Difference between revisions of "Ann Taylor"

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== Revolving door ==  
 
== Revolving door ==  
  
* Taylor joined the administrative board of the arms contractor [[Thales]] in 2010. Thales had been part of the consortium supplying two aircraft carriers that were £1.541bn over budget.<ref>Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend],guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.</ref>  
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* Taylor joined the administrative board of the arms contractor [[Thales]] in 2010. Thales had been part of the consortium supplying two aircraft carriers that were £1.541bn over budget.<ref name=ministerjoins>Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend],guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.</ref>  
  
While she was the ministry of Defence and in several defence committees, Taylor was often involved with [[Thales]]. In 2008, she visited Thales' British headquarters in Crawley, West Sussex, to see their £700m Watchkeeper unmanned plane, or "drone", programme. She also met with their staff at two arms exhibitions and at an international strategic think tank in 2009. In November of that same year she announced that the government was deciding whether it could arm the Thales drones. <ref> Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend], ''The Guardian'', 17 December 2010. Accessed 27 September 2016. </ref>
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While she was the ministry of Defence and in several defence committees, Taylor was often involved with [[Thales]]. In 2008, she visited Thales' British headquarters in Crawley, West Sussex, to see their £700m Watchkeeper unmanned plane, or "drone", programme. She also met with their staff at two arms exhibitions and at an international strategic think tank in 2009. In November of that same year she announced that the government was deciding whether it could arm the Thales drones. <ref name=ministerjoins> Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend], ''The Guardian'', 17 December 2010. Accessed 27 September 2016. </ref>
  
 
The prime minister's [[Advisory Committee on Business Appointments]] at the time saw no reason why Taylor should not join the board of Thales, subject to ACOBA's usual two-year lobbying ban, whereby she should not be personally involved in lobbying UK ministers or Crown servants, including special advisers, on behalf of the arms firm. <ref>Advisory Committee on Business Appointments, Annual Report 2010-11 </ref>
 
The prime minister's [[Advisory Committee on Business Appointments]] at the time saw no reason why Taylor should not join the board of Thales, subject to ACOBA's usual two-year lobbying ban, whereby she should not be personally involved in lobbying UK ministers or Crown servants, including special advisers, on behalf of the arms firm. <ref>Advisory Committee on Business Appointments, Annual Report 2010-11 </ref>

Revision as of 09:04, 27 September 2016

Revolving Door.jpg This article is part of the Revolving Door project of Spinwatch.


Ann Taylor was a Labour MP from 1974 to 2005, when she entered the House of Lords as Baroness Taylor of Bolton.[1]

Key parliamentary roles

  • Shadow secretary of state from 1992 to 1995
  • Chair of the intelligence and security committee between 2001 and 2005
  • Chief whip under prime minister Tony Blair from 1998 to 2001.

Entered the House of Lords as Baroness Taylor of Bolton in 2005 where she held two ministerial briefs:

  • Minister for Defence Equipment between 2007 and 2008
  • Minister for International Defence and Security between 2008 and 2010 [2] [3]

Revolving door

  • Taylor joined the administrative board of the arms contractor Thales in 2010. Thales had been part of the consortium supplying two aircraft carriers that were £1.541bn over budget.[4]

While she was the ministry of Defence and in several defence committees, Taylor was often involved with Thales. In 2008, she visited Thales' British headquarters in Crawley, West Sussex, to see their £700m Watchkeeper unmanned plane, or "drone", programme. She also met with their staff at two arms exhibitions and at an international strategic think tank in 2009. In November of that same year she announced that the government was deciding whether it could arm the Thales drones. [4]

The prime minister's Advisory Committee on Business Appointments at the time saw no reason why Taylor should not join the board of Thales, subject to ACOBA's usual two-year lobbying ban, whereby she should not be personally involved in lobbying UK ministers or Crown servants, including special advisers, on behalf of the arms firm. [5]

Chair of 'Snoopers Charter' committee

In 2015 Taylor was approached by the home secretary Theresa May and accepted the job of chairing a joint committee on the controversial investigatory powers bill, commonly referred to as the ‘Snooper’s Charter’. [7]

Notes

  1. Baroness Taylor of Bolton, www.parliament.uk, accessed 17 December 2010.
  2. Baroness Taylor of Bolton, www.parliament.uk, accessed 17 December 2010.
  3. Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend,guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend,guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "ministerjoins" defined multiple times with different content
  5. Advisory Committee on Business Appointments, Annual Report 2010-11
  6. Ann Taylor, accessed 27 September 2016.
  7. Rowena MasonTheresa May to appoint Labour peer to scrutinise snooper's charter,guardian.co.uk, Monday 12 October 2015.