Showing posts with label 'Policy exchange Conservatives'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Policy exchange Conservatives'. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Article Roundup - Attacks on Society, Deceit and Dirty Business


Every now and again I do an article roundup to bring together key articles from a couple of months work.

The first roundup focused on the Lords research and the healthcare takeover of parliament
More...

The second roundup was dedicated to  lobbying following the discovery of a document from a healthcare lobbying group that told the tale of how Sir Stephen Bubb played his part in changing the face of the NHS. In addition it looked at the daily Telegraph’s role in helping promote the message of ‘competition’. More...

This roundup looks at the political connections of two Think Tanks that silently go about producing policy that the government so readily take onboard to leverage public resources into the private companies that fund them. Reform, the BBC, Policy Exchange, Wonga are all in here, as is David Cameron and how the government accepted the recommendations of the ‘Choice and Competition’ working group of the NHS Future Forum before they received the final report. Democracy in this country is in a fragile state.

Please pass on this blog to anyone you know.

1. ‘Just as I was signing off our Panel's report on " Delivering real choice" I get sent a copy of the PM speech announcing he is accepting many of our key recommendations (although we haven't actually given him the report yet!) More

2. Sir Stephen Bubb was a key figure in ensuring private healthcare remained in the Health and Social Care Act following the so-called ‘listening period.’ Read about how he bumped in Lansley and got briefed before appearing on the Health and Social Care bill Committee. More

3. Policy Exchange Links to the Conservative Party. They are a think tank with charity status, but predominantly dream up ideas for privatising. They are meant to be politically ‘independent’, but are linked solely to the Conservative party. More here

4. Reform are according to their website 'keen to involve corporate organisations in our research because their expertise is often left out of the Whitehall policy discussion.’ – See why this is a lie with reports on Aviva, BMI Healthcare, G4Sand see why this makes them a conduitto privatisation. You can also see which of their corporate partners are linked to Lords and MPs. More

5. The BBC failed the people of the UK for whom they are meant to inform. A new report analyses the key stories they missed including the Lords and MPs research. How the BBC betrayed the NHS. More

6. A Complaint was sent to the Charity Commission over the free market think tank Reform. The complaint focused on their political independence and their linksto the Conservative party. The second part of the complaint looked at misleading statements made on their website. We await their response. More...

7. The government want to privatise probations, and it is all linked into the Police Commissioner elections, which will act as an opportunity to pressurise local leaders to outsource other areas such as the fire brigade, the police, ambulance services, of which Reform suggest Police Commissioners should be in charge. More


8. It takes a certain kind of person to run a company that takes advantage of people in desperate times, to squeeze money out of them when they have nowhere else to go. The kind of person who would do such a thing, should be admonished by society for preying on the needy however, this government, who receives money from one of their main funders, sees him as a person to go to for advice and to send senior advisers to lobby on the company's behalf. More

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Policy Exchange links to the Conservative party


Policy Exchange is a right wing free market think tank who provide policy ideas for the Conservative party. They promote privatisation and are funded in part by corporations, although which ones and how much are largely unknown.

They are a charity, and claim political independence, which is absurd. The charity status they have makes a mockery out of both the meaning of the word and the rules of the Charity Commission, which allows such organisations to become a charity in the first place.

The list below is of the think tank trustees with some collected from other sources and some new up to date research. The donations the trustees have given have only gone to the Conservative party.

The current trustees of Policy Exchange are:


Danny Finkelstein: Chairman of the Board – Worked as an advisor to the John Major government - Robert Shrimsley, ‘Spin-doctors in the House’, Financial Times, 7 October 1995 - Policy Unit, Conservative Central Office, 1999–2001.

Theodore Agnew: - Donated £144,000.00 to Conservative Party – British Insurance Executive who is non-executive director of Jubilee Managing Agency Ltd. Appointed non-executive member to the Department for Education board by Michael Gove.[1]

Richard Briance: £15,900 ex chief executive and deputy chairman of finance advisory boutique Hawkpoint partners, joined Edmond de Rothschild as its new UK chief executive.

Simon Brocklebank-Fowler: Founded Cubitt Consulting in 1998 and leads many of the firm's key accounts, which include a quarter of the FTSE100 over the last decade, and a range of growth companies and elite tier service firms. [2] Electoral Commission reveals the company he founded has given £35,622.00 to the Conservative party.

Richard Ehrman: Deputy Chairman of the Policy Exchange Board - was a government special adviser in the Employment Department and the Northern Ireland Office during the 1980s. In the 1990s he was chief leader writer of The Daily Telegraph, and is now a consultant director of the think tank Politeia, and on the board of Policy Exchange. He also runs a commercial property company. [3]Is a consultant director of think tank Politeia.

