If you got into a train at Euston, and
started travelling northwards towards
Liverpool, it would be a great surprise if
you finished up in Tunbridge Wells. I had
the same sense of an impossible change of
direction when I learned about Virginia
Bottomley's early life and subsequent career. Her mother was a Conservative
Education councillor, elected after Virginia
Bottomley became an MP, but her uncle
was a Labour Cabinet minister and she
herself was the Labour candidate in her
school's mock election. Then, in the hippy,
radical, mid to late Sixties, she went on to
read sociology at the University of Essex,
surely the most radical of all the university
campuses. After graduation, she went to
work for Frank Field at the Child Poverty
Action Group. Then on to the London
School of Economics to train as a social
worker, before employment as a full-time
social worker for 10 years, first at Brixton
and then at the Camberwell Child Guidance Unit. How on earth could all
that lead
to a safe Conservative seat in Surrey and
then to two Cabinet posts in a Tory
government, first as Secretary of State for
Health and then as Secretary of State for National Heritage?