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  • ...event at the House of Commons in 2006 where Moonman is a leading light in the [[Association of Former Members of Parliament]]]] ...rs of Congress]], and the [[Inter-University Center for Legal Studies]] of the [[International Law Institute]].">qZVuwzbNcHQ</youtube>
    35 KB (5,091 words) - 15:54, 9 May 2012
  • ...Beattie Media enjoyed remarkable success in attracting clients from across the Scottish public sector. Among the services offered to clients by Beattie are:
    8 KB (1,142 words) - 06:44, 11 September 2015
  • ...king and practice to provide innovative and practical solutions to many of the pressing social, economic and environmental challenges facing Scotland" <re ...volved as three of the SCF&#39;s five trustees are high-ranking members of the SCDI executive and its board and all of them are important members of Scotl
    8 KB (1,134 words) - 14:46, 7 September 2009
  • ...ractices with public affairs / lobbying division playing a leading role in the organisation. [[Alan Boyd]], the first convenor of ASPA, was clear that the organisation should act to resist democratic scrutiny and regulation of lob
    8 KB (1,147 words) - 14:43, 7 September 2010
  • According to its website, the '''Centre for Scottish Public Policy''' (CSPP) is ...ink tank providing a focus for imaginative and innovative policy debate on the key issues facing Scotland.<ref>"[http://www.cspp.org.uk/ Homepage]", CSPP
    12 KB (1,723 words) - 23:19, 6 September 2009
  • ...government. In 2007 the incoming SNP administration changed the name to [[The Scottish Government]]. ...Leith, Pentland House in Gorgie and Chambers Street in central Edinburgh. The [[Scottish Executive Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning Department
    7 KB (898 words) - 21:50, 19 November 2008
  • ...udes information on the integration of 'New Labour' networks with those of the free market right. ...nce services and by the CIA as well as the Atlanticist movement within the labour movement.
    4 KB (582 words) - 11:58, 23 November 2009
  • ...es/7949.html Princeton University Press]. She was a Visiting Professor at the Institute (1/9/02 to 31/12/05). She was paid £15,000 for this on top of he From 1999 to 2002 Wendy was a minister in the [[Scottish Executive]], first as Minister for Communities, then as Minister
    4 KB (565 words) - 19:44, 7 May 2008
  • ...trated a PR campaign in South Africa likely to 'inflame racial discord' in the former apartheid state. ...ter [[Margaret Thatcher]] who ran the Tory Party's publicity campaigns for the 1979, 1983 and 1987 elections. Bell was deputy chairman of [[Lowe Howard-Sp
    58 KB (7,320 words) - 12:42, 20 July 2019
  • ...Q at Millbank on loan from Good Relations, as a senior Press Spokesman for the 2001 election campaign. Is now a a non-executive director at [[Champollion] *[[Peter Bradley]], who became a Labour MP in the 1997 elections, is a former director of Good Relations <ref> David Singleto
    7 KB (785 words) - 12:45, 5 September 2016
  • ...ost other agencies. It is one of a handful of key financial PR agencies in the UK, including: [[FD]], [[Buchanan]], [[Citigate Dewe Rogerson]], [[Pelham P ...es the focus of a story. ‘It's bad manners to get between the client and the footlights,' he reportedly says.<ref>[http://www.brandrepublic.com/InDepth/
    33 KB (4,695 words) - 11:35, 27 January 2017
  • ...ries such as sugar, iron and steel. It campaigned against the creation of the National Health Service in 1945. It was known as [[Aims for Freedom and Ent ...d of Freedom in Britain', 1973 press advert from [[Aims of Industry]] in [[The Times]], 28 December 1973; p. 4; Issue 58974; col A. ]]
    14 KB (1,990 words) - 13:07, 16 October 2011
  • From an Obituary in the Guardian ...was also prominent in other rightwing organisations, including what is now the [[Freedom Association]], which he helped to set up in 1975.
    11 KB (1,708 words) - 12:22, 11 July 2008
  • ...nd to sound out New Labour concepts to the City and vica versa, as part of the &#39;Prawn Cocktail Offensive.&#39; Mulgan&#39;s role in this is noted by :&#39;Mulgan advised me that [the] stakeholder idea had frightened the big end of town and so it had been dropped. Company directors were concern
    2 KB (352 words) - 07:58, 2 September 2014
  • ...www.lwbooks.co.uk/journals/renewal/contents.html Contents], Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 11 February 2012 on 15 July 2016. </ref> ...Lowe Bell]] before starting [[LLM Communications]]. LLM was one of the New Labour Lobbyist companies exposed by [[Greg Palast]]&#39;s 'Lobbygate' secrets-for
    7 KB (947 words) - 10:33, 19 July 2016
  • The Cross Party Group on Obesity in the Scottish Parliament is according, to its website, "a forum for MSPs, health * [[Ross Finnie]](Scottish Liberal Democratic Party)
    2 KB (267 words) - 15:03, 26 October 2010
  • ...ur's outgoing chief whip [[Michael Cocks]],... known chiefly for running [[Labour Friends of Israel]].{{ref|1}} ...ad Ya'acobi]]; Na'amat secretary-general [[Masha Lubelsky]]; and father-of-the-bride/diamond dealer [[Herman Laub]] from Belgium.{{ref|D}}
    5 KB (843 words) - 14:36, 14 June 2007
  • ...ment's cultural propaganda body. The Council even carries a discussion of the its own history on its website which states as much: ...ded the teaching of English, but political messages always came along with the language tuition<ref>Nicholas J Cull [http://www.britishcouncil.org/history
    8 KB (1,098 words) - 01:41, 28 April 2016
  • ...ef>[http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=11341]</ref>. In 2004 CACI was the subject of five different government investigations.<ref><i>News 24</i> [ht ...wo companies named in the report by Major General [[Antonio M. Taguba]] on the [[Abu Ghraib Scandal]]. [[Steven Staphanovic]], one of its employees, was s
    12 KB (1,854 words) - 17:55, 26 August 2008
  • ...ly 20 employees and 30 clients. In 2003 [[Neal Lawson]] sold his shares in the company which completed a Management Buy Out.<ref>[http://www.cobaltcf.com/ ...a Blairite internet discussion forum. He has boasted of helping [[GTech]], the discredited Lottery company, to win their Lottery contract.
    6 KB (964 words) - 23:08, 7 October 2014
  • ...itician who held prominent positions in several minor parties, drifting to the hard right and becoming an anti-communist activist. Smith trained as a school teacher, and later worked as a tutor for the [[Workers' Educational Association]].
    3 KB (407 words) - 08:15, 31 October 2008
  • Halogen provides the following services: public relations; political relations and lobbying; and ...h is now essential in the increasingly complicated and complex Scotland of the twenty first century.'
    7 KB (1,032 words) - 03:20, 13 October 2015
  • ===Business in the Parliament=== ...e press release from the parliament announced that the delegates were &#39;the people driving Scotland's economy.&#39; (&#39;SCOTLAND'S BUSINESS PEOPLE TA
    7 KB (986 words) - 12:51, 10 November 2008
  • The '''Agricultural Biotechnology Council''' (abc) represents the interests of genetically modified (GM) crop companies in Britain. ...l information and education about the agricultural use of GM technology in the UK, based on respect for public interest, opinions and concerns.'
    3 KB (483 words) - 00:39, 21 November 2017
  • ...ttinger Communications]], one of the largest public relations companies in the United Kingdom. It went into administration in September 2017. BPPA previously operated within the public relations division of [[Chime Communications]] plc, until a manageme
    51 KB (6,350 words) - 06:29, 16 July 2019
  • ...imes, 4 December 2004.</ref> was a founder of the [[Bilderberg Group]] and the [[1001 Club]]. ...fact which was examined by a Dutch inquiry after he met [[Queen Juliana of the Netherlands|Crown Princess Juliana]]:
    11 KB (1,639 words) - 22:25, 2 June 2012
  • ...R and lobbying company [[Lexington Communications]]. He is a former Labour Party adviser. ...avoid more 'cash for access' scandals (other clients include [[Novartis]], the GM food company).
    3 KB (472 words) - 13:55, 21 July 2015
  • ...http://conservativehome.blogs.com/centreright/2009/03/the-growth-of-b.html The growth of Britain's conservative movement], ConservativeHome, 14 March 2009 ...Street]], London SW1 - shared with [[New Culture Forum]] and next door to the [[Centre for Policy Studies]]]]
    37 KB (5,383 words) - 10:09, 30 January 2023
  • ...|150px|''Preparing for Power: The Programme of the Revolutionary Communist Party'', London: [[Junius Publications]], first published July 1983]]{{Powerbase: [[Image:The Red Front.jpg|thumb|right|150px|The cover of the [[RCP]]'s ''The Red Front: A platform for working class unity'', their 1987 election manife
    17 KB (2,452 words) - 09:43, 10 January 2019
  • ...conomic development'. <ref> DFID [http://www.dfid.gov.uk/About-us/History/ The creation of DfID], acc 12 December 2011 </ref> [[CDC]], formerly the Commonwealth Development Corporation, is the private equity arm of DfID.
    26 KB (3,751 words) - 10:03, 4 September 2017
  • ...[[European Public Affairs Consultants Association]] and the webmaster for the [[European Corporate Governance Institute]]. His website also gives the names of the following contacts as referees:
    2 KB (293 words) - 17:54, 8 January 2011
  • ...Care]] from 2007-2011, and between 2003-2004 he had a regular column in [[The Lancet]], for whom he contributed 31 articles in this period, contributing ==Revolutionary Communist Party==
    119 KB (16,177 words) - 08:21, 6 November 2021
  • ...Andrews University. He was one of the foremost academic terrorologists in the UK and served as an active propagandist for Western state interests through ...ary 2003</ref> where he served for six years until 1965 when he retired at the rank of Flight Lieutenant.<ref>entry in ''Debrett's People of Today'' (Debr
    96 KB (14,650 words) - 11:21, 10 November 2013
  • ...the political and procedural dynamic of the [[European Parliament]] and of the Brussels political environment more generally. ...e development of legislation on all these issues and liaising closely with the UK Environment Ministry.
    7 KB (1,008 words) - 15:58, 10 September 2010
  • ...the journal she edited at the time: ''[[Irish Freedom]]'' the bulletin of the [[Irish Freedom Movement]], Issue 18 Summer 1992.]] ...ironmental [[LM network]] and its precursor, the [[Revolutionary Communist Party]].
    19 KB (2,774 words) - 14:11, 17 August 2013
  • ==Perverting the foot and mouth vaccination plan== ...sly slaughtered, often under inhumane conditions. It could also have saved the taxpayer hundreds of thousands of pounds in compensation, culling, and buri
    20 KB (3,012 words) - 15:08, 10 July 2007
  • ...and thought-provoking discussions with researchers and peers turns some of the UK’s brightest bioscience undergraduates on to a future in plant science' ...al source of funding, although it also receives over £800,000 a year from the [[Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council]] (BBSRC) , for whi
    18 KB (1,944 words) - 15:56, 16 April 2024
  • ...& Knowlton''' (H&K) was for many years the largest PR and lobbying firm in the world. ...moral rudder'.<ref>Andrew Rowell, Green Backlash – Global Subversion of the Environment Movement, Routledge, 1996, p122</ref>
    42 KB (5,421 words) - 02:12, 1 February 2018
  • ...m, the [[Bell Pottinger]] Group based in a part of the business known as [[The Collective]], a consultancy that deals with UK and international clients th ...e included Chile's [[General Augusto Pinochet]], South Africa's [[National Party]], and Milosevic-led Yugoslavia.
    5 KB (705 words) - 10:27, 27 January 2015
  • ...ependent forum for the exchange of views and information on food policy in the UK Parliament. Our objectives are to stimulate well-informed debate as a re *Chair: Sir [[David Amess]] - [[Conservative Party]]
    13 KB (1,653 words) - 09:53, 10 May 2016
  • '''Mick Hume''' is associated with the libertarian and anti-environmentalist [[LM network]]. [[File:Mick_Hume.jpg| ...f [[Brendan O'Neill]] but continues to write for Spiked. He also speaks at the [[Battle of Ideas]]. <ref>[http://www.battleofideas.org.uk/index.php/2010/s
    171 KB (22,329 words) - 16:34, 5 June 2017
  • ...998 Mandelson eased [[Matthew Taylor]] into Holtham's old IPPR job.<ref> ''The Guardian'' 1 June 2001 </ref> Manager of [[Norwich Union]]'s £106bn 'socia ...iscussion.] Edited by David Halpern, with David Mikosz </ref> Connected to the [[Brookings Institution]] and a member of '[[Citizens for Europe]]' with [[
    3 KB (498 words) - 16:14, 10 March 2008
  • ...on Brian Walden <ref>Andy Beckett, ''When the Lights Went Out: Britain in the Seventies'' (London: Faber & Faber, 2009) p.275</ref></CENTER> ...a former right-wing Labour MP who later became the long time presenter of the Sunday current affairs programme ''[[Weekend World]]''. He was close to a
    6 KB (948 words) - 15:22, 3 March 2015
  • ...as 'a little-known outsider, a self-styled "rank and file" candidate' for the SDP presidency in 1981.' ...hat he had a considerable transatlantic role before and during the life of the SDP. [http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/articles/l31whowh.htm]
    2 KB (303 words) - 18:13, 24 July 2006
  • ...he US Embassy in London from 1953 to 1959. Later European Co-ordinator for the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]]. ...uary of Mr Joseph Godson, Determined champion of Anglo-American relations, The Times, 6 September 1986.</ref>
    19 KB (2,879 words) - 15:33, 23 July 2014
  • ...chairs the Annual [[Herzliya Conference]] Series. He is also an Advisor to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.<ref>[http://www.idc.ac.il/en ...in the Air Force.<ref>Uzi Arad: Out of the shadows, into the line of fire, The Jerusalem Post, 17 October 1997.</ref>
    60 KB (9,278 words) - 12:20, 3 April 2013
  • ...age:Connection-out.jpg|300px|right|thumb|The view out to High Holborn from the Connection]]{{Template:Lobbying_Portal_badge}} ...interests of the pesticides industry. Lexington also had [[Monsanto]] and the [[Agricultural Biotechnology Council]] listed among its clients in 2008-09.
    64 KB (7,145 words) - 05:44, 6 March 2018
  • ...he drive to modernise left-wing politics and move the Labour Party towards the market. *[[Australia and New Zealand School of Government]], senior fellow. The School is run by another former Demos director [[Tom Bentley]]<ref>http://w
    12 KB (1,720 words) - 09:30, 14 July 2016
  • ...unded by the [[Nuffield Foundation]], the [[Medical Research Council]] and the [[Wellcome Trust]]. ...ubts about the safety of GM foods. Their publication also followed hard on the heels of a British Medical Association report calling for an indefinite mor
    15 KB (2,409 words) - 14:55, 4 September 2009
  • Dame '''Bridget Ogilvie''' is the Vice Chair of the controversial pro-GM lobby group [[Sense About Science]].<ref>[http://web.a ...went on to become the director of the [[Wellcome Trust]] (1991-98), one of the world's largest medical research bodies.
    4 KB (714 words) - 17:17, 17 December 2009
  • .../www.guardian.co.uk/politics/page/2007/dec/20/8 Thinktanks in the news], ''The Guardian'', Accessed 09-June-2009</ref>. ....uk/business/2005/jul/31/thinktanks.politics The marketing of Blairism], ''The Guardian'',31-July-2005, Accessed 09-June-2009</ref>.
