Difference between revisions of "Jonathan Powell"

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[[Image:Jonathan Powell.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Jonathan Powell]]'''Jonathan Nicholas Powell''' (born 14 August 1956) served as  Chief of Staff to Tony Blair from 1997 to 2007. His salary for the year 1999-2000 was £93,562. <ref>UK Parliament, [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199899/cmhansrd/vo991108/text/91108w12.htm Publications and Records]</ref>
 
[[Image:Jonathan Powell.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Jonathan Powell]]'''Jonathan Nicholas Powell''' (born 14 August 1956) served as  Chief of Staff to Tony Blair from 1997 to 2007. His salary for the year 1999-2000 was £93,562. <ref>UK Parliament, [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199899/cmhansrd/vo991108/text/91108w12.htm Publications and Records]</ref>
  
Brother of Thatcher's favourite PR man [[Charles Powell]]. He was one of the driving forces behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business. Another of his brothers, [[Chris Powell]], was Managing Director of [[BMP DDB Needham]], the Labour Party's advertising agency for the 1997 election.  
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Brother of Thatcher's favourite PR man [[Charles Powell]]. He was one of the driving forces behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business.  
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==

Revision as of 15:27, 5 March 2009

Jonathan Powell

Jonathan Nicholas Powell (born 14 August 1956) served as Chief of Staff to Tony Blair from 1997 to 2007. His salary for the year 1999-2000 was £93,562. [1]

Brother of Thatcher's favourite PR man Charles Powell. He was one of the driving forces behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business.

Background

Born in 1956, he is the son of an Air Vice-Marshal, he comes from an influential family. He is the brother of Thatcher's favourite PR man Charles Powell. Another of his brothers, Chris Powell was Managing Director of BMP DDB Needham, the Labour Party's advertising agency for the 1997 election. [2]

He worked for the BBC and Granada Television before becoming a career diplomat. He was recruited by Tony Blair from the Washington Embassy where he was First Secretary, in 1995. He went to Oxford and Pennsylvania Universities. He was one of the driving forces behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business.

He is married to Sarah Helm, a former journalist in Brussels. They made the headlines in May 2000 when they handed their 8-week-old daughter to a cloakroom attendant while they dined at the Groucho Club. [3]

In June 2000, Sarah Helm branded Tony Blair as 'fundamentally dishonest' and of 'leading people blindfold'.

Political Life

He was recruited by Tony Blair from the Washington Embassy where he was First Secretary, in 1995. He went to Oxford and Pennsylvania Universities. [4] He was one of the driving forces behind the decision that one of the quickest ways to show that the Labour Party was pro-business was to take funding from business.

Foreign Policy

Powell wrote Blair's only speech on foreign policy during the 1997 Election Campaign. The speech complained that the Conservative Government was guilty of 'presiding over the largest reduction in our military capacity since the war', and declared Blair's 'vision' for a 'Britain confident of its place in the world, sure of itself, able to negotiate wiht the world and provide leadership in the world.' Powell had also including a line in the speech declaring that Blair was 'proud of the British Empire', but the line was removed from the speech at the very last minute. [5]

He has been Blair's representative at the Irish 'Peace Talks' and during the Balkan war he acted as liaison with the Defence Chief, General Sir Charles Guthrie.

The Hutton Inquiry

Jonathan Powell's role in Downing Street came under intense scrutiny during the Hutton Inquiry. The Hutton Inquiry was set up following the death of David Kelly in 2003. On August 18 2003, Powell gave evidence to the inquiry. He was questioned about the decisions made in Downing Street on how to deal with David Kelly. An email sent by Powell to John Scarlett in September 2002 seemed to suggest that the dossier on the threat posed by Iraq should be toughened up. [6]

Notes

  1. UK Parliament, Publications and Records
  2. BBC, Profile: Jonathan Powell
  3. 'Peg of My Heart', The Guardian, 10 June 1999
  4. BBC, Profile: Jonathan Powell
  5. John Kampfner, Blair's Wars (The Free Press, 2003) pp.3-4
  6. 'Peg of My Heart', The Guardian, 10 June 1999