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==Reputation== [[File:Sir Alec Douglas-Home (geograph 3131225).jpg|thumb|Statue of Douglas-Home at [[The Hirsel]] by sculptor Professor Bill Scott, unveiled in 1998.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sir Alec Douglas-Home Memorial |url=http://billscottsculptor.co.uk/project/sir-alec-douglas-home/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180206002618/http://billscottsculptor.co.uk/project/sir-alec-douglas-home/ |archive-date=6 February 2018 |access-date=5 February 2018 |publisher=Bill Scott Estate}}</ref>]] Home's premiership was short and not conspicuous for radical innovation. Hurd remarks, "He was not capable of Macmillan's flights of imagination", but he was an effective practical politician.<ref name=dnb/> At the Commonwealth Relations Office and the Foreign Office he played an important role in helping to manage Britain's transition from imperial power to European partner. Both Thorpe and Hurd quote a memo that Macmillan wrote in 1963, intended to help the Queen choose his successor: {{Blockquote|Lord Home is clearly a man who represents the old governing class at its best ... He is not ambitious in the sense of wanting to scheme for power, although not foolish enough to resist honour when it comes to him ... He gives that impression by a curious mixture of great courtesy, and even if yielding to pressure, with underlying rigidity on matters of principle. It is interesting that he has proved himself so much liked by men like President Kennedy and Mr Rusk and Mr Gromyko. This is exactly the quality that the class to which he belongs have at their best because they think about the question under discussion and not about themselves.{{Sfnp|ps=none|Thorpe|1997|p=301}}}} Douglas Hurd, once Home's private secretary, and many years later his successor (after seven intermediate holders of the post) as Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, wrote this personal comment: "The three most courteous men I knew in politics were Lord Home, [[King Hussein of Jordan]], and President [[Nelson Mandela]]. All three had ease of birth, in the sense that they never needed to worry about who they themselves were and so had more time to concern themselves with the feelings of others."<ref name=dnb/> Although some in the Conservative party agreed with Wilson (and [[Jo Grimond]], the Liberal leader) that the Conservatives would have won the 1964 election if Butler had been prime minister, ''The Times'' observed, "it should not be overlooked that in October 1963 Home took over a Government whose morale was shattered and whose standing in the opinion polls was abysmal. A year later Labour won the general election, with an overall majority of only four seats. That [Home] recovered so much ground in so short a time was in itself an achievement." Looking back across Home's career, ''The Times'' considered that his reputation rested not on his brief premiership, but on his two spells as Foreign Secretary: "He brought to the office ... his capacity for straight talking, for toughness towards the Soviet Union and for firmness (sometimes interpreted as a lack of sympathy) towards the countries of Africa and Asia. But he brought something else as well: an unusual degree of international respect."<ref name=timesobit/>
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