Sir Simon David JenkinsFSAFRSLFLSW (born 10 June 1943) is a British author, a newspaper columnist and editor. He was editor of the Evening Standard from 1976 to 1978 and of The Times from 1990 to 1992.
In January 2005, he announced he was ending his 15-year association with The Times to write a book, before joining The Guardian as a columnist.[4] He retained a column at The Sunday Times and was a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post.[9] He gave up both on becoming chairman of the
National Trust in 2008, when he also resumed an occasional column for the Evening Standard.[10]
Opinions
In April 2009, The Guardian withdrew one of Jenkins' articles from its website after
African National Congress leader and South African president-elect
Jacob Zuma sued the paper for defamation.[11]The Guardian issued an apology,[12][13] and settled the libel case for an undisclosed sum.[14][15]
In February 2010, Jenkins argued in a Guardian article that British control over the
Falkland Islands was an "expensive legacy of empire" and should be handed over to the
Argentinian government.[16] He argued that they could be leased back under the supervision of the
United Nations and that the 2,500 or so
Falkland Islanders should not have "an unqualified veto on British government policy".[16]
In a piece in The Guardian in June 2010 he wrote that the government should "cut [defence], all £45 billion of it. ... With the end of the
Cold War in the 1990s that threat [of global communism] vanished."[17] In August 2016 he wrote in The Guardian in support of
NATO membership, saying: "It is a real deterrent, and its plausibility rests on the assurance of collective response".[18]
Jenkins voted for the UK to Remain within the European Union in the
2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, arguing in The Guardian that leaving would provide Germany with dominance over the remainder of the union: "It would leave Germany effectively alone at the head of Europe, alternately hesitant and bullying".[19]
Soon after
Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister, Jenkins wrote that his aides were "young, sneakered, tieless image-makers, and fiercely loyal to him." They were "special advisers, thinktanks and lobby groups isolated from the world outside."[20]
In March 2024, Jenkins wrote critically of
NATO's growing recklessness in the
conflict in Ukraine as it "reached predictable stalemate", fearing the war would "run out of control". Jenkins argued that Western Europe had no interest in escalating the war by supplying longer-range missiles, and its interests lay in seeking an early settlement and rebuilding Ukraine. He argued the "crass ineptitude of a quarter of a century of western military interventions" should have taught us lessons to be applied in this conflict.[21]
Books
Jenkins has written several books on the
politics,
history and
architecture of England, including England's Thousand Best Churches[22] and England's Thousand Best Houses.[5] In his 2011 book A Short History of England, he argued that the
British Empire "was a remarkable institution that dismantled itself in good order".[23]
In 2022, Jenkins' book, The Celts: A Sceptical History, stoked some controversy on account of Jenkins incredulous view of the
Celts as a distinct cultural entity. The release of the work was met with a number of hostile reviews from specialists in Celtic studies, with these critics of the book alleging factual errors in the work as well as of the misrepresentation of sources.[24][25][26]
In July 2008, it was announced that he had been chosen as the new chairman of the
National Trust; he took over the three-year post from
William Proby in November of that year.[29] He remained in the post until November 2014.[30]
Personal life and honours
Jenkins married the American actress
Gayle Hunnicutt in 1978;[31] the couple had one son.[32] They separated in 2008[31] and divorced in 2009.[33] He married Hannah Kaye, events producer at
Intelligence Squared, in 2014.[34]
^Jenkins, Simon (2003) "England's Thousand Best Churches", Manchester Memoirs; vol. 140 (2001–02), pp. 10–20 (part of a lecture he gave to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, 29 October 2001)