Eleanor Doughty

What to look for in a post-prime ministerial property

Who wouldn’t want their own little Chequers?

  • From Spectator Life
Chequers in Buckinghamshire, the official country residence of the Prime Minister (Getty)

After the pomp of high office – the convoys of ministerial cars, police on the gates, the £840-a-roll wallpaper – what are a former prime minister and his spouse to do for a home? Boris and Carrie Johnson must be considering their next move. They might be hoping for the kind of arrangement that was put in place when Alec Douglas-Home lost the 1964 election. The new prime minister Harold Wilson ‘kindly put Chequers at our disposal for a day or two,’ Douglas-Home remembered. ‘Then [the hotelier] Sir Hugh Wontner, with great consideration, allowed us to stay in the penthouse at Claridges for a fortnight, so that a sense of perspective and pose was gradually regained.’ Sadly such generosity seems in short supply in the Conservative Party of 2022.

The day the Camerons moved out of Downing Street in 2016, they also had a pal on hand to help out, since their house in Notting Hill still had tenants.

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