    17 KB (2,112 words) - 16:22, 29 April 2015
  • ...ic Policy Research''' (IPPR )is a UK think tank with links to the [[Labour Party]]. It describes itself as "progressive". ...IPPR website, the organisation was "founded by Lord Hollick who developed the idea for an independent progressive think tank in 1986". <ref>Institute for
    7 KB (1,085 words) - 14:03, 29 August 2012
  • ...he UK's largest advertising agency, which is, in turn, ultimately owned by the global communications group [[Omnicom]]. It has worked for some of the most controversial corporations, including [[Shell]] and [[British American
    41 KB (5,204 words) - 13:23, 3 March 2017
  • ...adge}}'''Connect Public Affairs''' is a Westminster-based lobbying firm in the UK. *[[Gill Morris]], chief executive. Morris is the former Chair of the [[Association of Professional Political Consultants]] and as of February 20
    40 KB (4,496 words) - 16:36, 23 December 2016
  • ...though its main impetus in Europe seems to have come from pro US forces in the UK including those with close links to NATO and other Atlanticist groups. ...r debate about the relationship between America and Europe while promoting the benefits of a strong and stable Atlantic community of nations.
    8 KB (1,178 words) - 07:41, 24 February 2011
  • Some of the the services offered by Greenhaus include: * identifying and designing the appropriate political strategy, specific to the clients needs.
    8 KB (1,084 words) - 15:36, 27 January 2017
  • ...1E - the office block also houses [[NHS England]] and the [[Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry]]]] ...st independently owned PR company with 46 offices and 50 affiliates around the world.
    68 KB (8,353 words) - 13:31, 3 March 2017
  • [[File:Scientific logo.png|right|thumb|300px|The Scientific Alliance Logo]] ...ws of the green lobby should be challenged, according to a new alliance]", The Guardian, 11 July 2001, accessed 28 April 2009</ref>
    30 KB (4,547 words) - 04:42, 25 July 2015
  • ...ing firm now known as [[Fleishman Hillard]]. GPC was centrally involved in the 'Drapergate' scandal over cash-for-access. (See also [[GPC Scotland]]) ...ering access to ministers and senior civil servants in return for cash. Of the British Government, Draper said:
    10 KB (1,466 words) - 09:49, 25 April 2008
  • ...al for a minister to stay in the same job so long. He was also a member of the cabinet biotechnology committee, [[Sci-Bio]], responsible for national poli He was a key donor to Blair's Labour Party, giving Labour its biggest ever single donation in September 1997. On October 3 1997 he wa
    40 KB (5,611 words) - 08:19, 17 January 2020
  • ..._navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false The Road from Mont Pelerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective]'' (Harvard University Press, 2009) p.87</ref He received an honorary degree in 1999 from the [[University of Buckingham]].
    5 KB (655 words) - 18:03, 13 November 2012
  • The [[Social Issues Research Centre]] (SIRC) calls itself ...reports.<ref>SIRC. [http://www.sirc.org/news/sirc_in_the_news.html SIRC in the news], Accessed 17 December 2009.</ref>
    31 KB (4,583 words) - 17:21, 12 March 2012
  • ...2006) was a journalist and neoliberal activist best known for co-founding the [[Centre for Policy Studies]] with [[Margaret Thatcher]] and [[Keith Joseph ...nathan Glancey, '[http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,395350,00.html G2: The Tory: Alfred Sherman]', ''Guardian'', 10 November 2000</ref>
    15 KB (2,137 words) - 03:10, 16 June 2015
  • ...ent]], 1978: [[David Leigh]] 'Death of the department that never was'. ''[[The Guardian]]'', 27 January 1978, p. 13.]] ...977. The last head of the IRD was [[Ray Whitney]], later a [[Conservative Party]] member of parliament and junior minister.
    24 KB (3,564 words) - 17:08, 19 November 2017
  • ...APPC'', 24th May 2013, accessed 17 October 2014 </ref> and deputy chair of the [[European Centre for Public Affairs]]<ref name="MP"> [http://www.govknow.c ...Grayling ''The Independent'' newspaper reported Burrell revealing some of the industry's lobbying tactics:
    6 KB (1,009 words) - 17:10, 30 October 2014
  • ...about Science]] are both part of the [[LM]] network and both studied under the [[LM]] network's leading light [[Frank Furedi]]. ....org/archive2.asp?arcid=6115 The March of Unreason: Science, Democracy and the New Fundamentalism] April 15 2005.</ref>:
    19 KB (2,922 words) - 14:33, 22 September 2015
  • ...endowment by the [[Millenium Commission]] to fund pet projects and aid in the privatising of public services. {{ref|enterprising}} ...onomics Editor Sunday Times, formerly [[Brunswick Group]] now Barclays and the Monopolies and Mergers Commission.
    8 KB (1,188 words) - 19:02, 27 March 2007
  • ...political landscape of the post-war UK including the [[Economic League]], The [[Council on Foreign Relations]], [[Common Cause]] ==Part 1: Clearing the ground: the unions, socialism and the state==
    178 KB (28,232 words) - 12:30, 7 September 2022
  • ...try Guardian]]. Since 1975 he has been a Professor of Energy Conversion at the [[University of Newcastle]], which also uses Fells Associates for PR servic From 2003 until September 2005 Fells was the chairman of the New and Renewable Energy Centre (NaREC) in Blyth. <ref>[http://www.fellsass
    13 KB (2,060 words) - 16:50, 13 January 2010
  • ...cy unit. He was also head of policy and message for Scottish Labour during the 2001 General election. ...ie Maxton]], John Maxton's son is today an employee of [[Green-Haus]].<ref>The parliamentary report can be found at: http://www.publications.parliament.uk
    2 KB (247 words) - 18:48, 6 May 2008
  • ...Communications". It has absorbed the group of firms formerly trading under the name [[GPC International]]. ...served as EMEA president for the company for the fours year leading up to the appointment. He will be moving to Fleishman's global HQ in St Louis.<ref>[h
    37 KB (4,497 words) - 00:10, 9 November 2018
  • ...don]] and was instrumental in the founding of the establishment think tank the [[International Institute of Strategic Studies]] based in London. ...War]], Howard was commissioned in the [[Coldstream Guards]] and fought in the Italian Campaign. He was twice wounded and won a [[Military Cross]] at Sale
    14 KB (2,040 words) - 22:22, 11 April 2013
  • ...oviding "an integrated service advising on all areas of communication with the global financial community, including financial media, political & regulato ...r]] and [[James Murgatroyd]] shared another £14 million between them from the sale.<ref>ref needed</ref>
    32 KB (4,083 words) - 15:32, 10 December 2019
  • ...fessional Political Consultants Scotland]], and in London as a Director of the British [[APPC]] (since 2005) and its Chair since 2008. ...viously he was partner at lobbying firm [[College Public Policy]], part of the [[College Hill]] communications group, having sold his lobbying firm [[Prec
    20 KB (3,035 words) - 01:29, 23 August 2017
  • '''The Whitehouse Consultancy''' is a commercial lobbying firm based in London, es It was formerly known as [[Good News Communications Limited]]. The name was changed to Whitehouse on 4 January 2002.<ref>
    37 KB (4,488 words) - 08:44, 25 July 2016
  • ...6-Congress-Final Where are they now? The 1997/1998 Special Advisers to the Labour Government]", ''GMB: April 2006 Briefing'', p13, accessed 12.09.10</ref> He ...mer Director of the [[Prima Europe]] PR consultancy, which was involved in the "Lobbygate" scandal involving his friend [[Derek Draper]]. <ref>Nyta Mann [
    4 KB (527 words) - 11:24, 19 September 2010
  • ...ndwick Worldwide]] under the name [[Weber Shandwick GJW Public Affairs]]. The ultimate owner is [[Interpublic]]<ref>Weber Shandwick [http://www.webershan The Edinburgh office was run by [[Sam McEwan]], who now runs [[McEwan Purvis]]
    2 KB (394 words) - 15:05, 20 September 2011
  • ...edged £100,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in April 1999 and gave £12,000 in the same year. He paid more than £5,000 for fund-raising dinner tickets in 199 ...so a Director of [[Schulte GmbH]] and a non-executive Director of [[WPP]], the advertising and marketing group run by Lord [[Martin Sorrell]].
    1 KB (186 words) - 22:37, 23 February 2007
  • ...ave or Gordon emerge as best man?; There'll be wall-to-wall FTSE bosses as the City's top spin doctor weds in London today ... BYLINE: RICHARD PENDLEBURY According to an [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/story/0,9061,1583163,00.html Observer profile]:
    12 KB (1,868 words) - 09:35, 13 March 2018
  • ...UK's leading financial PR men (alongside [[Roland Rudd]]). He is close to the UK's political elite. ...ting one observer to ask - was the prime minister getting two advisers for the price of one?<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jul/14/mediatop1002
    17 KB (1,980 words) - 16:02, 3 April 2015
  • ...l and corporate PR and lobbying firm with offices in Europe, the US, Asia, the Middle East and South Africa. It was bought by business advisory firm [[FTI ...ng services group”. The Financial Times wrote that the deal underlies “the increasing value that corporate clients place on issues such as reputation
    9 KB (1,235 words) - 21:19, 13 December 2011
  • ...03 Mr Jamie Reed MP] ''www.parliament.uk'', accessed 18 May 2015 </ref> In the 2015 election Reed was re-elected with a majority of 2,564. <ref> [http://w ...-by-election/ Labour MP Jamie Reed quits sparking Copeland by-election], ''The Telegraph'', 21 December 2016, accessed 21 December 2016. </ref>
    8 KB (1,138 words) - 17:40, 21 December 2016
  • ...ndragon''' is a London-based crisis communication and lobbying company and the European affiliate of [[Nichols-Dezenhall]]. ...., while Luther Pendragon helps Nichols-Dezenhall battle crises in Europe. The affiliation also gives Nichols Dezenhall access to top-flight resources in
    38 KB (4,359 words) - 01:09, 21 August 2017
  • ...December 14, 2007, p23</ref> The company has strong ties to the [[Labour Party]] through its CEO [[Colin Byrne]]. For information on its lobbying work in the UK, see [[Weber Shandwick Public Affairs]].
    75 KB (8,878 words) - 03:30, 8 January 2018
  • ...access to MPs at Westminster. It provided the model for the development of the [[Scottish Parliament Business Exchange]]. ...tual understanding between business and Parliament for the public benefit. The Trust is independent, non-partisan and non-lobbying.
    16 KB (2,396 words) - 06:56, 16 October 2014
  • ...ree Press'' newspaper, he was a journalist until he became a Labour MP for the Scottish constituency Cunninghame North in 1987. <ref>[http://www.niauk.org ...Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office; Minister of State for the Scotland Office and Deputy Spokesperson, Trade and Industry. <ref>[http://w
    10 KB (1,512 words) - 15:51, 10 September 2012
  • ...Association]] (NIA) is the trade association and "representative voice" of the UK’s civil nuclear industry. It represents almost 60,000 UK nuclear worke *For an overview of NIA lobbying up until 2007 see [[Lobbying by the NIA in the mid-noughties]].
    16 KB (2,294 words) - 01:24, 10 March 2015
  • ==In bed with the sceptics== ...d close involvement with the known climate sceptic and pro-GM organisation the [[Scientific Alliance]] in their joint quest to push nuclear power.
    14 KB (2,235 words) - 14:43, 8 November 2012
  • ...is the former chairman of [[Northern Foods]] and [[Express Dairies]].<ref>The ''Guardian'', [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,,596532,00.h ==New Labour supporter and adviser==
    20 KB (2,963 words) - 18:29, 16 November 2015
  • ...and health and safety activists from the largest construction projects in the country. ...” targeted at the workforce of local members’ factories, and a against the ‘subversion” of trade union activism and left of centre political parti
    111 KB (15,701 words) - 15:53, 1 October 2014
  • ...a meeting in 4 Deans Yard, Westminster in 1919. It later became known as the [[Economic League]]. Mike Hughes give the following account of its origins in his book ''[[Spies at Work]]'':
    7 KB (1,023 words) - 16:08, 10 March 2015
  • ...enscorrodale) is a [[Labour]] peer in the House of Lords, having joined on the 28 June 2010.<ref name="parl"> [http://www.parliament.uk/biographies/lords/ He was the First Minister of Scotland from 2001 to 2007.
    5 KB (744 words) - 12:23, 22 December 2014
  • ...lear and energy industries." <ref>[http://www.allparty-nuclear.org.uk/ All Party Parliamentary Group on Nuclear Energy]</ref> ...vide a broad level of information and briefings for parliamentarians about the commercial nuclear industry in Britain and overseas, and to enable discussi
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  • Butler Kelly is a cross-Party public affairs consultancy set up in 1998 by directors [[Phil Kelly]] and [ Butler and Kelley started their business association in 1995 with the formation of a public affairs unit in [[Grandfield Public Affairs]]<ref>[ht
    7 KB (906 words) - 15:15, 28 April 2015
  • ...r 2009 this website is defunct and the text is no longer available even in the web archive.</ref> It functions to support NATO and Western military inter ...h these organisations had a long history of supporting the Alliance but in the post Cold War period it was felt that there was sufficient overlap to bring
    8 KB (1,131 words) - 10:18, 30 April 2018
  • ...leadership of the Conservative Party in 1990 and latterly the Chairman of the [[Royal Bank of Scotland]]. He died in January 2003. ...e to enter Parliament. Following in the footsteps of his great-grandfather the 1st Viscount, Younger became Member of Parliament for Ayr in 1964. A summar
    4 KB (657 words) - 07:55, 18 August 2017
  • ...ntic Understanding]] (TUCETU) is an Atlanticist organisation with links to the CIA. It is an especially obscure organisation, with only about 100 hits on ...p://www.marxist.com/Europe/galloway.html No to witch-hunts in the Labour Party] last accessed 4th October 2007 </ref>
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  • ...Moderates'. An article by Seumas Milne and David Osler was published in'' The Guardian ''Sept. 9, 1995.'' '''Big Business and the Moderates - open the books'''
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  • #[[Committee for a Free Britain]] needs references to all the claims and formatting - mostly done. Two refs to wikipedia need replaced ...nks need to be ported to the new ff format + there are orphan ff + some of the links are dead + there are many (ref?) + maybe some sections can be condens
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  • ...ities. <ref> [http://www.labour.org.uk/shadow-cabinet The Shadow Cabinet], Labour.org, accessed 24 Sept 2013 </ref> ...ay 2015, Cooper announced her intentions to stand as the new leader of the party.<ref> Stephen Bush [http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/05/and-were-y
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  • ...in government he was the UK Shadow Chancellor. He is married to the former Labour Health Minister and now Shadow Home Secretary [[Yvette Cooper]]. ...of England and caused a row when Brown made him Chief Economic Adviser to the Treasury, bypassing official procedures.
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  • ...hman-Hillard]], a member of the Conservative party and a Tory candidate in the 2005 General Election. During the 2005 election campaign Spinwatch [http://www.spinwatch.org/modules.php?name
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  • ...ncome at the time was $3 million a year). He gave £10,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in March 1999. ...ices in Brussels, Strasbourg and Geneva. Adamson is the former Chairman of the [[EU Committee of British Chambers of Commerce]]. BSMG Worldwide's income i
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  • ...l elite planning groups (the others being the [[World Economic Forum]] and the [[Bilderberg Group]]). ...ades. ..."trilateralism" refers to the doctrine of world order advanced by the Commission...
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  • ...alth (2007-09) and Home Secretary (2009-2010). He was Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer until he resigned for personal reasons in January 2011. ..."Alan Johnson: This job's a Laugh, Even When your Enemies go Nuclear"], ''The Independent'', January 29, 2006.</ref>
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  • ...and campaigns on behalf of all nuclear workers and communities throughout the UK. ...anges to improve our organisation and our effectiveness including adopting the new name of nUKlear 21."
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  • The Trades Union Congress is the main umbrella organisation for Britain's trade unions. ...also reaffirmed the TUC's commitment to a "balanced energy policy". Moving the C15 motion, Peter Clements from [[PROSPECT]] said: " Nuclear power should h
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  • ...was founded in 1889 and has over 600,000 members working in every area of the UK economy.<ref name="Hist"> GMB, [http://www.gmb.org.uk/about/history/abou ...in the [[Labour Party]] and have been one of the biggest donors to the the party.
