the urban 
villages which were wrongly portrayed as some kind of peoned capitalism, 
whereas they're going to be mixed communities, including rented accommodation. 
 
HUMPHRYS::                              Right, but they will not be allowed to 
buy an existing house in an existing street, and do it up.  That's not going to 
be allowed any longer. 
                                                                          
REDWOOD:                               No, that's not my idea.  I think it's 
much better that all of the money that I send the housing association as grant 
coupled with whatever they can raise themselves in the private sector, and they 
can raise increasing amounts in the private sector, should be spent on building 
additional homes.  If they go and buy a home that's already been constructed 
and could be sold to one of the people who'd like to be a home owner, they're 
not adding anything, they are actually taking away from the stock of homes 
available for home ownership.  I want them to add additional homes on top for 
rent, so I don't intend to disadvantage people who don't want to buy a home.  
There will still be a plentiful supply of housing association new property. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But you will in a sense be building - 
and this was the point the film was making - you will in a sense be building 
the ghettos of tomorrow because when they're buying existing homes in existing 
streets, you're mixing Housing Association families, people who are in 
difficult financial situation usually, invariably, in an existing community.  
What you are doing here with your green field or brown field sites is you're 
promoting a kind of ghetto. 
 
REDWOOD:                               No, I'm not. I'm not in favour of 
ghettos and no sensible person is.  I think it's also a very dubious contention 
that all people who live in rented houses.. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              No all, not all but.. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Create ghettos..I think it's a very 
offensive idea. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              No, no, not a ghetto in the sense that 
you're taking it. I mean the fact is you're going to have the same kinds of 
people in a certain area. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well it is still possible for the 
planning system to produce the kind of mixture that you are advocating for the 
purpose of this question.  It is quite possible for them to say that: "yes we 
do want some more Housing Association homes for rent in our community as well 
as new homes for sale and we will mix them up"  and if that's what people want 
to build and that's what people want to buy and rent it can be done.  I won't 
be deciding that because this is a matter which will be decided locally in each 
community because I'm a strong believer that planning decisions should nearly 
always be taken close to people by their elected local authority. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              So, you approve of this policy, clearly. 
Again something that could be spread across the rest of the country do you 
think? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well urban villages are being 
constructed elsewhere. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              No but your particular policy on, for 
instance, Housing Associations? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well I think you'll find that most of 
the money in England is spent on building additional houses and I'm sure my 
English colleagues would agree that most of the money should be spent on 
building additional houses.  We did spend quite a bit of money on buying 
existing homes at one particular point in the recession, when it was a 
deliberate policy, announced by the Chancellor of the Exchequor, to try and 
provide a floor in the housing market.   Things have moved on, the housing 
market has found a floor and so we don't need the same intensity of purchasing 
that we did then. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              And would you like to see your target of 
eighty or ninety per cent home ownership spread across the country, as a target 
for the government? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well I think eighty per cent is a very 
good target.  I've chosen that in Wales because the housing.. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              You've chosen eighty, not ninety? 
 
REDWOOD:                               I've chosen eighty as the immediate 
target because... 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Ninety is the desired target? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Can I try and answer the question.  I've 
chosen eighty per cent because that is what the surveys in Wales say people 
would like to achieve.  There are eight in ten people wishing to own their own 
homes and not all do, so that's the obvious target to chose, it's a democratic 
one already chosen by people's voting themselves in this opinion poll.  England 
might want to do something similar and decide what is the right level for 
England, that's something you must ask my English colleagues.  I think we can 
go higher in the next century.  I think that more people will want to own then 
than currently wish to own but that's a matter of opinion and we'll find out 
nearer the time. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But would you like to see that become a 
Tory Party aspiration? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Home ownership is a Tory Party 
aspiration and a central one - and I think we can do more to promote it and 
that's exactly what I am doing in Wales.  In my own English constituency we 
have a much higher proportion of home ownership already and it is very 
flexible, people can buy and sell. They haven't always liked the prices in the 
last two or three years of course because there has been a sharp reduction in 
the market in the recession, but they can buy and sell, they are freer to move 
than people living in council houses.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Another stage in your crusade, if that's 
the word you perfer to use, is reducing bureaucracy.  You don't believe that's 
gone far enough yet? 
 
REDWOOD:                               No, I think we can do more and my 
colleagues agree with that.  We've set new and tougher targets for many parts 
of the public services over the next two or three years.  This was one of the 
themes of our public expenditure review when the cabinet sat round the table 
and settled that last autumn and I welcome that very much.  In Wales, I'm 
trying to do my bit by trying to reduce the numbers of grey suits and expensive 
motor cars and some of the quangoes of Wales.. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              By twenty-five per cent? 
 
REDWOOD:                               In some cases but not all, it depends on 
the nature of the body and the extent of the overhead. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Which implies there's an awful lot of 
people sitting on their backsides doesn't it? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well there are a lot of people in 
offices. 
HUMPHRYS:                              Doing nothing.  
 