Robin Edwards: A person named Robin Edwards donated £1,250 to Michael Portillo’s leadership campaign in 2001.

Virginia Fraser:  Is a writer for Homes & Gardens magazine and the widow of Frank Johnson, a former deputy editor of the The Sunday Telegraph (1995-99) and editor of The Spectator. She was appointed a Trustee of the right-wing think-tank Policy Exchange on 31 July 2007. [4]

Edward Heathcoat Amory:Was the Conservative MP for Wells – lost his seat in 2010 – writes for the Daily Mail.

David Meller: £3,000.00 – Former Conservative MP for Putney – former Chief secretary to the Treasury under John Major.

George Robinson: Donated £145,000 to the Conservative party - is the Co-Founder, Partner, and Chief Financial Officer of hedge fund, Sloane Robinson Sloane Robinson LLP. Ordered to pay back millions of pounds in tax after a judge ruled against an offshore scheme he had used to slash his bills.

Robert Rosenkranz: is the CEO of Delphi Financial Group, an insurance holding company on the New York Stock Exchange with assets of $8 billion. He is also the founder of a group of investment and private equity partnerships: Acorn Partners LP and Pergamon Advisors LLC

Robert Rosenkranz – The Rosenkranz Foundation, established by Robert Rosenkranz in 1985, funded a reportfor Policy Exchange upon Boris Johnson’s election, titled: ‘the million vote mandate’, because that’s how many votes Johnson won by in the 2008 election. [5]

Andrew Sells: Treasurer - donated £111,250.00 to the Conservative party

Patience Wheatcroft: - Baroness Wheatcroft: A life peer and long-time supporter of the Conservative party: Business Consultant, DLA Piper (legal services) a global law firm providing lobbying services to “clients in the health and social care sectors”. DLA Piper, which advised ministers on the failed £12 billion IT project for the NHS. Member of the Advisory Board, Pelham Bell Pottinger (financial and corporate communications) - Bell Pottinger whose lobbying clients include Southern Cross, BT Health and AstraZeneca. For more on Pottinger.

Rachel Whetstone: Whetstone is a former conservative party operative, a former chief of staff to Michael Howard[6]the partner of PR operative and Tory speechwriter Steve Hilton. She was appointed a Trustee of the Tory connected think-tank Policy Exchange on 7 July 2003.[7]

Simon Wolfson: Donated £418,350.00 to the Conservative party – Lord Wolfson is a Conservative Peer.

Previous trustees:

Alice Mary Rose Thomson: – Times journalist and supporter of the Conservatives and close friend of David Cameron [8]

Camilla Hilary Cavendish: Journalist for the Times

Charles Moore: Former editor for the Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph and the Spectator – Oliver Letwin is a friend from School and University and is a member of the British American Project

Timothy Steel: Is a Member of Advisory Board of Committed Capital Limited. Mr. Steel serves as the Director and Member of Compensation Committee of Corgi International Ltd.[9]

Companies
Policy Exchange is also supported by a number of corporations including Merck, one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies, the security company Reliance plc, BP, SAB Miller, BSkyB and Bupa.[10]

An investigation of accounts filed with the UK Charity Commission and the US
Internal Revenue Service has also identified the source of over £1 million of funding.

By far the largest of these donors, together making up well over half of the total
accounted for, are the Peter Cruddas Foundation and The Charles Wolfson Charitable. Peter Cruddas resigned following his statement that £250,000 would get you premier league access to the Prime Minister.

Trust. www2.amnesty.org.uk/sites/.../the_cold_war_on_british_muslims.pdf lots more fund references in this PDF


[1] http://www.education.gov.uk/inthenews/inthenews/a0070659/board-members
[2] http://www.cubitt.com/people.php?id=21
[3]http://www.powerbase.info/images/1/14/Richard_Ehrman_First_Post_profile.JPG
[4] http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Virginia_Fraser
[5] http://rosenkranzfdn.org/publicpolicy.html
[6] The Evening Standard (London) October 3, 2006 Tuesday Enigmatic Svengali who took young Tory from rank outsider to contender for No10; Known as 'Dave's Brain' or 'the Guru' by Tory MPs, Steve Hilton is David Cameron the low-profile Director of Strategy could get the Tories back into power, writes Paul Waugh SECTION: A MERGE; Pg. 8
[7] http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Rachel_Whetstone
[8] http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/jun/14/david-cameron-close-friendships-journalists
[9]http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=30839287&privcapId=20823170&previousCapId=20823170&previousTitle=Cazenove%20Capital%20Management%20Limited
[10] http://www.lobbyingtransparency.org/15-blog/general/64-policy-exchange-illuminate-us