Difference between revisions of "Labour Party"

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==Resources==
==Special Advisors==
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*[[New Labour: Special Advisers]]
===Downing Street 2002===
 
Since the 2001 election, the Number 10 Policy Unit has been merged with Tony Blair's Private Office to form the Number 10 Policy Directorate, run by civil servant [[Jeremy Heywood]]. [[Jonathan Powell]] remains as Chief of Staff, [[Alastair Campbell]] has been made Director of Communications and given 2 civil service deputies who now handle lobby briefings, and [[Sally Morgan]] has been made Director of Government Relations.
 
 
 
 
*[[Jonathon Powell]] Chief of Staff
 
*[[Sally Morgan]] Director of Government Relations. [[Tony Blair]]'s former political secretary at No. 10, who was given a peerage after the 2001 election, but has now taken over from Anji Hunter as Director of Government Communications. She was a Labour Party Student Organiser and Senior Targetting Officer from 1985-93. She was the Labour Party's Director of Campaigns and Elections from 1993-95 and [[Tony Blair]]'s Head of Party Liaison from 1995-97. Given peerage without being vetted by the House of Lords Appointment Commission.
 
*[[Robert Hill]] Tony Blair's Political Secretary. Former health adviser to [[Tony Blair]] at No.10, became Political Secretary to Blair in 2001. Used to work for the Audit Commission and [[Capita]]. He was a press officer for Tony Blair before the 1997 election.
 
*[[Andrew Adonis]] Policy Directorate. Former Lib Dem parliamentary candidate (and local councillor) and journalist with the Financial Times and the Observer. Education and Constitution policy adviser at No.10. He is opposed to the elitism of the 'Oxbridge' universities, although he actually studied History at Oxford University.
 
*[[Simon Stevens]] Policy Directorate. Special Adviser at the DoH from 1997-2001. Former President of the Union at Oxford University and analyst for the [[Guyana Sugar Corporation]]. Former Director of East Sussex, Brighton and Hove Health Authority. Policy Adviser.
 
*[[Peter Hyman]] [[Strategic Communications Unit]]
 
Former Labour Party press officer, BBC producer and Sky News journalist. He is the Policy Directorate's media analyst. He worked as a researcher for Donald Dewar and John Smith.
 
*[[Geoffrey Norris]] Policy Directorate.  Used to work on transport issues (he criticised John Prescott's transport white paper as too anti-car), now specialises in trade and industry matters. He has championed the case for Post Office privatisation as the best deal for business, and "Tony adores him." He is regarded as driving an agenda of his own, championing business and determined to undermine the Unions and the Public Sector. He went to Oxford University where he was known for 'Hard-Left' tendencies.
 
 
*[[Ed Richards]] Policy Directorate. Used to work as head of strategy for John Birt at the BBC, then for Gordon Brown in Opposition. His brief at the Policy Unit is to work on long-term strategy for the Labour Party's second term. Said to be consulting within the Labour Party and with Business.
 
*[[Philip Bassett]] Research and Information Unit. Former Industrial Editor at the Times. Married to [[Baroness Symons]], a Minister at the Foreign Office. He wrote the briefing paper for Tony Blair's disastrous Women's Institute speech in June 2000. He went to Oxford University.
 
*[[Carey Oppenheim]] Policy Directorate. Former senior lecturer in social policy at the South Bank University and Research Director at the [[IPPR]]. She is Chair of the [[NEXUS Stakeholder Society Group]]. She used to work for the Child Poverty Action Group and as a researcher for [[James Callaghan]].
 
*[[Justin Russell]] Policy Directorate. Former Senior Manager at the Audit Commission (where Robert Hill also worked). He previously held policy and research jobs in the Labour Party Policy Unit. He went to Oxford University. Special Adviser on policy at the Home Office until the 2001 election.
 
*[[Alastair MacGowan]] Policy Directorate. Special Adviser at the MOD until the 2001 election. Former Research Assistant to [[Martin O'Neill]] (Energy) and [[George Robertson]] (Scottish Secretary) in Opposition. He went to Oxford University.
 
*[[Sarah Hunter]] Policy Directorate. Part of the team that travelled with Tony Blair on his 2001 election campaign bus, worked for the Labour Party in Opposition. In the past she has worked for [[Peter Mandelson]] and for the BBC's policy directorate.
 
 
 
 
*[[Hilary Coffman]] Special Adviser/Press Officer at Downing Street (she resigned temporarily to accompany Blair on the 2001 election campaign). Used to be married to [[David Seymour]], who was [[Alastair Campbell]]'s Associate Editor at the Daily Mirror, now married to [[David Hill]].
 