REDWOOD:                               No, they're not doing nothing but there 
are people who I think could be better employed doing other things. I'm not 
making people compulsorily redundant but I am setting targets to control the 
overheads and to get more real work done on the ground.  That's the theme of 
both Virginia Bottomley and I in the Health Service, where we have put joint 
legislation to the House of Commons, saying we want to reduce the number of 
Health Authorities. I'm hoping to reduce the numbers in Wales from seventeen to 
five and I wish to see some office closures, I don't want ward and bed closures 
and that's how I'm going to balance it. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              You said the last public spending round 
was generous, is this one way you want to see a tighter public spending round 
next time, by cutting bureaucracy, getting rid of civil service jobs, quango 
jobs. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well I think we did go quite a long way 
in that direction. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              But not far enough.  
 
REDWOOD:                               ...in that total settlement and you have 
to take these things gradually because you need to be realistic and there are 
jobs that need doing, you can't get rid of all the adminstration clearly, good 
adminstration is a very vital part of good government.  So I'm quite happy with 
the targets for administration which we set, we must now make sure we deliver 
them and next year we might like to think about tightening them further, but 
that's for next year.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Right, so what you said, talking about 
education and housing and the bureaucracy, suggests that even though you didn't 
like the phrase "Thatcherite Revolution" right at the start of this discussion, 
you aren't satisfied that it has been completed, it has to be pushed forward, 
there are still barricades to storm? 
                                                    
REDWOOD:                               Well it's not a Thatcherite Revolution, 
it is a set of common policies for the Conservative Party in the 1990s where 
we've placed a different agenda from that of the eighties. We've cracked a lot 
of the problems in the eighties, like trade unions and strikes and industrial 
disruption and general economic management problems. We now have a new 
generation of problems in the nineties, related to the public services, which I 
and my colleagues are very keen to make sure we sort it out.  We want more 
choice, we want higher standards.  So in that sense there is a continuing 
revolution, a continuing revolution within the public services, for higher 
standards and more choice.  Which is a common Conservative aspiration. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well you say a common Conservative 
aspiration, a continuing revolution.  Douglas Hurd doesn't say that, he says we 
want to stop the permanent revolution, we don't want anymore of it.  So you're 
clearly on the opposite side of the divide to Mr Hurd. 
 
REDWOOD:                               No, no, but that's not your view, 
because Douglas is taking very generally.. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well I'm using his words. 
 
REDWOOD:                               I am a true Conservative like Douglas 
and I agree with him that you don't want change for its own sake and you don't 
want too many changes. There are a lot of things you should keep stable, 
institutions you should support, things you don't go round digging up.  And I 
entirely agree with Douglas on that and I agree with Douglas over the European 
Community for example that we may need a period when less comes forward rather 
than more because we don't want continuous revolution all the time. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well, but he was making a very clear 
point, he was distinguishing between consolidation and continuing revolution 
and you're arguing here, not for consolidation by and large, but for the 
contining revolution. There IS a difference between you - everybody who knows 
your views would say "but of course there's a difference between Mr Redwood and 
Mr Hurd" for instance. 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well I think Douglas Hurd would agree 
with me that we ought to promote home ownership. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Yes.  
 
REDWOOD:                               I think he would agree that we want 
higher standards in schools, I think he would agree that more choice for people 
over school is a very good idea.  So I don't think there is as much 
disagreement as you're trying to imply. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              Well, you see, what you want to do, one 
of the tenets of your belief is that you want to curb the state's excessive 
power. Now Mr Hurd thinks that after sixteen years of Conservative Government 
that has broadly been achieved? 
 
REDWOOD:                               Well I think each day you have to make 
sure that the state does not abuse its power, that it conducts itself well and 
uses its very real powers to do good where those powers need to be applied. But 
of course all Conservatives, and Douglas Hurd would agree with this as well, 
have to make sure each day that the powers of the state are not over-extended 
and are not being used unreasonably.  That is a true Conservative position. 
 
HUMPHRYS:                              What I'm trying to suggest to you is 
that you are absolutely four-square with people like Mr Hurd, people on the 
other side of the ideological divide, both Conservatives admittedly, but 
different kinds of Conservatives and clearly from everything you've said here 
this morning and everything you're seen to be doing in Wales, you have a fight 
upon your hands. 
 
REDWOOD:                               No, I don't agree.  I think I belong to 
a Conservative tradition which believes in raising standards of public services 
but believes that there should be good public services in several areas of our 
public life, believes in a strong market economy, which again is common ground 
because that's the way to create jobs and prosperity and believes that state 
power should always be subject to a democratic test because you don't want it 
to get out of hand.  
 
HUMPHRYS:                              John Redwood, thank you very much.