2019-10-01_CAR_UK

(Marty) #1

62 CARMAGAZINE.CO.UK | OCTOBER 2019


Ghost and a Jaguar SS100 that he’d owned since his student days.
Big Red had black alloys that, along with the rest of the car, looked like
they’d never been cleaned. This endeared Clark to me immediately. He
liked his cars shabby and well used. He drove that Bentley everywhere.
Going further back, Boris’s hero Winston Churchill was a war reporter
and Nobel prize-winning author, but never wrote about cars to my
knowledge. He did get a Land Rover for his 80th birthday, and his interest
in land transport included championing the development of the first tank,
known as Little Willie, introduced in 1915.
King Alfonso XIII of Spain was a fan of Hispano Suizas – one of the finest
cars of the early 20th century – and Lenin drove a Rolls-Royce. Prince
Charles has an Aston Martin DB6 MkII Volante, his 21st birthday present
from his mother, which now runs on biofuel. Trump has that ludicrous
Cadillac One – custom built on a GMC truck platform and known as The
Beast – and Kim Jong-un has a Mercedes S600. Ex-French PM François
Fillon races classic sports cars and ex-UK science minister Paul Drayson
has competed twice at Le Mans. Respect.
Meanwhile Hitler was a non-driver but also a motoring enthusiast. He
opened the first autobahn, asked Ferdinand Porsche to design a car for the
people, and opened the 1938 Berlin Motor Show.
He also bankrolled the dominant pre-war Mercedes and Auto Union
GP teams. The Hitler flunky who oversaw the Nazi-backed teams, Korps-
führer Adolf Hühnlein, delivered his race reports to the Führer by telegram.
He was very probably the first politician to double as an F1 reporter.

Ex-editor Gavin Green is one of the world’s leading car commentators.
He likes his politicians like he likes his cars – fit for purpose

oris Johnson is the UK’s
first ex-motoring journalist
prime minister. The Right
Honourable Member for
Uxbridge and South Ruislip,
and First Lord of the Treasury,
wrote a car column for the men’s
magazine GQ. He also expressed an
interest in presenting Top Gear, after
Clarkson punched a producer.
I hope Boris makes a better PM than he did a car writer, where
his stories tended to mix sex, technical inaccuracies and verbal flam-
boyance – and were invariably late. ‘It was as though the whole county of
Hampshire was lying back and opening her well-bred legs to be ravished by
the Italian stallion.’ That was Boris on the Ferrari F430.
GQ editor Dylan Jones said Boris’s column was probably the most costly
in the magazine’s history, owing to the parking tickets and other fines. A
biographer, Andrew Gimson, noted that Boris wasn’t just bad at writing
about cars. He was also terrible at driving them.
Now Boris may be our first motoring writer PM, but he’s far from the
first senior politician with a keen interest in cars. Ex-deputy PM John
Prescott famously liked Jaguars so much that he had two (an XJ saloon and
an XJS) and former chancellor Philip Hammond is also apparently a Jaguar
fan. The honourable leftover of the 19th century, Jacob Rees-Mogg, owns
a new Range Rover (and very probably a Victorian horse-drawn Phaeton).
Former Tory party leader Iain Duncan Smith drives a Morgan Plus 4.
Alan Clark is the only other senior UK politician I know of who wrote
about cars. Clark was a fabulous writer (he died in 1999) and his Diaries
was surely the juiciest book on UK politics of the ’90s. Like Boris, he was
part Casanova and part classicist. He wrote for motoring magazines after
coming down from Oxford in the early ’50s. Forty years later, I helped
recruit him to write for our sister title Classic Cars.
When we met for lunch he turned up in a filthy burgundy red Bentley
Continental S, the more powerful version of the mid-’90s Continental R.
This was an old-school Bentley coupe powered by the muscular pushrod
V8 from the Turbo R tuned for 400bhp. He called it Big Red. Most of
Clark’s cars had names. He told me his favourites included a Jaguar XK120,
an old corrugated-bodied Citroën 2CV (‘Looks like a crumpled packet of
Gitanes’), a Bentley R-Type Continental from the 1950s, a Rolls-Royce Silver

Illustration by Peter Strain

B


‘I hope Boris

Johnson makes

a better Prime

Minister than

he did a car

writer’
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