*[[David Bradshaw]] Strategic Communications Unit. Former Deputy Political Editor at the Mirror, working for [[Alastair Campbell]]. Worked at Millbank during the 1997 election campaign, and has been working at No.10 ever since.
 
*[[Kate Garvey]] Worked for Tony Blair in Opposition, then became Blair's Private Secretary until she temporarily resigned to work on the 2001 election campaign tour, returning to No.10 after the election.
 
*[[Catherine Rimmer]] Former colleague of [[Bill Bush]] at the Political Research Department of the BBC.
 
 
 
*[[Joanna Nadin]] Member of the Labour Party's Policy Unit at Millbank until becoming a Special Adviser after the 2001 election.
 
*[[Patrick Diamond]] Former Special Adviser to [[Peter Mandelson]], when he was Northern Ireland Secretary. Former Chairman of Labour Students, he stood for Cambridge Council in 1998 and lost. Director of New Labour magazine 'Progress' and member of the Steering Committee of the Labour [[Renewal]] Network. Responsible for issues concerning public services.
 
*[[Matthew Elson]] Policy Directorate. Joined the Policy Directorate in January 2002 from McKinseys, the management consultants that has many links with the Labour Government. Transport policy adviser.
 
 
 
===Treasury===
 
 
*[[Ed Miliband]] Former television researcher. He went to Oxford University and was an adviser to [[Harriet Harman]] in opposition. His brother David is head of the Downing Street Policy Unit. He is the former partner of [[Liz Lloyd]], also from the Policy Unit.
 
*[[Sue Nye]] Old friend of Gordon Brown, she has always worked for the Labour Party. She runs Brown's private office and is married to [[Gavyn Davies]], millionaire Chief Economist at [[Goldman Sachs]] and member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee. They live in a large house in Islington and have another one in Devon. Sue Nye was born in Zimbabwe and went to Cambridge University. She works for Brown unpaid.
 
*[[Ian Austin]] Ian Austin, former Deputy Director of Communications for the Scottish Labour Party (working for [[Gordon Brown]]), he was brought in as Brown's spin-doctor as a replacement for [[Charlie Whelan]] in June 1999. He had previously been the Labour Party's West Midlands Press Officer, since 1995.
 
*[[Spencer Livermore]] Worked in Gordon Brown's Economics Secretariat before the 1997 election and as political adviser to [[Andrew Smith]] when he was Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, now Special Adviser to the Chief Secretary of the Treasury. He went to Oxford University and the London School of Economics.
 
*[[Nicola Murphy]] Special Adviser to the Chief Secretary of the Treasury. Former Chief Political Research Officer for the Labour Party.
 
 
===Treasury Council of Economic Advisers===
 
*[[Chris Wales]] A former City accountant who secretly worked with Ed Balls before the 1997 election, developing the new Labour Government's first budget. Former adviser to Geoffrey Robinson. He was a tax partner at Arthur Andersen, head of a team who toured the City drumming up support for the Labour Party before the 1997 election, after which he immediately joined the Treasury.
 
*[[Paul Gregg]] As well as working for Gordon Brown, Paul Gregg works part-time as a Senior Research Associate at the London School of Economics and as a Reader in Economics at the University of Bristol. Before joining the LSE in 1995, he worked at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research from 1987.
 
*[[Shriti Vadera]] Former Executive Director at Warburg Dillon Read, where she worked on banking and privatisation teams. She is an expert on Public-Private Partnership (PPP) deals. She is the Treasury's top negotiator in the PPP scheme to part-privatise the London tube network, telling London transport commissioner [[Bob Kiley]] she 'could not sanction public control of the tube under any circumstances' on February 12th 2001.
 
*[[Maeve Sherlock]] Former Director of the National Council for One Parent Families. She was a member of the [[National Union of Students]] Executive from 1985-1998 including as President from 1988-90.
 
*Dr [[Stewart Wood]] Professor in Politics at Oxford University (he is on leave until 2004). Went to Harvard University in the USA and is an organiser of the 'Third Way' think-tank NEXUS, which has co-ordinated research for the former No. 10 Policy Unit.
 
 
 
 
*[[Sue Jackson]] Former Labour Party Campaigns Officer and Head of Administration in Tony Blair's Office. A career Labour Party official.
 
Margaret Ounsley
 
Former Labour councillor in Reading who then worked for the Local Government Association. Former History teacher.
 
David Mathieson
 
Special Adviser at the Foreign Office until the 2001 election, now Special Adviser to the Leader of the House of Commons. Former solicitor with Clifford Chance. A Party Political Appointee, paid for by the Labour Party.
 