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  • ...ears, first at Westminster and then at Holyrood. His constituency included the Torness nuclear power station near Dunbar. From 1997-1999 he was the Parlimentary Private Secretary to the pro-nuclear Dr [[Jack Cunningham]] MP.
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  • ...abour.org.uk/people/entry/elaine-murray Elaine MurrayMSP], Scottish Labour Party website, undated, acc 16 October 2013 </ref> Murray's constituency includes the [[Chapelcross]] nuclear plant that is now being decommissioned.
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  • ...P for Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale, whose constituency includes the Chapelcross nuclear plant. ...MP in Scotland, he was appointed the secretary of state for Scotland after the May 2015 general election.<ref> ITV News [http://www.itv.com/news/update/20
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  • ...ww.prweek.com/article/1108089/public-affairs-week-lobbying Public Affairs: The Week in Lobbying], ''PR Week'', 9 December 2011 </ref> ...ealth. Associate [[George Hall]] was also EU issue manager on eCommerce in the [[Trans Atlantic Business Dialogue]].
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  • ...dent of the [[Energy Industries Club]], and a former [[MEP]] from [[Labour Party]] (19.07.1994-13.07.2009).<ref>European Parliament, [http://www.europarl.eu *Chairman, Delegation for relations with the countries of South Asia
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  • ...in February 2002. She was Senior Press and Broadcast Officer of the Labour Party from 1993-7. {{ref|1}} =='Hammer of the trots'==
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  • ...fermlinelabour.org.uk/index.php/biography Biography], Thomas Docherty MP], Labour website, accessed 2 September 2012 </ref> He is PPS to [[Angela Eagle]] MP, Shadow Leader of the House.<ref name="MP"/>
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  • ...k, Hansard 16 July 2009.</ref> More recently he has acted as an adviser to the [[House of Lords]] enquiry on shale gas. ...a visiting professor at [[Kings College London]], energy policy adviser at the [[Cavendish Laboratory]] in Cambridge, and a Senior Adviser to [[Coller Cap
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  • ...g leader of the Labour Party. Prior to this he served as the Chancellor of the Exchequer under Tony Blair from 1997 to 2007. ...EDF Energy's Head of Press on 13 September 2004. Previously, he worked for the lobbying company [[Weber Shandwick]].<ref>No named author, ''Private Eye''
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  • ...rld and largest in the UK, whose ultimate owner is [[Interpublic]], one of the big three global communications conglomerates. ...rs, Charles Barker Public Affairs. WSPA describes its staff as “spanning the political spectrum and including former special advisors, election aides an
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  • :150 The Broadway ...cialists we believe that everyone should have the chance to share fully in the civic, economic and cultural life of our society.
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  • ...ur MP for Barrow and Furness between April 1992 and April 2010. He entered the House of Lords on 1 July 2010. <ref> They Work For You [http://www.theywork ...became a law lecturer at [[Northumbria University]], before being elected the MP for Barrow and Furness in 1992. He is a friend and former flatmate of ke
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  • ...eral party. In 1966, Morris served as an informer for the secret police on the campus of Cape Town University, later becoming a key state witness in vario ...nda front organization" and "a direct copy of the British '[[Institute for the Study of Conflict]]' but not half as good."{{ref|129}}
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  • ...9 MEPs for the North West Region of England, the Labour Party having 3 of the 9. ===Chair of Pro-Nuclear Forum at the EU===
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  • ...German political foundation closely associated with the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Much of it's work is concerned with policy research, howe ==The Foundation==
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  • ...Europe make understanding how the EU works a pleasure, not a chore - hence the magazine&#39;s appeal to businessmen and policy-makers alike'. 'E!Sharp is now being widely read in Brussels and in national capitals around the EU, with subscribers ranging from EU ambassadors and policy-makers to chief
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  • The [[New Health Network]] says it :brings together the worlds of medicine, management, politics and business to inspire debate, in
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  • ...er 2013 </ref> His constituency has been known as Glasgow North West since the May 2005 general election. ...tson lost his seat in the 2015 general election to the [[Scottish National Party]]'s [[Carol Monaghan]] by 10,364 votes.<ref> BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk
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  • ...shire Police. He was a policeman for 36 years{{ref|2}} and was nicknamed 'the Black Night' since he dressed entirely in black and drove a black Porsche. ...on feature of his career. In August last year he criticised the clarity of the cannabis debate among politicians and public figures, which he said was enc
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  • ==History of the Fabian Society== ...General known for delaying battle until the right moment. Early members of the Fabian Society included [[George Bernard Shaw]], [[Emmeline Pankhurst]] and
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  • ...a free market think-tank which describes itself as ‘an independent, non-party think-tank whose mission is to set out a better way to deliver public servi They ‘believe that by liberalising the public sector, breaking monopoly and extending choice, high quality service
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  • ...interests on the SSAC website dicloses that he is a member of the [[Labour Party]] and a Director of [[Young Enterprise UK]].{{ref|Kuyl}} He is according to the SSAC [http://www.scottishscience.org.uk/main_files/membs.htm website]:
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  • ==The Pro-Nuclear Cabinet== ...to nuclear power; two if they were "For" it and one if they were "Wary". The results were as follows:
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  • ...nion. It has more than 120,000 members employed in building trades in both the private and public sectors. {{ref|biog}} ...- has an important role to play as a provider of baseload power well into the 21st century&#39;. {{ref|spec}}
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  • ...ght|thumb|Malcolm Wicks MP at the Nuclear Industry Association stand, 2005 Labour Conference]] '''Malcolm Wicks''' (1947-2012) was a British Labour Party politician from 1992 until his death in September 2012. He served as a mini
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  • ...ozier <ref>cited in Richard Norton-Taylor, 'With the right on his side', ''The Guardian'', 4 August 1993</ref></CENTER> ...University]]'s [[Hoover Institution]]. He died on his birthday in 2012 at the age of 94.<ref>Richard Norton-Taylor, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2
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  • (This is a separate article on the history of the BAP, also see the current profile on [[BAP]]) The British American Project for the Successor Generation
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  • ...s Organizing Director at [[MoveOn.org]]. In 2005 he worked in the [[Labour Party]] election team. [[Image:Exley.jpg|Zack Exley|180px|right|thumb]] ''The 'Garbage man', Zack Exley''</div>
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  • ...h secretary [[Paul Murphy]] and was once described as 'a protege of fallen Labour spin supremo [[Peter Mandelson]]'. ...he same time as completing a postgraduate diploma in journalism studies at the [[University of Westminster]] from 1991 to 1993.
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  • ...ormed the basis of party policy when in government. The modus operandi for the LFIG was to meet with shadow ministers and to host 'private seminars and di ...ket for PFI business, or in lobby-speak, they would help interpret the New Labour policy agenda for their private sector clients.
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  • ...0,1041,sid%253D1014,00.html About Deliotte Touche] accessed 31.01.07</ref> The parent group is Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. ...he [[UK Competition Commission]] for being "insufficiently independent" of the City.
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  • ...est happy development in the warm relationship between the sport and "new" Labour. ...as since turned to more subtle methods by employing the services of one of the best-connected lobbying firms, [[Sovereign Strategy]].
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  • Sir '''Charles Dunstone''' (born in 1964) is the founder and CEO of The [[Carphone Warehouse Group]] plc. In 1989 Dunstone founded The [[Carphone Warehouse Group]] plc, which merged with [[Dixons]] in August 20
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  • Overview of the Planning System ...or this reason that lobbying is of particular use to supermarkets who need the government on their side. Lobbying companies today have access to extensiv
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  • ...of his support for the [[Conservative Party]] prior to his withdrawal from the House of Lords in July 2010.<ref>David Maddox, [http://news.scotsman.com/po The Sunday Times Rich List for 2005 stated that Laidlaw was Scotland's 6th ric
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  • ...ce, Houses of Parliament, recruitment consultancies, law firms, education, the media and other public affairs related groups. PubAffairs numbers over 1400 ...erdeen University; and a PgDip in European Policy, Law and Management from the Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen.
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  • ...rom a radical perspective. It is independent of any lobby group, political party, company or commercial intention. This is taken from their website on the 10/04/06 @http://www.squall.co.uk/squall.cfm/ses/sq=2001030701/ct=1
    4 KB (705 words) - 19:22, 10 April 2006
  • ...rom a radical perspective. It is independent of any lobby group, political party, company or commercial intention. <center>This is taken from their website on the 10/04/06 @ http://www.squall.co.uk/squall.cfm/ses/sq=2001030701/ct=1</cente
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  • ...the [[Fabian Society]]. The founder of the network was [[Neal Lawson]] of the lobbying firm [[LLM Communications]]. It also had a journal associated wit ...ddle of the road is a dangerous place' The Observer March 8, 1998 SECTION: The Observer News Page; Pg. 23
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  • ...est corporations who meet annually at the Swiss ski resort of Davos to set the world's ...t.org/sbeder/Books/suiting.html Suiting Themselves: How Corporations Drive the Global Agenda]'', Earthscan, London, 2006, p. 1.</ref>
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  • ...in by [[David Bell]], the former chairman of the [[Financial Times]] (and the [[Millennium Bridge Trust]]). ...usiness (mostly Labour party donors) including multinationals, the police, the MOD, banks and their associates:
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  • ...nt "hugely influential in setting the intellectual structures for managing the Cold War."<ref>IISS [http://www.iiss.org/about-us About us] </ref> ...d, ‘Institute for Defence Study, British Members, U.S. Finance’.<ref>''The Guardian'', 28 November 1958</ref>
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  • ...2010). </ref>In August 2010 Rossiter was appointed executive director of The [[Society of College, National and University Libraries]]. <ref>Social Mark ...Social Market Foundation think-tank, and leading light in the Third Way], The Observer, 31 July 2005, accessed 13 September 2010.</ref>
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  • ...vernment, but it remains a well known fringe group within the Conservative Party. ...n Post'', 21 April 2004</ref> In 2003, [[Norris McWhirter]], recalled how the group originated from a chance meeting with [[William Sidney|Viscount De L'
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  • ...crete action on greenhouse gas emissions. The so called 'carbon club' lead the way in undermining public support for action to curb climate change. BP, attempting to brand itself as progressive was one of the first to withdraw from GCC. [[John Browne]], Chairman of BP, announced in a
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  • ...amme and is the Head of the forthcoming [[Demos]] [[Glasgow 2020: Tales of the City]] project – a futures project looking at how citizens see cities and A response to a celebratory account of this project, authored by Hassan for the Herald, is worth quoting to demonstrate how Hassan's perspective differs fr
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  • ...he [[Charity Technology Trust]]. He gave more than £5,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1997 and £10,000 in March 2001 {{ref|1}}. ...s a staunch supporter of medical euthanasia and has repeatedly lobbied for the 'Right to Die' bill {{ref|2}}.
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  • ...on to form the [[Social Democratic Party]], splitting the Labour Party in the early 1980s. ...ional socialism, particularly Clause IV which pledged "common ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange".
    4 KB (583 words) - 11:10, 3 March 2015
  • ...xecutive with The [[Corporate Services Group]] 2000, and a Board Member of the [[Office of Fair Trading]]. ...ntre for Policy Studies]] and of [[Global Vision]] and an active member of the House of Lords.
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  • ...it could be argued that this deal leaves Mr. Swire politically indebted to the big tobacco firm and hence more open to being influenced further by them, p ...sleaze, making it all the more notable that only months into the Blair era the first evidence of cash being exchanged for a sympathetic ear emerged.
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  • ...that he was stepping down from his seat to become the president and CEO of the [[International Rescue Committee]] at its New York headquarters.<ref>[http: ...ng Labour's first term in office from 1997 to 2001. Since 2001 he has been the MP for South Shields.
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  • ...|300px|thumb|right|Former minister for the Cabinet Office Francis Maude at the 10 Steps to Cyber Security event in London, 5 September 2012.]] ...y contrast we have prepared very carefully. So we are well equipped to hit the ground running."'' - Francis Maude <ref>Patrick Wintour, '[http://www.guard
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  • ...witney David Cameron quits as MP to 'avoid being a distraction' to May], ''The Guardian'', 12 September 2016, accessed 17 October 2016. </ref> ...n Service]], and in December 2016 joined the public speaking circuit under the [[Washington Speakers Bureau]], where he is expected to earn up to six figu
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  • ...y 2016], ''BBC News'', accessed 15 July 2016</ref> He is now an adviser to the world's largest fund manager, [[BlackRock]]. <ref name="BBC BR"> [http://ww After the 2015 election, he received the additional title of First Secretary of State.<ref name="2015Apptmts">[https
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  • ...al Secretary to the Treasury in May 2010. He stepped down from the role at the end of 2012, replaced by [[Paul Deighton]]. ...[http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/profile_comsec.htm Commercial Secretary to the Treasury: Lord Sassoon], HM Treasury website, accessed 5 October 2011 </ref
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  • [[Douglas Trainer]] was appointed as a special advisor on health to the Scottish Executive by [[Jack McConnell]] in May 2006. ...attempts to fight the boycott of coke and its products led by students in the UK.
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  • ...', 29 August 2001</ref> which mirrored the pledge made in the Conservative Party's General Election Manifesto of 1970. ...return]</ref> even though the Club's policies had remained unchanged since the 1960s.
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  • ...elly]], Sovereign's Executive Chairman, is a former Labour Party Leader in the European Parliament <ref>[http://www.sovereignstrategy.com/people.asp Sover ...ast. We're expanding our office in Brussels and we have a new affiliate in the USA.<ref>[http://www.euractiv.com/en/pa/interview-alan-donnelly-executive-c
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  • ...clearSpin}}'''Alan Donnelly''' is the former leader of the Labour group in the European Parliament, now a lobbyist and co-founder of [[Sovereign Strategy] ...e receiving end of lobbying for 11 years, I'd seen the good approaches and the bad ones, and over time I'd developed my own ideas about how I'd do it.<ref
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  • ...[[Foreign Policy Centre]] in partnership with the [[British Council]] and the [[Migration Policy Group]]. ...f [[Advantage West Midlands]], the regional development agency, to take on the appointment of Non-Executive Director of [[Severn Trent Water]]. <ref> RSA
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  • ::::'Lobbyists are the touts of protected industries.' ::::'MPs can't be expected to give us the detail as a labour of love, can they?'
    53 KB (8,562 words) - 13:36, 21 November 2012
  • ...ial definition, that its release would be 'prejudicial to the interests of the nation. ...y refusing to publish the document and went into closed session, excluding the public.
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  • ...e greatest burden on society comes not from isolated individuals, but from the collective impacts of light to moderate drinkers.<ref>World Health Organisa ...orkforce through a steady rate of staff cut-backs and the casualisation of labour.
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  • ...t a significant portion of his career advocating for the legitimization of the organization which has been categorized as a terrorist group by multiple wo ...y Committee for Iran Freedom]] and is listed as the official registrant of the BPCIF's website.<ref>Whois.net, [http://www.whois.net/whois/iran-freedom.or
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  • ...nment and the Environment, Councils to Invest Funds from Selling Homes", ''The Independent'', 4 April; Not available online</ref> .... 'We have absolutely no plans to expand nuclear power,' Blair said during the election campaign. <ref>''UK Environment News Limited'' (2001) FOE Sets Imm
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  • ...reasurer of [[Labour Friends of Israel]], he is very well connected in New Labour and zionist circles. ...e Blair's business links and retains close links with [[Jonathon Powell]], the chief-of-staff at 10 Downing Street and [[Lord Levy]].
