Public Servant, Secret Agent: The Elusive Life and Violent Death of Airey Neave

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Fourth Estate, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 384 pages
Overlooked by Macmillan and Heath for high office, ostensibly on health grounds, Neave pursued a public life of a very unusual kind: he became conspicuously inconspicuous, operating almost entirely outside the public gaze. During the early 1970s Neave was in contact with anti-Wilson plotters and by 1974 he was calling for Edward Heath's resignation too, seeing weakness in the Tory leader's capitulation to the miners. Thatcher was his crusading angel and he ran a brilliant leadership campaign, fooling more experienced candidates into complacency and securing Thatcher's triumph. She offered him any job in her Cabinet in return. Inexplicably to most he chose Northern Ireland and had prepared the most confrontational and explicitly belligerent strategy ever seen there. A matter of weeks before Thatcher's General Election victory began 18 years of Conservative government, Neave's extraordinary life of intrigue and scheming was ended by a plot he had not foreseen."--BOOK JACKET.

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About the author (2003)

Paul Routledge is political correspondent for the 'Independent on Sunday' and has covered the events in Northern Ireland since the 1960s for 'The Times', the 'Observer' and, most recently, the 'Independent on Sunday'. He is author of two highly acclaimed political biographies, 'Scargill: The Unauthorised Biography' and 'Madam Speaker: The Life of Betty Boothroyd'.

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