Contents
Cover
Title Page
Editors’ Note
1 OPEN GOVERNMENT
2 THE OFFICIAL VISIT
3 THE ECONOMY DRIVE
4 BIG BROTHER
5 THE WRITING ON THE WALL
6 THE RIGHT TO KNOW
7 JOBS FOR THE BOYS
8 THE COMPASSIONATE SOCIETY
9 THE DEATH LIST
10 DOING THE HONOURS
11 THE GREASY POLE
12 THE DEVIL YOU KNOW
13 THE QUALITY OF LIFE
14 A QUESTION OF LOYALTY
15 EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
16 THE CHALLENGE
17 THE MORAL DIMENSION
18 THE BED OF NAILS
19 THE WHISKY PRIEST
20 THE MIDDLE-CLASS RIP-OFF
21 THE SKELETON IN THE CUPBOARD
Copyright
THE COMPLETE YES MINISTER
The Diaries of a Cabinet Minister
by
the Right Hon. James Hacker MP
Edited by Jonathan Lynn and Antony Jay
The BBC TV series
by Jonathan Lynn and Antony Jay and
produced by Sydney Lotterby and Peter
Whitmore. The part of
played by Paul Eddington,
Editors’ Note
Some note of explanation is needed on the methods and guidelines that we have used in reducing these collected diaries of many millions of words to one relatively short volume.
James Hacker kept his diaries from the day on which he first entered the Cabinet. He dictated them into his cassette recorder, sometimes on a daily basis, more often at weekends when he was at his constituency home. His original plan had been simply to make notes for his memory, but he soon realised that there would be intrinsic interest in a diary which gave a daily picture of the struggles of a Cabinet Minister.
Before going into politics full time, Hacker had been first a polytechnic lecturer and, later, Editor of
Apart from the discrepancies, there was also a certain amount of boring repetition, inevitable in the diaries of a politician. Years of political training and experience had taught Hacker to use twenty words where one would do, to dictate millions of words where mere thousands would suffice, and to use language to blur and fudge issues and events so that they became incomprehensible to others. Incomprehensibility can be a haven for some politicians, for therein lies temporary safety.
But his natural gift for the misuse of language, though invaluable to an active politician, was not an asset to a would-be author. He had apparently intended to rewrite the diaries with a view to improving the clarity, accuracy