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  • .... who was the Leader of the Labour Party at the time of his early death at the age of 55. ...ay of Cartvale|Meta Ramsay]], who went on to be a career spy. According to the ''Sunday Times'':
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  • ...-the-secret-tape/ Brown's Fixer Explains How It's Done: Jon Mendelsohn and the Secret Tape], Greg Palast, accessed Feb 2009</ref> [[Jonathon Rutherford]] describes the formation of Compass in 2005:
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  • ...rgaining position – and earned the ire of the left’s wishful thinkers, The Independent on Sunday, 9-May-2010</ref> ...icle1165285.ece Foundation hospitals: Defeat will not divert proposals], ''The Times'', 2-October-2003</ref>
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  • ...rs, contributing to the policy debate through green papers, think tanks or the media, training for UK or EU committee interviews, support drafting UK Priv ...r for the (London) Putney ward of Parkside until 2002. He then switched to the [[Liberal Democrats]].<ref>[http://www.cicero-europe.com/team.htm Cicero we
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  • ...lassmith.jpg|thumb|250px|Douglas Smith, Westminster lobbyist, Conservative party spin doctor and long time networker]][[Douglas Smith]] is a long time lobby According to his biography on the [http://web.archive.org/web/20010819063650/www.political-intelligence.com/p
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  • ...have always espoused a particular cause for which they have been paid, and the fact is that what they have been saying has been rather marked down, if you :'The public do not have an automatic right to know what Members of Parliament ge
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  • ...ebsite it 'is an independent company dedicated to attaining and delivering the highest standards in monitoring, research, intelligence and publishing.' [h Longtime Westminster lobbyist [[Douglas Smith]] is the director of the firm. Its website appeared soon after [[Political Intelligence Ltd]]'s sto
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  • ...or badge}}[[Charles Powell]], Lord Powell of Bayswater KCMG is a member of the [[House of Lords]] and a former UK diplomat. [[Image:800px-Charles Powell, ...th his counterparts in Washington.<ref>Gavin Esler, Different lessons that the Gulf war taught, Scotland on Sunday, 11 October 2002.</ref>
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  • ...campaign group based in [[Tufton Street]] in London at the same address as the [[Centre for Policy Studies]]. In October 2009 the Financial Times published an open letter entitled [[Britain must negotiate
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  • [[Image:Neal Lawson.jpg|thumb|Neal Lawson at the Compass conference, June 2006]] ...a Blairite internet discussion forum. He has boasted of helping [[GTech]], the discredited Lottery company, to win their Lottery contract.
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  • ...by the Foreign Policy Centre at the Compass Conference (Mike Gapes, MP, in the background), 17 June 2006]] ...ent for Education and Skills. In 2004, in the government changes following the resignation of David Blunkett, he was promoted to Minister of State for sch
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  • ...of the Exchequer and a director of the [[Better Together]] campaign during the referendum for Scottish independence in 2014. ...laced by [[Ricky Henderson]], who lost the seat to the [[Scottish National Party]]'s [[Joanna Cherry]] by 8,135 votes.<ref> BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk/n
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  • ...groups, including the [[Iraq Unions Solidarity]]. It is a key supporter of the [[Ukraine Solidarity Campaign]] a group that appears to be [[CIA]] adjacen ...f Women's Freedom in Iraq]], [[Iraqi Freedom Congress]] and the [[Union of the Unemployed in Iraq]].<ref>http://www.workersliberty.org/node/4160</ref>
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  • ...om/ Gauche]</ref> At City University in London he is programme director of the BA in Journalism and a Social Science.<ref>City University [http://www.city ...on.html Paul Anderson], accessed 4 May 2009</ref> He is a former member of the libertarian socialist group [[Solidarity]].<ref>Paul Anderson [http://libso
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  • ...r North East Derbyshire from 1987 to 2005. He is a member of the [[Labour Party]]. ...9</ref> As an MP, he joined joined a supporters group entitled 'Friends of the ILP'.
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  • ...active with organisations such as [[Democratiya]]. Here is his account of the history of Solidarity<ref>Paul Anderson [http://libsoc.blogspot.com/2005_03 ...in 1992, by which time the byline [[Maurice Brinton]] had not appeared for the best part of a decade.
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  • <h4 align="center">DIRECTION FOR THE DEMOCRATIC LEFT</h4> <h3 align="center">Agenda - The Shape of Things to Come</h3>
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  • ...was a [[Labour Party]] MP for Stalybridge and Hyde, first being elected at the 2001 general election. He was educated at Balliol College, Oxford. <ref>'J ...n oversight role over the British Broadcasting Corporation and the rest of the British media."<ref>Redress Editors, [http://www.redress.cc/global/redress2
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  • ...his might mean for their business,’ and crucially, ‘how they can enter the debate.’ ...eparture from the EU' and that it is advising clients on 'how to influence the process'.<ref>[http://portland-communications.com/pdf/Portland%20Brexit%20U
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  • ...e at the MOD (1974-76), the minister for Overseas Development (1976-77) at the FCO. ...ncies]] (1985-90) and the [[World Economic Forum]] Conference in Geneva on the future of South Africa (1990-91).
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  • ...ocating "lower taxes and reformed public services". On 19 September 2007, the [[Hayek Society]], a LSE right-wing group, circulated a job description to ...http://conservativehome.blogs.com/centreright/2009/03/the-growth-of-b.html The growth of Britain's conservative movement], ConservativeHome, 14 March 2009
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  • ...case with the late Lt-General Vernon Walters, formerly Deputy Director of the CIA."<ref>[http://www.intelligencesummit.org/speakers/MichaelShrimpton.php Shrimpton's Wikipedia 'user page' follows the TIS biography:
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  • ...r Political Affairs under President Lyndon B. Johnson and was appointed to the [[Ams Control and Disarmament Agency]] by President [[Ronald Reagan]]. *[[Committee on the Present Danger]] (1976 version)
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  • ...HMS Ark Royal, and was Commandant of the Royal Navy Staff College and, in the Ministry of Defence and Director of Navy Plans. ...ement, Chiefs of Staff from all three Services, and the chief Executive of the Defense Procurement Agency." <ref>[http://www.osi-int.org/ViceAdmiralSirJer
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  • ...b|right|Gordon Beattie gives an unconvincing performance under pressure at the Standards committee investigation of 'Lobbygate']] [[Gordon Beattie]] is the founder of [[Beattie Media]] one of the biggest and most controversial PR firm in Scotland.
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  • ...c Dialogue]]. The Club is formally registered as a charity in the UK under the name [[Trialogue Educational Trust]]. ...ablished public health strategies dating back at least to the beginning of the nineteenth century.
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  • ...he Americans promoted the development of the Common Market. The CIA funded the [[European Movement]]." {{ref|rams}} ...ro-Europeans, Heath presided over a party that was deeply ambivalent about the "Common Market".
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  • ''How CIA Money Took the Teeth Out of Socialism'' ...her (originally published in Philip Agee and Louis Wolf, eds., Dirty Work: the CIA in Western Europe, Zed Press (pp. 188-200))
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  • ...hinktank Progress says it will turn to members to make up its shortfall] ''The Guardian'', Friday 23 June 2017 06.00 BST</ref> ...ended to produce a manifesto entitled ''The Purple Book'', in imitation of the Liberal Democrat ''Orange Book'':
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  • ...the publication of the [[Hutton Inquiry]] report which heavily criticised the organisation. ...ossibly why Thatcher gave him an OBE in 1979. He worked as an economist in the City, first for Phillips and Drew, then Simon and Coates, before starting a
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  • ...ology and the Arts]]. He joined the House of Lords as a [[Labour]] peer on the 24 January 2011. ...cently closed a $500 million fund for small and medium sized businesses in the Middle East.
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  • ...is the British branch of [[Keren Hayesod - United Israel Appeal]], one of the three 'national institutions' in Israel. ...JIA offices in London were bombed as well as the Israeli embassy following the signature of a peace agreement between Israel and Jordan.<ref>Belfast Teleg
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  • ...{{ref|1}}. He was raised to the peerage as Baron Lipsey of Tooting Bec in the London Borough of Wandsworth in 1999 {{ref|2}}. ...ocial Market Foundation think-tank, and leading light in the Third Way", ''The Observer'', accessed 27 April 2008.</ref>
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  • ...by Sir [[Jeremy Beecham]] (former Labour Leader of Newcastle upon Tyne), the [[New Local Government Network]] says it wants “a radical approach to imp ...eading members also have close links with New Labour business interests in the public sector. It campaigns for elected mayors.
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  • ...ials vigorously denied the claim"{{ref|Dorril}} FISC shared an office with the [[Overseas Student Trust]]. ...rgaret Ramsay]] who had previously (from 1962) been Associate secretary at the [[International Student Conference]] which was a CIA front. She later (in 1
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  • ...trick Wintour, The Guardian 11th May 2005, [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/story/0,9061,1481113,00.html Top Blair adviser quits for her family] Last A Collins now works for [[Fishburn Hedges]] offering counsel to the agency's clients.<ref> Alec Mattinson [http://www.prweek.com/article/10785
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  • ...efence Acquisition Reform]</ref> After losing his ministerial positions in the 2010 General Election he stated that he would devote himself totally toward Between 2001 and 2002 Drayson was the Chairman of the [[BioIndustry Association]].
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  • ...cher of Sandwell (born 20 November 1926), was a [[Labour Party]] member of the [[House of Lords]]. He was made a Life Peer in 1992 and died on 14 June 201 He was previously the Member of Parliament for Warley, West.
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  • '''Andrew Miller''' was the [[Labour Party]] member of Parliament (MP) for Ellesmere Port and Neston from May 1992 to ...13, accessed 21 May.</ref> He was replaced by [[Justin Madders]], who held the seat.<ref> BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/politics/constituencies/E140
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  • ...Us], ''Stockholm Network'', Accessed 9 April 2010</ref> [[Helen Disney]], the Stockholm Network's founder and director, describes it as "not a think tank ...ional-politics/2267-you-want-policy-in-cash You want policy? In cash?]', ''The Times'' (London), 20 December 2005, Page 19.</ref>
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  • ...MIC THINKING], accessed 18 November 2010</ref> It also describes itself as the [[Forum for Social and Economic Thinking]]. ...Francis Maude]] MP, [[David Willetts]] MP. [[Maurice Cowling]] was also on the advisory council.
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  • ...stry. According to the Financial Times, five of the top ten companies with the most profitable foreign operations were pharmaceutical companies [13]. ...ap’ generic drugs, and the company pushed for a strict patent law within the World Trade Organisation.
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  • ...d continues to do secretly. Despite successive scandals, U.S. meddling in the internal affairs of other nations — including their "democratic" election ..." {{note|1}} Butler would recognize the old policy of interference behind the new NED smoke screen.
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  • ...ored a report - Future Foundations: towards a new culture in the NHS - for the right wing think tank [[Policy Exchange]]. ...nday investigation has revealed how the Prime Minister's wife arranged for the directors of a private medical firm to be given exclusive access to Downing
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  • ...ttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-30339417 Hugh Bayley to stand down as Labour MP], 5 December 2014, accessed 11 May 2015.</ref> He was replaced by [[Rach ...onal Association of Local Government Officers]] (NALGO). He was active in the [[Anti-Apartheid Movement]] in his student days and is a lover of jazz. He
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  • ...ce last month, it&rsquo;s important we build on the momentum we created at the event for the more <b>equal</b> and <b>democratic</b> world we want to bring about. It&rs
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  • ...ls itself a group of conservatives and libertarians dedicated to reforming the current legal order[1]. To that end it has set out to build up a network of ...the ability of the federal government to enact and enforce laws protecting the environment, civil rights, workplace health and safety, and other areas”.
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  • The Sunday Herald writes in May 1999: ...ai_n13939294 Friendly persuaders have to play by the rules] Sunday Herald, The, May 30, 1999 by Nic Outterside</ref>
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  • ...11) was the Labour MP for Inverclyde from 2001 - 2011 and twice chair of [[Labour Friends of Israel]] (LFI). ...ancreatitis and was survived by his partner [[Dermot Kehoe]] of [[BICOM]] (the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre).
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  • ...AND THEIR MONEY DENTED TONY'S IMAGE AS 'A PRETTY STRAIGHT SORT OF GUY'. <i>The Independent</i>. 29th March 2001</ref> ...y Member in 1994. He was Vice-Chairman (1981-5) and Chairman (1985-99) of the Thrombosis Research Trust.
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  • ...//www.capitaland.com/en/AboutCapitaLand/BoardOfDirectors/AndrewBuxton.htm] the former chairman of Barclays Bank. [http://www.mbih.com/_mbih/asp/showcommen ...become part of the UK Ministry of Defence's Saudi Armed Forces Project — the staff includes a number of secondees from [[BAe Systems]]. [http://www.brit
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  • Gummer was raised to the peerage as Baron Deben in 2010. Lord Deben is Chair of the government-sponsored Committee on Climate Change which in July 2019 iss
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  • ...net.nl/~reijd050/organisations/MCG/2003_09_03_Daily_Mail_MCG.htm It's hard Labour, bosses tell Blair], Daily Mail, 3 September 2003 [http://web.archive.org/w ...reveal that in March 2013 UK foreign minister [[William Hague ]] met with the Multinational Chairman's Group (consisting of [[Rio Tinto]]/[[Vodafone]]/[[
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  • The '''British Bankers' Association''' is the UK banking and financial services trade association. ...ston">Peston, Robert, "[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19755863 Libor: The final humiliation for banks]," ''BBC'' News Business 28 September 2012, acc
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  • [[William Shawcross]] is a for British journalist and was chairman of the Charity Commission from October 2012 until February 2018. ...com/index.php?page=cv Curriculum vitae], williamshawcross.com, archived at the Internet Archive, 26 May 2011.</ref>
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  • ...much more. For daily news, views and debate from the democratic left visit the Compass website at</em> [http://www.compassonline.org.uk www.compassonline. ...ynote speech at the Compass AGM on Saturday 9 of September taking place in the Bevin
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  • ...icial with USDAW and rose through the ranks, becoming General Secretary of the union in 1986. He retired in 1997. ...and title: Raised to the peerage as Baron Davies of Coity, of Penybont in the County of Mid Glamorgan 1997
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  • ...British Empire and for his key influence on South African history, through the ruthless pursuit of British hegemony. ...l John Ready, former Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island and later the Isle of Man.
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  • [[Raytheon]] has a full time lobbying staff in the US of 19 people<ref>http://ipan.net/starwars/raytheon.pdf (source: Indiana Raytheon is a member of the following lobby groups:
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  • ...sn’t designed to kill humans, because the company should have known what the gas was used for.[45] ...ficer, the Lord Advocate Colin Boyd QC, in a highly unusual step to ensure the government got its way in ensuring nuclear weapons were legal.[47]
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  • ...lso involved in providing intelligence, personnel and logistics support to the US and British military. ...which cites Fleurant, A., Perlo-Freeman, S., Wezeman, P. & Wezeman, S., ‘The SIPRI Top 100 arms-producing and military services companies, 2014’, SIPR
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  • ...st [[David Hart]]. In 1988 [[Colin Clark]] and [[Betty Sherridan]], joined the Committee.<ref>Ref needed</ref> ==Activities of the CFB==
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  • ...strike of 1984/5, advising [[Margaret Thatcher]] and [[Iain MacGregor]] of the [[National Coal Board]]. ...untry house, Coldham Hall, in Suffolk.<ref>"Hart's Desire", interview in ''The Spectator'', 15 October 1988.</ref>
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  • ...see as 'unnecessary' restrictions on their profits. The Task Force became the [[Better Regulation Commission]] on 1 January 2006.<ref>Cabinet Office 06/0 ...he Cabinet Office supports the Task Force.<ref>This paragraph adapted from the Corporate Accountability Centre website, [http://www.corporateaccountabilit
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  • The '''Fire Safety Group''' exists 'to meet and discuss topical fire safety iss ...the Commissioner from Mr Robert Thomson, 20 January 2006] Lobbying and All Party
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  • The '''Built Environment Group Group''' exists 'to promote excellence in the built environment.'<ref name="November"/> The '''Construction Industry Council''' defined the group in the following way:
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  • ...in society. Its goal is to provide an independent and innovative debate on the future of politics. Currently, the Network's main areas of activity include:
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  • ...MP for Slough since 1997. She served as a Parliamentary Under-Secretary in the [[Home Office]] from 2003 to 2006, and was Shadow Minister for Equalities f ...actaggart-holds-Slough-seat-with-7336-majority-08052015.htm ELECTION 2015: Labour's Fiona Mactaggart holds Slough seat with 7,336 majority] ''Slough Express'
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  • ...sh businessman with media interests, and a noted supporter of the [[Labour Party]] He joined the House of Lords on the 20 June 1991.
