Difference between revisions of "Ferdinand Mount"

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He lives in [[Islington]]. He inherited the Mount baronetcy from his uncle [[Sir William Mount, 2nd Baronet|William]] in 1993. His son [[Harry Mount]] is also a journalist and his cousin Mary Cameron is mother of [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] [[David Cameron]], leader of the Conservative Party.<ref name="moss"/><ref>{{cite news|last=Bell|first=Matthew|title=Still talking turkey|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/matthew-bell-the-iiosi-diary-281110-2145593.html|accessdate=11 December 2010|newspaper=[[The Independent]]|date=28 November 2010}}</ref>
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He lives in Islington, London. He inherited the Mount baronetcy from his uncle [[Sir William Mount, 2nd Baronet|William]] in 1993. His son [[Harry Mount]] is also a journalist and his cousin Mary Cameron is mother of [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] [[David Cameron]], leader of the Conservative Party.<ref name="moss"/><ref>{{cite news|last=Bell|first=Matthew|title=Still talking turkey|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/matthew-bell-the-iiosi-diary-281110-2145593.html|accessdate=11 December 2010|newspaper=[[The Independent]]|date=28 November 2010}}</ref>
 
==Political orientation==
 
==Political orientation==
 
According to a 2010 report in the ''[[New Statesman]]'':
 
According to a 2010 report in the ''[[New Statesman]]'':

Revision as of 08:18, 12 April 2011

Sir William Robert Ferdinand Mount, 3rd Baronet (born 2 July 1939), usually known as Ferdinand Mount, is a British writer and novelist, columnist for The Sunday Times, commentator on politics, and Conservative Party politician and think tank operative. He was head of the policy unit in 10 Downing Street in 1982-83, during the time when Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister,[1][2] and wrote the 1983 Tory general election manifesto.

He attended Greenways Prep School in Wiltshire, and was later educated at Eton College and Christ Church, Oxford. In 1993 he succeeded his uncle as 3rd Baronet, but he does not use the title.

For 11 years (1991-2002) he was editor of the Times Literary Supplement.[3] He wrote for The Sunday Times, and in 2005 joined The Daily Telegraph as a commentator.[3]


He lives in Islington, London. He inherited the Mount baronetcy from his uncle William in 1993. His son Harry Mount is also a journalist and his cousin Mary Cameron is mother of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom David Cameron, leader of the Conservative Party.[1][4]

Political orientation

According to a 2010 report in the New Statesman:

In a much-discussed speech delivered before she became prime minister, Thatcher had dismissed as incoherent the very idea of "social justice", along with a "progressive consensus" that regarded the notion as fundamental. (It is also worth ­remembering, incidentally, that in the early 1980s Thatcher had rejected proposals to protect marriage through the tax system, put to her by the then head of the Downing Street ­Policy Unit, Ferdinand Mount. Mount, who published an elegy to the lost "civilisation" of the English working class at about the time Duncan Smith was establishing the CSJ, has since worked with the think tank's social ­housing group in what he describes to me as a "fruitful relationship".)[5]

Affiliations

Centre for Social Justice |

Publications

  • Ferdinand Mount The Subversive Family: An Alternative History of Love and Marriage, London: Jonathan Cape, 1982.
  • The Theatre of Politics (1972)
  • Communism: A Times Literary Supplement Companion (1992), editor
  • The British Constitution Now: Recovery or Decline? (1992)
  • The Recovery of the Constitution (Sovereignty Lectures) (1992)
  • Mind the Gap: Class in Britain Now (2004)
  • Private Life 21st Century (2006)
  • Full Circle: How the Classical World Came Back to Us, Simon & Schuster, 2010. ISBN 9781847377982


Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lord Young has found that soundbites sometimes bite back. 19 November 2010. 
  2. Mrs. Thatcher sets up her own advisory team. 1 December 1982. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Ferdinand Mount joins Telegraph. 1 March 2005. 
  4. Still talking turkey. 28 November 2010. 
  5. Jonathan Derbyshire Poor relations, New Statesman, Published 01 March 2010