 
 
Meg Russell
 
Special Adviser to the Leader of the House of Commons. Senior Research Fellow at the Constitution Unit of the University College London (also responsible for PR). A former National Women's Officer in the Labour Party and Parliamentary Researcher for Clare Short (in Opposition).
 
 
 
Greg Power
 
Special Adviser to the Leader of the House of Commons. Former Director of the Hansard Society's Parliament and Government Programme and Head of the Parliamentary Unit at Charter 88.
 
 
 
Matthew Seward
 
Special Adviser to the Leader of the House of Lords. Former Home Affairs Policy Officer for the Labour Party. He went to Hull University.
 
 
 
Deborah Lincoln
 
Special Adviser to the Leader of the House of Lords. Formerly Director of Communications at Macmillan Cancer Relief and a former National Women's Officer in the Labour Party.
 
 
 
Fiona Gordon
 
Special Adviser to the Chief Whip, Hilary Armstrong. Former West Midlands Regional Director for the Labour Party.
 
 
 
Joe McCrea Knowledge Network Project
 
Joe McCrea was the former Special Adviser to Frank Dobson from 1997-9 (he also worked for Dobson in opposition for 4 years). He is now the Project Manager of the Knowledge Network Project (KNP) at the Cabinet Office. He is said to have ordered the playing of New Labour's favourite song "Things can only get better" at his wedding reception in 1999! Click on the image for more information.
 
 
Deputy Prime Minister
 
 
Ian McKenzie
 
Special Adviser in the Cabinet Office until the 2001 election. Worked as an adviser to Ann Taylor (former Chief Government Whip) in opposition. Former Head of PR at the Southampton Institute (a higher education college). Former President of the University of East Anglia Student's Union.
 
 
 
Joan Hammell
 
Special Adviser at the DETR from 1997-2001. She has worked for John Prescott since 1994. Before that she worked for Neil Kinnock, Ann Taylor and Frank Field.
 
 
 
Anna Healy
 
Worked as Senior Consultant for Strategic Communications at lobbyists GPC (alongside Joy Johnson, former head of Party communications) until the 2001 election, and previously as Press and Strategic Communications Co-ordinator for Carlton Television. Former adviser to Jack Cunningham and Mo Mowlam, before that she worked as Senior Parliamentary Press Officer for the Labour Party for 6 years. Working part-time for John Prescott.
 
 
 
Paul Hackett
 
Special Adviser at the DETR from 1997-2001. Previously worked at the Cranfield School of Management and the TUC (remains a Research Fellow at Cranfield University). He was caught on film in 1998 trying to get the Lobbyist Derek Draper to publicise a report he had written for Cranfield, in return for a favour Draper was asking him. Working part-time for John Prescott.
 
 
===Department of Trade and Industry===
 
 
Jim Godfrey
 
He is a former PR manager for the IPPR (where he worked one day a week for Patricia Hewitt). He worked on Frank Dobson's campaign to be mayor of London and joined the Labour Party's Millbank team as a Senior Press Officer in 2000 and worked on the 2001 election campaign.
 
 
 
*[[Kitty Usher]] Former Chief Economist at the [[Britain in Europe]] group.
 
 
 
Roger Sharp
 
Former Head of Business Liaison for the Labour Party at Millbank. Previously worked at lobbyists [[GJW Government Relations]]. A Manchester City fan, he is working for the DTI part-time.
 
 
===Forward Strategy Unit===
 
The Cabinet Office [[Forward Strategy Unit]] was set up after the 2001 election to work on policy and strategy projects. It is run by former Special Adviser Geoff Mulgan. There are a number of people working in the Unit as unpaid advisers:
 
 
 
 
*Dr [[Arnab Banerji]] Chief Investment Officer at Foreign &Colonial Management Ltd. He is responsible for investment management, policy decision-making and asset allocation. Previously he was Chief of Staff at Citibank Global Asset Management.
 
 
 
Nick Lovegrove
 
Director at McKinsey & Company, co-leader of the Global Media and Entertainment Practice (in charge of 200 consultants around the world), in the past he has advised Gordon Brown on productivity and competitiveness. McKinsey have held seminars on productivity at Downing Street. He is working with the DCMS, looking at the effect of technology on broadcasting.
 
 
 
Penny Hughes
 
Former President of Coca Cola Great Britain and Ireland. Non-Executive Director of Vodaphone, Enodis, Swedish bank SEB and Trinity Mirror.
 