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  • ...tch) is a [[Labour]] peer in the [[House of Lords]], having been raised to the peerage on 7 June 2004. ...d of the UK branch of [[Zurich Financial Services]] and deputy chairman of the [[Bank of Scotland]] plc, [[Lloyds Banking Group]] plc and [[HBOS]] plc.
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  • The British Road Federation was a key roads lobbyist. It appears to have cease ...However the cuts to the road programme in 1994-97 make one wonder whether the lobby was ever powerful at all.
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  • ...Hadi Saleh - Why Are You Silent? An Open Letter To The Leaders of the Stop The War Coalition]</ref> *[[Labour Friends of Iraq]]
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  • ...umbria on entry into the House of Lords in October 2007.<ref> Conservative Party website biography [http://www.conservatives.com/People/Peers/Neville-Jones_ ...d down from this role in 2011. She also was given a permanent position on the UK government's newly created [[National Security Council]].<ref> No 10.gov
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  • ...942) was [[Labour Party]] MP Dundee West from 1979 until his retirement at the 2005 general election. ...quality control engineer at [[Timex Corporation|Timex]] and joined Labour Party in 1973. In April 1981, he took part in a good-will delegation from Dundee
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  • ...founded in 1918 to promote "global understanding through the shared use of the English language." ...d the globe. [[English-Speaking Union Scotland]] is the Scottish office of the ESU, based in Edinburgh.
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  • ...and subsequently of the Liberal Democratic alliance. Williams also chaired the [[English Speaking Union]]. ...the renewed rise of CND in the late 1970s, had become a central figure in the government-funded [[Peace Through NATO]].[http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk
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  • ...re; remains a director of Political Quarterly, as well as vice-chairman of the Hansard Society for Parliamentary Government and, in addition, chairs [[Th ...o employed [[Roger Liddle]], the former SDP candidate who jointly authored The Blair Revolution with [[Peter Mandelson]]. {{ref|2}}
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  • ...nberg, the former Chairman of [[Isys]] plc, gave £100,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in May 2001. He has also given large donations in 1977 and 1979 and spent ...a fellow of the [[Institute of Directors]] and is Vice President of the [[Labour Finance and Industry Group]] (he was Deputy Chairman from 1972-93).<ref>Tak
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  • ...iller Consultants''' is a PR and lobbying firm. In 2006, it became part of the [[Huntsworth]] Group, which is owned by Tory peer and David Cameron’s con ...r a high-profile campaign, where we help clients influence opinion through the media as well as in Parliament."<ref>[http://www.quillerconsult.co.uk/ourEx
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  • ...te:Lobbying_Portal_badge}}{{Template: Revolving Door badge}}Matt Carter is the founder and managing director of [[Message House]], a campaigns and researc He is the former General Secretary of the Labour Party, Europe, Middle East and Asia managing director of [[WPP]] subsidiary [[Pen
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  • ...s quoted on the '''London Stock Exchange''' and has a secondary listing on the '''New York Stock Exchange''', as well. In 2006 the Spanish energy giant [[Iberdrola]] made an £11.6bn takeover bid. The offer was formally approved by shareholders at an EGM on 30 March 2007, eff
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  • ...ohn Reid]] when he was Home Secretary, is a freelance writer including for the Guardian's [[Comment Is Free]] and lobbyist. In 2009 he is a 'Project Advi ...involved in the development of Labour’s foreign policy in the run up to the 1997 general election. From 1991-94 he worked as a research assistant to Dr
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  • ...of Sir [[William Beveridge]], it has long made a powerful contribution to the study of federalism and federal systems. ...worked at the European Institute of Education and Social Policy in Paris, the Commonwealth of Learning in Vancouver, and both Oxford and Cambridge Univer
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  • [[File:Logo epc.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Logo of the [[European Policy Centre]], circa November 2011]] ...corporateeurope.org/docs/lobbycracy/lobbyplanet.pdf Lobby Planet: Brussels the EU Quarter] July 2005, accessed 1st November 2011 </ref>
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  • ...rn 1931) is an Indian-born, British-based business man. He was knighted by the Queen in 1978. ...he became a life peer, taking the title '''Baron Paul''' of Marylebone in the City of Westminster.
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  • ...[Tony Blair|Tony]] and [[Cherie Blair]]. Baroness Goudie is the founder of the exclusive [[Aeolus]] networking dinner club.'{{ref|Scots}} ==New Labour fundraiser==
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  • ...ons. In 2008 it emerged that the Forum was being used to covertly bankroll the campaign of [[Wendy Alexander]].<ref>Ref needed</ref> The founding of the forum was reported in the press thus:
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  • ...monwealth Union]] and a founder of [[National Propaganda]] (later known as the [[Economic League]]). The following account is based on Mike Hughes profile of Hall in his book [http
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  • ...[[Economic League]] from 1926 to 1945 and acted as a Publicity Adviser to the League from until 1976. Mike Hughes writes: ...]] of the Foreign Office, the [[Political Warfare Executive]], Director of the [[Economic League]] for nineteen years and Publicity adviser for another tw
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  • ...s the group that acted as midwife to the Economic League, was according to the historian Barbara Lee Farr : ...an underground network of secret subsidies to sympathetic politicians and labour leaders, infiltration of government departments and spying. " (*4)
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  • ...en the [[Political Warfare Executive]]. He is recognised as the founder of the [[British Council]]. ...by birth, he entered the British Foreign Office in 1920 and in 1929 joined the [[News Department]], which was responsible for information work overseas.
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  • ...up a new firm called [[M&C Saatchi]]. Saatchi and Saatchi is now part of the transnational [[Publicis Groupe]]. ...it was snapped up by Publicis in 2000. Advertising Age ranked Saatchi's as the #12 agency brand worldwide in 2005 with revenues of $552m.
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  • ...itable and that its true profits were hidden from the Chilean state. Under the guise of making interest payments to a subsidiary, Exxon exported Compañí ...roduction, transportation and sale of crude oil and natural gas as well as the manufacture, transportation and sale of petroleum products.
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  • ...paigned for Muslim organisations [[Hizb ut-Tahrir]], [[Al Muhajiroun]] and the [[Muslim Public Affairs Committee]] to be banned from campus.<ref> NUS, [ht Berger is a great-niece of the former Labour MP [[Emanuel Shinwell]].<ref>Sarah Priddy, [http://www.parliament.uk/briefi
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  • '''Oliver Letwin''', MP (born May 19, 1956, Hampstead), has been the Member of Parliament for West Dorset since 1997. Letwin was the minister for government policy in the [[Cabinet Office]] from 2014 until May 2015.<ref>[http://www.number10.gov.u
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  • ...the [[Scottish National Party]] MP for East Lothian having been elected in the 2015 general election. <ref> [http://www.snp.org/people/george-kerevan Geor ...t think tank the [[Policy Institute]] which is based inside the offices of the Scotsman.{{ref|PI}}
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  • ...iam Reginald Hall]]. Hall had been elected for a Liverpool constituency in the hastily called post-war election. {{ref|1}} ...hy and unreliable autobiography "Fifty Fighting Years". According to this, the Dean's Yard meeting had decided:
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  • ...and less than their fair share of ministers. The Conservative and Unionist Party has always been an uncomfortable coalition - not so much a "broad church" a ...during the inter war years: tariff reform, the integrity of the Empire and the Union, and later a generally misunderstood approach to continental fascism
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  • The [[Royal Parks]] ...ty]]), Deputy Chairman of the [[Royal College of Music]] and a Director of the [[Royal Philharmonic Orchestra]]. He lives in London and Northamptonshire.
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  • ''Not to be confused with the paedophile and member of the [[Paedophile Information Exchange]] [[Charles Napier (paedophile)|Charles N ...search unit, and is now an Associate, working on public affairs issues for the company.
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  • ...inburgh) is the chief of staff to [[Jim Murphy]] and the [[Scottish Labour Party]].<ref name="McTernan"> [http://au.linkedin.com/pub/john-mcternan/25/2b0/35 ...the development of the Labour government's political strategy. The Labour Party paid his salary.
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  • ...ps companies anticipate and benefit from changes happening now and next in the contemporary world of work".<ref>"[http://www.manpower.com/services/service ...ss]", The Daily Yomiuri Online, 1998, accessed October 2008.</ref> He told the Daily Yomiuri that he did this because they had fired [[Mitchell Fromstein]
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  • Norman Reddaway was the head of the [[Information Research Department]] of the UK [[Foreign Office]]. ...t pro-Europe campaign was [[Norman Reddaway]], Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Office, with a brief covering IRD and other FO information services
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  • [[Written in Flames]] is a pamphlet published in 1987 which listed the names, jobs and addresses of British Corporate directors. It was accused by the [[Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism]] of encouraging attacks on corporate leaders.
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  • [[File:CDISS, the Centre for Defence &amp; International Security Studies 1295267091058.png|t ...nd originally based at Lancaster University. Blogger Charlie Pottins gives the following background on CDiSS:
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  • ...1954, Edinburgh) is an [[MEP]] (''1984- '') for Scotland from the [[Labour Party]].<ref>European Parliament, [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/members/archive/ : 08.09.2010 / ... : Delegation to the Cariforum — EU Parliamentary Committee
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  • ...e Thatcher government, Scottish Tory Party treasurer, Scottish Business in the Community and director of Grampian Holdings. SE is the parent body of 14 Local Enterprise Companies (LECs).
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  • ...st in government he was minister for the [[Cabinet Office]], chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, minister of state for trade, minister of state for Euro ...-to-become-youngest-mp-since-17th-century-10239334.html Mhairi Black: Meet the 20-year old who beat Douglas Alexander to become youngest MP since 17th cen
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  • ===Labour Party=== 1979 - 1985 (On becoming Leader of the Council)
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  • ..."Red Clydeside: A history of the labour movement in Glasgow 1910-1932", on the Glasgow Digital Library website: ...determined to combat the forces of labour which they viewed as a threat to the British way of life.
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  • ...German Union]], which had been founded in 1915. Sir [[George Makgill]] was the BEU's Honorary Secretary and Lord [[Edward Illiffe]] was its treasurer. ...argued for a paramilitary force to combat it. It was also associated with the antisemitism of [[Leopold Maxse]].
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  • [[Ifor Davies]] was Labour MP for Gower 1959-82. The Labour MP [[Huw Irranca-Davies]] is his nephew.<ref>Sarah Priddy, [http://www.parl [[Category:Labour Party|Davies, Ifor]][[Category:MP|Davies, Ifor]] [[Category:British Politician|Da
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  • ...dge}}{{Template:Lobbying_Portal_badge}}'''Andy Sawford''' was the [[Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for Corby from November 2012 to 2015. .../ref> In 2015 general election Sawford lost his seat to the [[Conservative Party]]'s [[Tom Pursglove]] by 2,412 votes.<ref> BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk/n
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  • ...was the Labour MP for Kettering from 1997 until 2005. He is the father of Labour MP [[Andy Sawford]].<ref>Sarah Priddy, [http://www.parliament.uk/briefing-p [[Category:Labour Party|Sawford, Phil]][[Category:MP|Sawford, Phil]] [[Category:British Politician|
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  • ...SCL’s approach to propaganda is based upon a methodology developed by the associated [[Behavioural Dynamics Institute]]. This apparently secret metho ==Origins of the company==
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  • ...at the Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture in Trinidad and Tobago and the University of British Columbia, Canada. ...abour Party. In 1975 he founded the New Democratic Party (NDP) and became the Parliamentary Opposition Leader{{ref|1}}.
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  • ...section) and can count on the support of other governments, in particular the US government (see also section on links with governments). Even if one forgets about the high level of secrecy and commercial confidentiality (seriously restricting
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  • ...]] (www.securitas.com.) still claims to be the largest security company in the world. ...ntury in Denmark, when [[Philip Sørensen]] and [[Marius Hogrefe]] founded the guarding company ‘[[København Fredriksberg Nattevagt]]’(1901), and [[S
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  • '''Carillion''' was the UK's second-biggest construction company. The firm went into compulsory liquidation due to ongoing financial difficulties ...illion, as Finsbury stopped its membership of the voluntary lobbying body, the [[APPC]], which publishes a register of clients.
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  • ...the US, such as the Clean Water Act, the Toxic Substances Control Act and the Oil Spill Prevention Act. {{ref|1}} ...efforts to expand the public's right to know about toxic chemicals used in the workplace, consumer products and communities." {{ref|2}}
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  • ...f. Critics however, claim that prices are kept artificially high even when the initial investment is recovered. ...laim that high drug prices are needed to sustain research and development. The report documents that drug companies are spending more than twice as much o
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  • ...ions and have substantial access to government, particularly in the UK and the Netherlands. ...ncrete action on greenhouse gas emissions. The so called 'carbon club' led the way in undermining public support for action to curb climate change.
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  • “We lead the privatisation programmes in both the prison services and the court services. We pioneered all these things” [[Jim Harrower]], Group Chief and Operating Officer of the executive management board 25.
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  • ...f the [[Foreign Office]], the [[Political Warfare Executive]], Director of the [[Economic League]] for nineteen years and Publicity adviser for another tw ...e intelligence organisations that have so far more or less slipped through the parapolitical historian's net.
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  • ...His position as chairman was briefly taken over by Sir [[Aukland Geddes]]. The League's "5th Annual General Report" of 1925 recorded that: ...been circulated in confidence to district Economic Leagues. Supplements to the documents will be circulated from time to time."
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  • ...ven amongst some academics there is a stubborn resistance to the idea that the first British fascist groupings were anything more than fascist in name alo ...ions for countries throughout the World. This translation from nationalist party to supra-nationalist ideology was not accomplished by German and Italian in
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  • ...effect. The League was, in this pamphlet, ahead of its time in recognising the role of public relations and news management: ...d articles on economic questions to daily and weekly newspapers throughout the country."
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  • ...ts of the League's work and the application of lessons learned in war" was the creation of a "training organisation". ...in the wartime spirit of cooperation, the Unions had not barred their way. The League was quick to capitalise on this and as early as 1946 it started to r
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  • ...list manifesto and blueprint for first world aid to developing countries. "The days of imperialism are over," he declared: ...it means that influence will be used, as never before, for the welfare of the human race, and in partnership with it - not in overlordship over it." {{re
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  • ...the strike were his statements to the House of Commons in which he alleged the strike was being manipulated by: ...tly that they are more concerned with harming the nation than with getting the justice we all want to see."
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  • ...dward Heath|Ted Heath]] in the Conservative Party leadership election, and the resignation of [[Harold Wilson]] and his replacement by [[James Callaghan|J ...nsolidating their infant revolution had been made easier by the right-wing Labour government of James Callaghan, who took over from Wilson when he surprising
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  • ==The Select Committee== ...eague. While the League were about to go to the Select Committee Ford told the press that they had withdrawn their subscription.
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  • ...documents I have had access to. This is by no means a complete list of all the published documents of which I have copies. Not available through libraries, but Labour Research, the Labour History Museum and TUC Library have many copies.
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  • ...he [[Conservative Philosophy Group]] with [[John Casey]] and was editor of the ''[[Salisbury Review]]'' from 1982 to 2000. <ref>‘[http://www.ukwhoswho.c ...from the tobacco industry in exchange for writing pro-smoking articles in the ''[[Wall Street Journal]]''.
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  • ...?PageID=35 Gail Rebuck], accessed 4 February 2015 </ref> and a director at the [[Tony Blair Foundation]] since 2013. She is the widower of one of the key New Labour strategists [[Philip Gould]].
