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Alec Douglas-Home
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=== Appointment === In 1960 the Chancellor of the Exchequer, [[Derick Heathcoat-Amory]], insisted on retiring.<ref>Ramsden John. [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30760, "Amory, Derick Heathcoat, first Viscount Amory (1899β1981)"], ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, January 2011, accessed 28 April 2012 {{Subscription required}}</ref> Macmillan agreed with Heathcoat-Amory that the best successor at the [[HM Treasury|Treasury]] would be the current Foreign Secretary, [[Selwyn Lloyd]].<ref>Thorpe (1997), pp. 205β206</ref> In terms of ability and experience the obvious candidate to take over from Lloyd at the Foreign Office was Home,<ref name=dnb/> but by 1960 there was an expectation that the Foreign Secretary would be a member of the House of Commons. The post had not been held by a peer since [[Lord Halifax]] in 1938β1940; Eden had wished to appoint Salisbury in 1955, but concluded that it would be unacceptable to the Commons.<ref>Dutton, p. 33</ref> [[File:Sir Edward Heath.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Edward Heath]], Home's deputy at the Foreign Office. They later served in each other's cabinets.]] After discussions with Lloyd and senior civil servants, Macmillan took the unprecedented step of appointing two Foreign Office cabinet ministers: Home, as Foreign Secretary, in the Lords, and Edward Heath, as [[Lord Privy Seal]] and deputy Foreign Secretary, in the Commons. With British application for admission to the [[European Economic Community]] (EEC) pending, Heath was given particular responsibility for the EEC negotiations as well as for speaking in the Commons on foreign affairs in general.{{Sfnp|Hutchinson|1980|pp=76β77}} ==== Objection at appointment ==== The opposition Labour party protested at Home's appointment; its leader, [[Hugh Gaitskell]], said that it was "constitutionally objectionable" for a peer to be in charge of the Foreign Office.<ref name=pike462/> Macmillan responded that an accident of birth should not be allowed to deny him the services of "the best man for the job β the man I want at my side".<ref name="pike462">Pike, p. 462</ref> Hurd comments, "Like all such artificial commotions it died down after a time (and indeed was not renewed with any strength nineteen years later when [[Margaret Thatcher]] appointed another peer, [[Lord Carrington]], to the same post)".<ref name=dnb/> The HomeβHeath partnership worked well. Despite their different backgrounds and ages β Home an [[Edwardian]] aristocrat and Heath a lower-middle class meritocrat raised in the inter-war years β the two men respected and liked one another. Home supported Macmillan's ambition to get Britain into the EEC, and was happy to leave the negotiations in Heath's hands.<ref name=dnb/>
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