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  • '''Michael Turner''' is the chairman of [[Fullers, Smith & Turner]]. ...me="FUL"> Fullers [http://www.fullers.co.uk/corporate/governance/the-board The Board], accessed 7 April 2015.</ref>
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  • ...ed with the building of a new Asda WalMart supercentre on the site next to the stadium.[1] ...linked him to a controversial deal with a local authority, destruction of the greenbelt, and a breach of parliamentary rules.
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  • ...o be a ‘good thing' for the British consumer. But reality and especially the exeriences of U.S. society show something else… ...tax base shrinks, the number of workers with health benefits declines, and the number of workers eligible for welfare increases.[2]
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  • ...s piece now features in ''The Rich At Play: Foxhunting, Land Ownership and The Countryside Alliance'' (ISBN 0954301404) 78 pages A5 – £4.00, plus £0.5 ...that they have gradually become more and more acceptable to the media and the public, and have begun to be taken quite seriously by many as an authoritat
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  • Sir Ben Gill – President of the National Farmers' Union86 Ben has been a farmer all his life having taken over the family farm at Hawkhills near Easingwold in North Yorkshire in 1978. He is
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  • ==Labour Party Interests== ...an extra £14,000 in 1997). In March 2001, he gave £10,000 to the Labour Party.
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  • ...ommemorates the late [[Airey Neave]] DSO OBE MC MP who was assassinated in the Palace of Westminster in 1979. ...security service plots against Harold Wilson's Labour government, such as the Clockwork Orange project in Northern Ireland.
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  • ...since he left Sainsbury's only when he entered government, his links with the company are still extremely strong. ...which sits somewhat uncomfortably with Sainsburys' professed concern about the subject. For more on UNICE, see: http://www.corporateeurope.org/ebsummit/fa
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  • ...r party, (which certainly appear to have brought Lord Sainsbury rewards in the shape of a peerage and an appointment as Science and Technology Minister, a ...the patent is the cauliflower mosaic promoter, which was at the centre of the [[Arpad Pusztai]] affair[40].
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  • ...old plating of EU directives. All of this undermines British businesses on the home front as they battle in global markets.' ''Sir Terry Leahy''{{ref|1}} As the above quote highlights, Tesco has a bit of a problem with national and Euro
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  • ...ting further pressure on suppliers and therefore workers. Since its end at the start of 2005 conditions in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in particular appear t ...d by Tesco and the other supermarkets, which affects working conditions in the garment trade worldwide.
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  • '''Wilton Park''' is an executive agency of the Foreign Office and is used as an elite conferencing venue. *Dr [[David Bryer]] Chair of [[Oxfam]] International and Trustee of [[Save The Children]]
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  • ...irman of the [[Virgin Entertainment Group]] (he launched Virgin Net) until the end of 1999, when he left to set up [[clickmusic]], an internet music direc ...stries Task Force]] on the Internet. He was also appointed to the board of the [[South Bank Centre]] by [[Chris Smith]] in June 1999. He went to Cambridge
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  • ...e Labour Party before the 1997 election, after which he immediately joined the Treasury.
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  • ...reasury{{ref|1}}. Former Chief Political Research Officer for the [[Labour Party]]{{ref|2}}. ...abour-proposal-wins-over-mp-s-girlfriend-1-2543708 'Yes, Minister' – New Labour proposal wins over MP's girlfriend] ''Yorkshire Post'', 4 May 2004, accesse
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  • ...he Financial Times [http://specials.ft.com/ukelection2001/FT373LH0OKC.html The Campaign Teams] 7 May 2001</ref> ...rector for [[Labour]] MPs [[Douglas Alexander]] and [[Michael Dugher]] for the 2015 UK general election.
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  • ...as an independent. He served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the [[Department for Communities and Local Government]] from 2009 to 2010. ...ent for [[Charlie Whelan]] in June 1999. He had previously been the Labour Party's West Midlands press officer, since 1995 and is now, July 2007, Brown's PP
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  • ...-blamed-for-Gordon-Browns-bigoted-gaffe.html Sue Nye's work with Brown], ''The Telegraph'', 29 Apr 2010, Accessed 9 September 2014 </ref> ...//www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/59495/page/14001 The London Gazette] ''The Gazette'', 22 July 2010, accessed 17 October 2014 </ref>
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  • ...the election by 99 seats to the [[Conservative Party]].<ref> [http://www2.labour.org.uk/ed_miliband Ed Miliband biography], accessed 10 November 2010.</ref> ...Ed narrowly win after four rounds of voting, with support from 50.654% of the electoral college.
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  • ...ty's chief fundraiser and [[Lord Falconer]] the man Blair put in charge of the Dome. It also features figures from the internal hierarchy of the Labour Party, like General Secretary [[Margaret McDonagh]] and unelected Government Mini
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  • ...''[[The Sun]]'', ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' and the now defunct ''[[News of the World]]''. ...] (the boyfriend of Murdoch's daughter) and hosted by [[Chris Evans]]. The party cost £20,000.
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  • ...ote a letter to the Financial Times in May 2001 in support of the [[Labour Party]]. He collects sports cars, including Lotuses, Mercedes and Aston Martins. ...der and Chairman of [[Merlin Scientific Services plc]], he has been called the "Biotech King" and has connections with a large number of biotechnology com
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  • ...ee wise men' who advised on new competition policy in January 1997, paving the way for his former boss, [[Lord Simon]], to be appointed Minister for Europ ...nt. [[Alan Jones]], former Regional President of BP Amoco Scotland, sat on the first [[Oil and Gas Industry Task Force]]. His replacement [[Steve Marshall
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  • ...2-1997. The former Vice Chairman of BAe, Richard Lapthorne was apponted by the Government in April 2000 to set up its Working Age Agency. ...ter weapons and are the 'prime' contractor for Astute class submarines for the Royal Navy.
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  • ...Blair's 'open' Government is not very open about the Task Forces (not even the Cabinet Office actually knows how many there are!), but we have attempted t ...side of Tony. None of these people are elected, they all all appointed by the Government.
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  • ...ales - the oil companies now pay £2 billion a year less in tax than under the Tories. ...lluters of UK rivers in 1992 and were fined £20,000 in 1998 for polluting the Manchester Ship Canal with 140 tonnes of oil.
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  • ...Media and Sport. The main Task Force is dominated by donors to the Labour Party and personal friends of Government ministers. *[[Janice Hughes]] is the Co-Founder and Managing Director of Spectrum Stategy Consultants, an Intern
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  • ...e parent company for [[WPP]]'s market research companies. Kantar is one of the world's largest research, insight and consultancy companies. {{ref|1}} ...cquisitions. He has also been a researcher and speechwriter for the Labour Party Foreign Affairs Team. {{ref|2}}
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  • ...ead of Investment Research at [[Save & Prosper]], was given his peerage in the same year. <ref>Available through: [http://www.red-star-research.org.uk/sub <td align="center">[[Labour Party]]</td>
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  • ==Sub Group for the future environment== ...dent of ExtendMedia, an interactive television company based in Canada and the USA. Former Director of International Programming at BSkyB and former Execu
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  • ...(events and sponsorship). The Trade Unions, who once generated 90% of the Party's income, now provide only 30% (and only 3 high-value donations in 1998-9). ...ers. What was supposed to be the 'Party of the working class' is funded by the rich and packed out with businessmen.
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  • ==Donation to New Labour== ...99-2000. In total they gave the Labour Party £36,000 for tables at Labour Party events since 1997.
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  • ...1950, Tredegar) was a [[Conservative Party]] member of Parliament (MP) for the constituency of Cardiff North from 2010 to 2015 and Brecon and Radnorshire ...essed 14 May 2015.</ref> Evans was replaced by [[Craig Williams]] who held the seat by 2,137 votes.<ref> BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/politics/cons
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  • ...nagement company. London Export Ltd gave more than £5,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1997. SLP Investments gave more than £5,000 in both 1998 and 2000, an ..., Vice President of the [[China-British Business Council]] and Chairman of the [[48 Group Club]].
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  • ...Granada founder, [[Sidney Bernstein]]). He pledged £200,000 to the Labour Party in 1999, gave more than £5,000 in 1997, and was one of a group of milliona ...man of the [[Royal Exchange Theatre]] in Manchester and is now Chairman of the [[Old Vic Theatre Trust]], set up by [[Sally Greene]].<ref>Available throug
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  • ...ubsidiary called [[Euroinvest]]. They paid more than £5,000 to the Labour Party for 'tickets for dinners' in 1999-2000.
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  • ...<i>The Guardian</i> 'Special Investigation: Tax loopholes on homes benefit the rich and cost UK millions: Choice homes, virtually tax free'. 25 May 2002</ He is director of the [[Oxford Institute for Yiddish Studies]] and lives in St Johns Wood in Nort
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  • ...a company which acts as celebrity agents. He gave £1,500 to the [[Labour Party]] in March 2001.
    474 bytes (60 words) - 15:54, 14 August 2007
  • ...& Software]] (S3), an IT recuitment company. He gave £2,000 to the Labour Party in March 2001. His personal wealth is £80 million. ...ic testing on behalf of clients. They expanded into Germany only after the Labour laws were relaxed.
    866 bytes (108 words) - 12:23, 12 November 2016
  • ...up the [[Pagurian Press]], before becoming a banker and financier. He sold the [[Pagurian Corporation]] in 1988, at which time it had assets of $500 milli ...o from 1970-88, which he bought out in 1992 and then sold in 1995. LOM was the first independent equity house in Canada. They operate in Corporate Finance
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  • ...gencies) has given the [[Labour party]] more than £5000 in 1998 and 1997. The Reed family fortune is worth more than £50 million. He was paid £200,000 Reed Employment runs the Government's New Deal projects in the Hackney & City area of North London.
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  • .... Richard Williams unsuccessfully stood as Labour candidate for Gosport in the 1997 General Election. <ref>Available through: [http://www.red-star-researc ...me]], DETR, [[Ministry of Defence]], CCTA (Government computer Centre) and the Department of Social Security. <ref>Richalis Ltd, [http://www.wwwsites.org.
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  • ...' Accessed 17/09/2016</ref> is the former chairman of [[Amstrad]]. He was the former executive chairman and owner of [[Viglen]] Ltd and former chairman o ...ire the winner to one of his businesses but now invests £250,000.00 in to the winners' business.
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  • ...998, a position he held until 2004. He gave more than £5000 to the Labour Party in 1997 and 1998, and £20,000 in May 2001. ...te Hotels]] received letters offering them the "opportunity" to opt out of the 48-hour maximum working week.
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  • Charles Allen is the Chief Executive of the [[Granada Group]]. He was paid £844,000 in 1999 and £773,000 in 1998. He ...he Media division in 2001. When Granada Media splits he is expected to run the new company and cash in share options worth £4 million.
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  • ...Group]] (he resigned in March 2001), gave more than £5,000 to the Labour Party in 1997 and £12,000 in May 2001. ...n's shops and the 99 Waterstones shops. [[Alan Giles]], Chief Executive of the HMV Media Group is also a Non-Executive Director of [[Somerfield]].
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  • ...w.arcelormittal.com/index.php?lang=en&page=9 Profile] </ref> He has sat on the board of directors of [[Goldman Sachs]] since 2008. <ref name="Sachs">Goldm ...ittal is the result of a merger in June 2006 between Arcelor - at the time the world's second largest steel company - and Mittal Steel. <ref>Arcellor Mitt
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  • ...wns a 6% stake in Rangers football club. He gave £100,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 2001. He drives a Bentley worth £200,000 and his personal wealth is e ...Hunter owns the Fosters clothing chain (now called D2) and has a stake in the [[Ultimo]] bra company and [[Newco]] (which owns [[BHS]]). He sold a softwa
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  • ...6.8 million).[http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2090877,00.html] In the [[Sunday Times Rich List 2006]] he was placed in 888th position with an est ...ts President for a two-year term until 2003. He has also been appointed to the Board of Transport for London.
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  • ...r. He married into a wealthy family and has regular holidays at a villa on the French Riviera. {{ref|1}} #{{note|1}} see the BBC report at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1999/08/99/edinburg
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  • ...landtrust.org/senior_management.html Senior Management: Sir Ronald Cohen], The Portland Trust website, accessed 4 October 2011</ref> ...[Robert Peston]], has 'lobbied tirelessly for favourable tax treatment for the industry he helped to create'.
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  • ...roup]] and [[Central Plastics]]. He gave more than £5,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999-2000 and £6,600 in 2001. ...blisher of business information, including the Insider magazines (covering the North-West and Yorkshire), corporate finance directories and Finance North
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  • ...largest private development companies in the UK. AC Gallagher Holdings is the parent company for construction and property development companies [[Gallag ==Labour Party Donations==
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  • DLA Upstream was the lobbying branch of [[DLA]]. It is now known as [[Global Government Relation DLA Upstream gave more than £5,000 in sponsorship to the Labour Party in 1999-2000 and spent more than £5,000 on "Tickets for Dinners" in 2000-2
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  • ...ners had a fee income of £135 million in 2001. Its parent organisation is the global legal services organisation [[DLA Piper]]. Its lobbying subsidiary
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  • ...Chrysalis Group have given more than £5,000 in sponsorship to the Labour Party in 2000-2001.<ref>Reference needed</ref> ...o a broad-based media group best known for its Heart FM radio station.<ref>The top 352-372 Sunday Times (London) April 27, 2003, Sunday Features; Rich Lis
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  • ...e container leasing company, registered in Bermuda. They paid the [[Labour Party]] more than £5,000 for "Tickets For Dinners" in 2000-2001. ...train company, two containerships and two roll-on roll-off cargo ships and the ports of Heysham, Newhaven and Folkestone.
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  • ...insurance division of the [[Credit Suisse]] Group. They paid the [[Labour Party]] more than £5,000 for "Tickets For Dinners" in 2000-2001. In the UK, they are the company behind C[[hurchill Insurance]], the [[National Insurance and Guarantee Group]] and [[Winterthur Life UK Ltd]].
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  • ...urer in Europe. They gave more than £5,000 in sponsorship to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999-2000 and spent more than £5,000 on "Tickets for Dinners" in 2000 ...hich merged with [[Zurich Insurance]] to form ZFS in 1998. He was chair of the [[Association of British Insurers]] from 1998-2000 and is a director of [[A
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  • ...6-Congress-Final Where are they now? The 1997/1998 Special Advisers to the Labour Government]", ''GMB: April 2006 Briefing'', p11, accessed 12.09.10</ref> ...writers, "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/fionamillar Fiona Millar]", ''The Guardian'', accessed 17.09.10</ref>
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  • ...6-Congress-Final Where are they now? The 1997/1998 Special Advisers to the Labour Government]", ''GMB: April 2006 Briefing'', p8, accessed 12.09.10</ref> ...s reportedly in favour of hospitals being given power to borrow money from the private sector.<ref>Cherry Canovan, "[http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?sto
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  • ...2007. He was also the Chief British Negotiator on [[Northern Ireland]] in the decade up to 2007. ...behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business.
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  • [[File:Andrew Adonis.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Andrew Adonis introduces the Institute for Government's Future of No 10 Communications event, 08 March 2 [[Andrew Adonis]] (Lord Adonis) is a Labour life peer, former journalist, educationalist and academic. He was education
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  • ...r to [[Frank Dobson]] from 1997-9. He worked as an advisor to Mr Dobson in the Shadow Cabinet from September 1993 and previously worked as a research assi ...n became the Project Manager of the [[Knowledge Network Project]] (KNP) at the Cabinet Office, with [[Chris Hancock]] as his depute. He is Director of con
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  • ...00,000) from January 2000 until 29 January 2004 when he resigned following the Hutton Inquiry. ...usly moved towards creating more business friendly journalism. He expanded the recently created Economics and Business Centre:
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  • ...s compounds, including parathion, into the marketplace for insect control. The difficulty with organophosphates (OPs) is that they are neurotoxic due to t ...developed as a potential pesticide and that the US military application of the compound has nothing to do with them.{{ref|215}}
    75 KB (11,176 words) - 11:18, 24 August 2009
  • ...an of the [[Perrotts Group]] from 1973-97. He gave £6,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 2001. *[[All-Party Parliamentary Group for Apprenticeships]], Member
    891 bytes (112 words) - 13:55, 30 September 2015
  • ...tchell, is the founder of [[Syscap Ltd]]. He gave £25,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 2001 and he was subsequently ennobled by prime minister [[Tony Blair]] ...ide/story/0,,1491862,00.html Appeal to end 'misguided' Israeli boycott], ''The Guardian'', May 25, 2005</ref>
    1 KB (160 words) - 10:42, 15 January 2017
  • ...ebate, 'Former defence chief says he did not have to declare interest'], ''The Guardian'', 26 January 2004.</ref> ...e attitudes".<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8049412.stm 'Two Labour peers face suspension'], ''BBC'', 14 May 2009.</ref>
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  • ...London Council of the [[CBI]] from 1992-99 and is a member of the board of the [[Higher Education Funding Council]] ([http://www.dfes.gov.uk/pns/DisplayPN ...e Guildhall. In June 2003, David was appointed a non-Executive Director to the [[Bank of England]].[http://www.hepi.ac.uk/board.asp?ID=92 Source]
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  • ...er the waste management company Snowie Ltd was awarded clean-up work after the foot-and-mouth epidemic. {{ref|2}} ...emntal credentials after it was discovered that 900 animals were buried in the wrong location in County Durham. On three different occasions, Snowie Ltd h
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  • ...to [[Caspian]], a media company. He gave more than £5,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999 and £7,000 in 2001. ...also the Chairman of Thorpe Park (Leeds) Ltd. In the financial year up to the 31st March 2000, GMI Rovinian earned £200,000 in management charges from T
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  • ...ounder of [[Veetee Rice Company]], one of the largest producers of rice in the UK. When Varma originally arrived in England in the early 1980s he intended to use in background in steel production in Malawi
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  • ...00 in 2001. He is a former Metropolitan policeman. When his company bought the Zap club in 1998 they installed hidden CCTV cameras<ref>Available through [
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  • ...th Bottriell's companies. Sunil Wickremeratne gave £6,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 2001. His personal wealth is estimated at £40 million.
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  • Peter J. Thompson is Chairman of the [[Hong Kong Port and Maritime Board]], responsible for promoting Hong Kong' ...er of the [[Hong Kong Public Service Commission]] and was Vice-Chairman of the [[Hong Kong Shipowners Association]].
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  • ...Milligan]]. A month after the donation he was appointed as the Chairman of the [[Scottish New Deal Advisory Task Force]]. ...Aberdeen Enterprise Trust]] and [[Head Start Aberdeen]]. He is Chairman of the Board of Governors at [[Robert Gordon University]], and a sponsor of an Ind
    856 bytes (126 words) - 08:50, 23 February 2007
  • ...r, gave £2,500 to the [[Labour Party]] in May 2001. The company is run by the Chaudhry family.
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  • ...rus shifted its focus to the voluntary sector. However, although "much of the work is delivered on a not for profit basis... a successful commercial arm ...3,000 to the [[Labour Party]]{{ref|3}}. In October 2001 [[James Plaskitt]] Labour MP for Warwick and Leamington since 1997, became Non-Executive Director{{re
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  • ...velopers in the North east, specialising in developing industrial estates. The company, known as [[James Esson]] (Properties) Limited until 1985, has a su ...it is common for people to give money to political Parties, "especially in the construction industry."
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  • ...Directors of the company are [[Philip England]] and [[Barry Smith]], while the major shareholder is [[Victoria Leisure Ltd]]. Deltacloud also has a subsi In May 2001 Deltacloud gave £2,000 to the [[Labour Party]].
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  • ...property developers, gave more than £5,000 in sponsorship to the [[Labour Party]] in 1998 and 2000. They own Manston Airport and a huge business park next ...ng property without their shareholders' permission).He is also Chairman of the [[Johnson Fry Utilities Trust]] and a Director of [[Scottish Value Trust pl
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  • ...an of [[Stoke City FC]], has given several large donations to the [[Labour Party]]. He pledged £100,000 in March 1999 and has given donations via companies ...Gloucestershire County Cricket Clubs and at shopping centres. The board of the Staffordshire-based company is largely made up of Coates family members, as
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  • .... He has said that he may give more money in the future, "I certainly have the tendency to donate again". <ref> Ref needed </ref> ...ant of Sir [[Robert Peel]], the 19th Century Prime Minister and founder of the British police force.
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  • ...ince 1997. He had been a Tory supporter up until the 1997 election, giving the Tories more than £40,000 and is a friend of advertising boss [[Charles Saa ...0 in 1998 and 1999), a golf club and health club business with 21 clubs in the UK, Germany and Spain. He is also a Director of several property companies:
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  • ...land on Sunday newspaper in January 1999 to express support for the Labour Party (including [[William Haughey]],[[Tom Hunter]] and Dr [[John Parker]] of [[B ...e|1}} National Union of Mineworkers, "Conservatives Raise Twice As Much As Labour", http://www.num.org.uk/?p=news&ni=45
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  • ...is CEO of the strategic brand consultancy [[Butterfield8]] and a fellow of the [[IPA]]{{Ref|1}}. Partners BDDH past clients include: [[Mercedes]], [[Emirates Airlines]], [[The Guardian]], [[BT]], [[Sainsbury's]] and [[Clerical Medical]].
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  • ...and chairman until 2003, [[David Woolf]], donated £2,500 to the [[Labour Party]] every year between 1995 and 1998, and £5,000 in June 1999. Woolf, known as the "Grandfather of the Retail Park Industry", was Citygrove Leisure's chief executive until 2003 b
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  • ...' is the Chairman of [[Dennis Publishing]]. {{ref|1}} He gave the [[Labour Party]] £166,666 in January and May 1999 and more than £5000 in 1997. {{ref|2}} Dennis Publishing produces lifestyle magazines like [[Maxim]] and four of the seven top-selling computer magazines.
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  • ...of £500,000 to Tony Blair's private office fund before the 1997 election.The fund was a 'blind trust' set up by [[Jonathan Powell]], now Blair's Chief o ...tion (ICI, Rolls Royce, BAT/Rothmans, Halifax, Powergen) and Tax forms for the Inland Revenue. Directors got paid between £146,000-£210,00 in 1999.
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  • ...ster, '''Christopher Suenson-Taylor''', (born 8/4/1951) is a British peer, Labour politician and multimillionaire dairy farmer in Cheshire. He was educated a ...ies/lord-grantchester-obituary-1602153.html Lord Grantchester Obituary], ''The Independent'', 21 September 1995 </ref>
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  • ...e, together with husband [[Robert Bourne]], gave £100,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999-2000. ...Mandelson]] also sits on the Board. Sally Greene runs the trust which owns the Criterion Theatre in Piccadilly Circus, London.
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  • [[William Haughey]] is Chief Executive of [[City Refrigeration]], the UK's largest specialist refrigeration and facilities management company. According to The Sunday Times Rich List,
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  • .... & Gadher, D. (2008) 'THE DONORS: FROM DIAMOND BROKER TO DEMOLITION MAN'. The <i>Sunday Times</i> 13th January 2008</ref> ...& Druggist</i> 'It's goodbye from him'. 28th June 2003</ref>. He was also the second largest shareholder of IVAX (as reported in 1998), with a stake wort
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  • ...thority he is paid £19,825 a year. He gave more than £5000 to the Labour Party in 1999. Yorkshire Enterprise operates in Yorkshire and Humberside, lending ...cutive of [[Yorkshire Tyne Tees Television]] (now part of [[Granada]]). At the time that he was in charge, staffing was reduced from 2000 to 850 in five y
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  • ...0,000 to the Labour Party and was caught up in the controversy surrounding the cash-for-honours scandal. {{ref|2}} ...billings" worth $4 billion (they are ranked 13th biggest in the world). In the UK they operate as [[Lowe Howard-Spink]].
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  • ...in 1998. His personal wealth is estimated at £30 million. He owns 37% of the shares of Sunderland FC (valued at £12 million). ...in the £80 million redevelopment of the Odsal rugby stadium in Bradford. The company was previously called [[Laurelwood Ltd]], and is part of a network
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  • .... He now runs the Poptones label, manages bands, DJs and writes a blog for The Guardian and myspace.[http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/interviews/article.html?i ...thew Freud]]. In April 2000 he said in an interview with MP3 magazine that the way Internet firms were buying up record companies was good because, "More
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  • ...board company) bought Vision Posters in May 1999 and it now operates under the brand 'Score Outdoor', alongside Trainer Ltd, Signways (Manchester) and Par ...of England and Wales are covered by ASCAs) and also proposed increases in the permitted level of brightness of illuminated boards.
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  • ...person in the health sector by the ''Guardian'' in 2000. He is a member of the [[Better Regulation Task Force]]. ...partment of Health]]'s 'action team' on NHS bed use which recommended that the NHS should place older patients into private nursing homes.
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  • ...than £5,000 to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999-2000 to almost entirely fund the election campaign of [[Frank Roy]] {{ref|2}}. ...ll and is a former Director of [[Rangers Football Club]]. He resigned from the latter post in 2003, with Rangers' debt estimated by some at £80m {{ref|3}
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  • ...ield Ltd]]{{ref|2}} and own 6 purpose-built irradiated fuel carrier ships. The PNTL ships transport nuclear waste and fuel around Europe and Japan. ...tinued sales of the fuel to Japan are vital to the commercial viability of the MOX plant at Sellafield.
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  • ...G Group took over the transmission, exploration and production of gas from the former nationalised [[British Gas]] company. BG Group has significant shale gas assets in the United States.
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  • ...une of £280 million <ref> Sunday Times Rich List, "Sir Michael Bishop". ''The Times'' (London), 27 April 2008. Acc 2 November 2008 </ref> to over nearly ...of Proceedings for 22 March 2011].</ref> where he sits as a [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]].
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  • ...Party]] more than £5,000 in sponsorship in every year from 1997 to 2001. The Cable Communications Asociation is made up of [[Eurobell]], Cable and Wirel ...n the [[Creative Industries Task Force on the Internet]]. [[Greg Clarke]], the Chief Executive of Cable and Wireless, was paid £382,238 in 1999.
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  • ...our Party]] in 1998 and 2000-2001.The company sponsored the Gala Dinner at Labour's 1999 conference for £20,000 (tickets cost £350 a head). ...es of mature woodland. 50,000 extra vehicles per day would be generated in the area. Manchester Airport (55% owned by Manchester City Council) itself has
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  • ...wner of [[J&P Ltd]], one of the largest property and construction firms in the Middle East{{Ref|1}}. ...to make a £10,000 donation to [[John Prescott]]'s "private office" before the 1997 election{{ref|4}}.
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  • ...er plc is one of the largest retail groups in Europe and gave the [[Labour Party]] more than £5,000 for 'tickets for dinners' in 1999-2000. ...eid=90 Our Operating Companies] ''Kingfisher plc'' </ref> which operate in the UK, France, Italy, Turkey, Ireland, Spain, Russia, Germany, China Taiwan an
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  • ...rivate contractor which operates local council contracts). They run 17% of the UK rail system and 3 London bus lines. They gave more than £5,000 in sponsorship to the [[Labour Party]] in 1999-2000 and 2000-2001.
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  • ...oil and gas taskforce. Schlumberger sell drilling products and services to the oil industry. <ref> Old reference needs updating - originally taken from 'S
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  • Mirror Group newspapers sponsored the Labour Party's centenary dinner in March 2000, give more than £5,000 in sponsorship yea
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  • '''Sadiq Khan''' is a [[Labour Party]] MP, he has been the Member of Parliament for Tooting since 2005. ...uded in the shadow cabinet due to his intentions to run as a candidate for the Mayor of London.
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  • Chasing the Dragon; Appeasing the Chinese ...assacre and features including 'The Last Emperor', an unfavourable look at the life of Mao Zedong.
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  • ...hat has developed a number of influential ideas for increasing the role of the private secortr in local government. Corry is also chief executive at [[New ...greater financial flexibility for the best performers. It also introduced the comprehensive performance assessment, which ranks every English council int
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  • ...ti-communist aims. This was Common Cause, whose origins are to be found in the merging of two quite distinct political strands. ...is to be found within the [[Amalgamated Engineering Union]] (AEU). Within the AEU,
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  • ...terest in defence and security issues to exchange information and views on the future needs of Britain's defence'.<ref>[http://www.ukdf.org.uk/about.htm A ...er-arms-lobbyist.html Lords scandal: Peer faces row over arms lobbyist], ''The Telegraph'', 10:54PM GMT 26 Jan 2009 </ref>
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  • '''Bill Rammell''' was the [[Labour]] member of parliament for Harlow between 1997 and 2010. ...at the [[University of Plymouth]] until 2012 and is now Vice Chancellor of the [[University of Bedfordshire]].
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  • ...ey Work For You, [http://www.theyworkforyou.com/regmem/?p=10438 Changes to the Register of Members' Interests, Lewis Moonie], accessed 01 August 2007.</re ...[Sovereign Strategy]] is not a member of the lobbyists' professional body, the [[Association of Professional Political Consultants]], which has a code of
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  • ...estminster]]'''Open Europe''' is a Eurosceptic think tank which is part of the [[Stockholm Network]] and has neoconservative connections. ...y, roll back EU regulation of trade and financial services, and repatriate the EU welfare budget to member states.
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  • [[Image:ImranKhand.jpg|right|thumb|500px|Imran Khand, New Labour donor]] ...ics/article2327904.ece Brown hit by new sleaze row over Labour funds] From The Sunday Times, August 26, 2007</ref>
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  • ...a majority of 14,828. <ref> [http://www.express.co.uk/politics/politicians/labour/khalid-mahmood/479 Khalid Mahmood] ''Express'', accessed 18 May 2015 </ref> ...mingham City Council]]lor from 1990-1993, resigning his seat after leaving the city to work in Kuwait.
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  • ...support for the Conservative Party.<ref>Richard Cockett, (1994)''Thinking the Unthinkable'', p. 229-230. On 23 June 1970, he was created a life peer with the title '''Baron Vaizey''', of Greenwich in Greater London.
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  • ...t was 'originally spun out' from the [[University of Oxford]] in 1993 with the aid of [[Isis Innovation]].<ref name="Isis"/> In 2003, PowderJect was acqui .../20/executivesalaries.executivepay1 £43m windfall for PowderJect chief] ''The Guardian'', Tuesday 20 May 2003 02.34 BST</ref>
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  • '''Baroness Whitaker''' is a member of the UK [[House of Lords]]. ...f the proposed [[Joint Parliamentary Human Rights Committee]], a member of the [[European Union Select Committee on Social Affairs]] and International Dev
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  • Source, unless otherwise specified, is the ODI website.<ref>ODI [http://www.odi.org.uk/council.html ODI council], acce *[[Tony Baldry]] MP : Conservative MP who chaired the International Development Select Committee from 2001 to 2005.
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  • The British Youth Council is part of [[Mezzanine2]]. ...be financed by the Foreign Office, though that may be a euphemism for MI6, the British secret intelligence service.
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  • ...Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi in house arrest and detaining many of the party members [25]. ...E). Even though Premier's share is only 27%, they are the main operator of the project [26].
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  • ...aviour of people and firms was essential for the planner when dealing with the development of urban and rural areas both in situations where he could infl ...sociological and participatory techniques, but regarded as more important the testing of new policies.
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  • ...agenda-setting work on young offenders, ethnic diversity, welfare and the labour market. ...e merger of Political and Economic Planning (PEP, established in 1931) and the [[Centre for Studies in Social Policy]] (CSSP, established in 1972).[http:/
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  • ...shire and sits in the [[House of Lords]] as a member of the [[Conservative Party]]. ...the nephew of [[Robert Sainsbury|Sir Robert Sainsbury]]. He is married to the former ballerina [[Anya Linden]]. His brother is [[Timothy Sainsbury|Sir Ti
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  • ...(MST) is a front group for establishment interests who are concerned about the proliferation of new information sources that are beyond their control. ...urdoch in 2006 noted how "power is moving away from the old elite" towards the consumers.<ref>Richard Sambrook, "[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/49
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  • ==Altered State: The Story of Ecstasy Culture and Acid House== Below are some extracts from Altered State: The Story of Ecstasy Culture and Acid House.
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  • ...eign Secretary. From 1992-95 he was Secretary of State for Defence. He was the MP for Kensington and Chelsea. ...for a Free Britain]], attended the CFB reception at the 1988 Conservative Party conference.
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  • ...pany of tomorrow.The findings of the Inquiry, published in 1995, introduce the concept of an inclusive approach to business success in which a company: ...rence in co-operation with The German Federal Foreign Office Supported by the [[Global Public Policy Institute ]]
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  • '''Pearson''' is the world’s biggest educational company and a strong advocate of market-drive It is also the world's leading book publisher.
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  • ...Scottish Networks International]], [[Keronite plc]],[[eTourism Ltd]] and [[The Glasgow School of Art]]. He is Director of [[Chamberlin & Hill plc]], [[Ri ...Sustainable Development]] from 1996 to 1999. He has been a Board member of the [[Scottish Legal Aid Board]] since 1996 for which he receives an annual rem
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  • ...or the alcohol industry, during her time at The [[Portman Group]] she told the [[Telegraph]]: ...ative appealed to me. It avoids the legislative route. <ref> Stefan Stern, The Daily Telegraph
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  • .../953/953ap16.htm Memorandum from the All-Party Parliamentary Beer Group to the Select Committee on Treasury] Last accessed December 3rd 2007 </ref> ...ry-office.co.uk/pa/cm/cmparty/memi140.htm House of Commons Register of All-party Groups] Accessed April 2007 </ref>
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  • ...the 1998 Nobel Peace Prize, with [[David Trimble]] of the Ulster Unionist Party. ...r 2010.</ref> and a Member of Parliament for Foyle, as well as a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly.
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  • ...n in Northern Ireland and the leader of the [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] (SDLP). ...tion, Durkan retained his seat with a majority of 6,046 and 48 per cent of the vote. <ref> [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/politics/constituencies/N06000008 Fo
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  • '''Merrill Lynch''' is one of the world's leading financial management and advisory companies, providing fina *[[Dan Crippen]], Director of the Congressional Budget Office (1999-2003)
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  • Sir '''Dick Olver''' (born 1947- ) is the former chairman of global arms company [[BAE]] and a former [[BP]] executiv ...as appointed chairman of BAE Systems plc and at the same time retired from the board of BP. Before leaving BP he was deputy group chief executive. He cont
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  • ...ons such as [[Open Europe]]. During his father's lifetime, he was known by the courtesy title, [[Viscount Cranborne]]. ...d-1186204.html The Saturday Profile Viscount Cranborne, Conservative Peer: The last true blue blood], ''Independent'', 21 November 1998</ref> and
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  • ...' is a public relations and lobbying consultant and a former director of [[Labour Friends of Israel]] (LFI). A biography on the LFI site, accessed via the [http://web.archive.org/web/20030827124813/http://www.lfi.org.uk/ internet
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  • ...l-white-eric-joyce-afghanistan Eric Joyce's resignation doesn't add up], ''The Guardian'', 04-September-2009, Accessed 07-September-2009</ref>. ==Support for the invasion and occupation of Iraq==
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  • ...for Wansdyke between 1997 and 2010. He stood unsuccessfully in 1992 and in the newly formed constituency of Somerset North-East. ...Hain]] and Rt Hon [[David Miliband]] and parliamentary under-secretary to the [[Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs]].<ref> [http://www.th
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  • ...lm Wicks]], first in the [[Department of Trade and Industry]] and later in the [[Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform]] until 2008. < ==Back for more! 14 Labour and Lib Dem ex-MPs given payoffs of up to £55,000 when they lost their sea
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  • '''Fabian Hamilton''' has the been the [[Labour Party]] MP for North East Leeds constituency in Yorkshire, UK since 1997. <ref> [ In the 2015 general election in May, Hamilton retained his seat with a majority of
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  • ...d''' (born July 1, 1957) is a British politician. He has been the [[Labour Party]] member of parliament for Caerphilly since 2001. <ref> [http://www.theywor David was re-elected in the May 2015 general election with a majority of 10,073. <ref> [http://www.bbc.
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  • ...a majority of 7,455. <ref> [http://www.express.co.uk/politics/politicians/labour/chris-bryant/186 Chris Bryant] ''Express'', accessed 19 May 2015 </ref> In ...nce secretary, citing disagreements over defence issues with newly-elected Labour leader [[Jeremy Corbyn]]. <ref> [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-3424
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  • ...|thumb|right|Caroline Flint]]'''Caroline Flint''' has been the UK [[Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for Don Valley since 1997. ...pdate/2015-05-08/reports-labours-caroline-flint-holds-don-valley/ Reports: Labour's Caroline Flint holds Don Valley] ''ITV News'', 8 May 2015, accessed 14 Ma
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  • ...gham from 1997 to 2010. Clark was reportedly not re-elected in 2010 due to the expenses scandal as he claimed £1,200 a month in rent for his London flat ==Back for more! 14 Labour and Lib Dem ex-MPs given payoffs of up to £55,000 when they lost their sea
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  • ...Template:Fracking badge‬}}'''Barbara Keeley''' has been the UK [[Labour Party]] member of Parliament (MP) for Worsley and subsequently Worsley and Eccles In February 2014 the MP described [[IGas Energy]]'s potential fracking site at Barton Moss in Sa
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  • ...and transport sectors.<ref>Public Affairs News, "[http://bit.ly/9tmnua Ex-Labour Group in EP leader Titley joins agency in Brussels]," accessed 31 January 2 *Member, Delegation to the EU-Croatia Joint Parliamentary Committee
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  • ...2015 election Ellman once again retained her seat, gaining 67 per cent of the vote and a majority of 24,463. <ref> [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/politics/co .../home.aspx?ParentId=m11s18s186&SecId=186&AId=59670&ATypeId=1 JC Power 100: The people shaping Jewish life in Britain], 25 April 2008</ref>
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  • ...London Assembly Member for Barnet and Camden since 2012. He was previously Labour MP for Hendon from 1997 until 2010.<ref>[http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor-ass ...f British Jews]], [[Labour Friends of Israel]], and 'a visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories with [[Trade Union Friends of Israel]]' in November
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  • '''George Foulkes''' (Lord Foulkes) is a British Labour Party peer and a Lothians MSP. ...select committees, and giving clients tours of the Palace of Westminster. The ''Herald Scotland'' reported that:
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  • ...bbyist. In 2007 he was appointed as director of election resources for the party under [[Gordon Brown]]. On the 5 September 2013 he was created a [[Labour]] peer in the House of Lords.<ref name="parl"> [http://www.parliament.uk/biographies/lord
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  • ...revious parliament, from 1992, he represented Wallsend. He did not contest the 2010 UK general election. ...nd secretary of state 'for transport, local government and the regions' in the Cabinet.
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  • ...a British [[Labour Party]] politician who was elected MP for Hartlepool in the by-election of September 2004, succeeding [[Peter Mandelson]] when he left ...a majority of 3,024. <ref> [http://www.express.co.uk/politics/politicians/labour/iain-wright/135 Iain Wright] ''Express'', accessed 19 May 2015 </ref>
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  • ...ew|Paul Anthony Elliott Bew]], Baron Bew is professor of Irish politics at the Queen's University of Belfast, a position he has held since 1991. ...active in the Northern Ireland Civil Rights movement, and participated in the 1969 Belfast-Derry march which was attacked by loyalist protestors at Burnt
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  • ...o be further associated with the Institute, although the issue is unclear. The group was disbanded in 2001. ...l]] of [[France]] and the [[Conservative Party (South Africa)|Conservative Party of South Africa]].
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  • ...y involved with the [[Conservative Party]] and a national board member for the [[Tory Reform Group]].<ref name="people"> [http://www.cavendishpc.co.uk/abo *[[Gareth Morgan]], director. Member of the [[Labour Party]].<ref name="people"/>
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  • ...itehall, the EU and the devolved assemblies. Central Lobby Consultants run the [[Associate Parliamentary Food and Health Forum]] *[[Business in the Community]]
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  • ...ommunications experts are engaged in developing and pro-actively executing the communications needs of statesmen and public figures, governments, diplomat ...et/aboutus-management-abailey.htm website] makes it clear that the work of the agency is also about art and culture:
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  • ...10 and ministerial Special Adviser in the Office of Arts and Libraries and the Welsh Office. ...er adviser to the Labour Shadow Cabinet, and Editor of Tribune, the Labour Party weekly paper from 1987 to 1991;
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  • ...ofessional body to amend government legislation during its passage through the Houses of Parliament."''<ref>[http://www.advocate-consulting.co.uk/clients. ...] (formerly GPC International). He then went back to Labour to work on the party's third successive General Election victory in 2005.<ref>[http://www.pharma
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  • ...ector for both [[Andy Burnham]] and [[Owen Smith]] in their bids to become Labour leader.<ref>[http://www.fourcommunications.com/news/four-acquires-insight-c It had a fee income in 2016 in the region of £3.5 million. It specialises in lobbying for healthcare companie
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  • ...major real-estate, hospitality, financial services and other companies in the Gulf. ...HQ during the 2001 General election and was the agent in his local area in the 2002 council elections.
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  • ...xecutive. Reid was caught on film boasting about his links to the Scottish Labour hierarchy as a means of winning a business contract for his employer, [[Bea ...ss to people because of who I am and who I know. Certainly as you know, in the business of politics, you have a relationship, it makes things easier. (Obs
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  • ...ky must be distilled in Scotland, though bottling can take place anywhere. The [[Scotch Whisky Association]] (SWA) is a licensed trade association represe ..., fight for fair tax and access to international markets, and to represent the industry's interests at governmental level both at home and abroad". <ref>
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  • ...tive of [[Diageo]], who in June 2013 retired after 13 years at the helm of the world's largest alcohol company. ...y industry after receiving almost £15m in cash and long-term bonuses from the company in its most recent financial year'. <ref> Jill Treanor, [http://www
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  • ...gagement, dialogue and insight”. They “believe that great research has the power to achieve great things – from challenging conventional thinking to ...founded in 1992, and in 1998 became part of [[Chime Communications]] plc, the holding company for several public relations, research, and advertising and
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  • ...p, a member of the Design Council's Millennium Commission, and a Fellow of the [[Sunningdale Institute]]. ...leading critic of housing profiteers is beneficiary of property empire]", The Daily Telegraph, 18 April 2004, accessed October 2008</ref>
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  • ...1992 election defeat Labour leader John Smith suggested Frankel join the [[Labour Finance and Industry Group]]. ...al.co.uk/pages/Back/Wnext25/Osler.html ''Labour Party plc: New Labour as a Party of Business''] mentions Frankel in connection with Hobsbawm’s ‘fund-rai
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  • ...Crea used when he worked for [[Frank Dobson]] at the Department of Health. The KNP system was provided by a consortium that included [[IBM]] and Lotus UK, ...peeches from representatives of the CIA, the German Defence Department and the CBI {{ref|5}}.
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  • ...wC) is a major international accounting and consulting firm resulting from the July 1998 merger of [[Price Waterhouse]] and [[Coopers & Lybrand]]. As of 2 ...tors-held-account-shareholder-spring Auditors must be held to account], ''The Guardian,'' 31 May 2012 </ref>
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  • [[Novartis]] was created in 1996 through the merger of [[Ciba-Geigy]] and [[Sandoz]]. It has operations in 140 countries ...ts [http://globalbusinessinsights.com/content/rbhc0019m.pdf Patient Power: The shift towards more informed, more powerful consumers of drugs] Accessed 5th
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  • ...ccra (August 2006) to discuss issues of interest to centre-right parties. The aim was also to form an "association of centre-right political parties in A ...sday in Gaborone. According to Saleshando's statement, the meeting covered the following issues including:"
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  • From the AMF website: ...are sponsored by the MATRA programme of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in The Netherlands.
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  • '''Rob Templeman''' is the chairman of [[Gala Coral Group]] and the [[RAC]]. Templeman has been chief executive of some of the largest companies in the UK including [[Debenhams]], [[Homebase]], [[Harveys Furnishing Group]] and
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  • ==The 'big tent'== Matthews writes<ref name="Lob">Simon Matthews 'Pissing in or pissing out? The 'big tent' of Green Alliance', [[Lobster]], No 42., Winter 2001/2, p3-7.</r
    12 KB (1,782 words) - 12:05, 25 April 2012
  • ...i-regulatory [[Manifesto Club]] and has spoken at the [[Battle of Ideas]], the [[Brighton Salon]], [[Leeds Salon]] and [[Manchester Salon]]. ...2006</ref> <ref>[http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/9447/ The weird fashion for bashing faith schools] Spiked, 23 August 2010</ref>
    342 KB (38,083 words) - 02:02, 24 January 2018
  • .../01/dean-godson-is-the-new-director-of-policy_exchange.html Dean Godson is the new Director of Policy Exchange], ConservativeHome, 31 January 2013.</ref> ...he Labour Party . <ref>The CIA, The British Left and the Cold War: Calling The Tune? by Hugh Wilford, Frank Cass, 2003, pp176-181</ref>
    65 KB (9,862 words) - 08:59, 16 September 2014
  • ...getown University], accessed 6 August 2009.</ref> He has been President of the [[National Strategy Information Center]] since 1993.<ref>[http://www.strate "Godson's intense interest in intelligence operations is relatively new, the National Journal claimed in 1986. "Just 10 years ago, with a bachelor's fro
    15 KB (2,243 words) - 03:20, 15 November 2012
  • ...[[Dean's Yard]]. [[Marsham Street]] and [[Smith Square]] are parallel to the West and East respectively. [[Dean Trench Street]] runs East from Tufton St ...of). The [[Centre for Policy Studies]] is at 57 as is [[Lord Harris]]’ The [[Centre for Research in Post-Communist Economies]].
    9 KB (1,444 words) - 14:52, 8 February 2023
  • ...er), [[Ray Whitney]] MP and [[Stephen Haseler]]. According to Tom Easton, the Institute had a marked anti-left tendency: ...th?]", Review of ''SDP: The Birth, Life and Death of the Social Democratic Party'', by Ivor Crewe and Anthony King, Oxford University Press, 1995, in ''Lobs
    16 KB (2,330 words) - 19:52, 17 February 2011
  • ...ely 11,000 people with approximately 6,500 of those working in Edinburgh. The company manages assets in excess of £124 billion on behalf of over seven m ===The 1800s===
    30 KB (4,299 words) - 15:22, 7 February 2011
  • ...hose views and behaviour were at odds with the parliamentary party and the Labour-voting electorate. ...] in 1988 to form the [[Social and Liberal Democrats]] (SLD), now known as the [[Liberal Democrats]] <ref>BBC [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/6
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 10:13, 15 January 2009
  • ...cessed 20 August 2012</ref> where he was head of operations for the [[Stop the Boycott]] campaign.<ref>Leslie Bunder, [http://www.somethingjewish.co.uk/ar
    939 bytes (128 words) - 07:18, 1 October 2014
  • ...b]] and is the father of [[William Kristol]], the founder of [[Project for the New American Century]]. ...aff sergeant in the armored infantry in [[Europe]] in World War II. After the war, he was stationed in Marseilles for a year.
    11 KB (1,582 words) - 00:45, 21 April 2013

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