 
 
Adair Turner
 
Vice-Chairman of Merrill Lynch and former Director-General of the CBI. In the past he has worked for BP, Chase Manhattan Bank and McKinsey & Company. He went to Cambridge University, where he was Chairman of the Conservative Association. Joined the SDP in the 1980's. He sat on the Government's Skills Task Force and the DTI's Competitiveness Advisory Group. He is examining the "supply side" of the NHS.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
===Department for Culture, Media and Sport===
 
 
Ruth MacKenzie
 
Has worked in the Arts since the 80's, including at the Arts Council. General Director of Scottish Opera from 1997-9, during which time it was within 48 hours of bankruptcy and was criticised by an all-party committee for 'wholly inadequate' management. She was also on the board of the Dome's New Milliennium Experience Company from 1997-99. She went to Cambridge University.
 
 
 
Bill Bush
 
Special Adviser in the Research and Intelligence Unit at N0.10 until the 2001 election. Former Head of Political Research at the BBC and former aide to Ken Livingstone at the GLC.
 
 
===Department for Education and Skills===
 
 
Dr William Cavendish
 
Lecturer in Economics at Imperial College and local councillor in Oxford. He was the Head of Policy for the Labour Party until being made a Special Adviser. He is a specialist in privatisation and a member of the New Local Government Network alongside Paul Corrigan.
 
 
 
Chris Boffey
 
Former News Editor of the Sunday Telegraph, and had previously worked at the Sunday Mirror, the News of the World and the Daily Star.
 
 
===Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs===
 
 
*[[Nicci Collins ]](Previously Nicci Russell) Special Adviser at the Cabinet Office until the 2001 election. Former Westminster Labour councillor. She went to Cambridge University. Has worked for Margaret Beckett for more than 5 years.
 
*[[Sheila Watson]] Special Adviser at the Cabinet Office until the 2001 election. Deputy Director of the Centre for Local Economic Strategies in Manchester. Has worked for Margaret Beckett since 1990 and is a former researcher for the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Went to Oxford University with Andrew Hood.
 
 
===Department of Transport, Local Government and the Regions===
 
 
*[[Dan Corry]] Special Adviser at the DTI from 1997-2001. He is a former Employment (1984-86) and Treasury (1986-89) economist for the Tories and Chief of Economics at the [[IPPR]]. He was Head of the Labour Party's Economic Secretariat from 1989-1992. He went to Oxford University.
 
*[[Michael Dugher]] Unsuccessful Labour candidate at the 2001 election. He is the former Head of Policy at the AEEU and speech-writer to Frank Dobson. Former National Chair of Labour Students and regional convenor for the NUS in the East Midlands, during which time the Warwick University Labour Club suggested they would "almost start to think he was actually a maniacal, power-hungry psycopath who'd willingly screw over anyone to get his corrupt and mentally deficient mates elected" as delegates to a Labour Students conference.
 
 
===Home Office===
 
 
Nick Pearce
 
Special Adviser at the DfEE until the 2001 election, he worked for David Blunkett and Ann Taylor in Opposition. Former Director of Education at the IPPR.
 
 
 
Sophie Linden
 
Special Adviser at the DfEE until the 2001 election, she also worked for David Blunkett in Opposition for 5 years. She went to Cambridge University. Working part-time at the Home Office.
 
 
 
Katherine Raymond
 
Former Director of the Social Market Foundation, a right wing think-tank. She believes that private schools should have a greater role in teaching State pupils and that when it comes to private firms running schools and hospitals, "it doesn't matter who provides services".
 
 
 
Huw Evans
 
Labour Party Regional Press Officer for Wales until the 2001 election.
 
 
 
Kevin Bond Head of Police Standards Unit
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Andrew Hood
 
Former Special Adviser to Robin Cook at the Foreign Office. He went to Oxford University (with Sheila Watson). Co-wrote a book on the Constitution with Tony Benn.
 
 
 
Richard Taylor
 
Member of the Labour Party Policy Unit at Millbank until the 2001 election.
 
 
===Department of Health===
 
 
Darren Murphy
 
Special Adviser at the DETR from 1997-2001. Newcastle Councillor. Former Treasurer of Labour Students and Lobbyist for European Economic Development Services. Adviser on Press and Parliamentary Relations.
 
 
 
*Professor [[Paul Corrigan]]
 
 
 
===Department of Work and Pensions===
 
 
Kieran Simpson
 
Special Adviser at the former Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food until the 2001 election. Long-term aide of Nick Brown. He worked in Gordon Brown's economic team in Opposition. Former Chair of Scottish Labour Students at Edinburgh University.
 
 
===Lord Chancellor's Department===
 
 
Garry Hart
 
Labour Party donor and friend of Lord Irvine. Click on the picture for more information.
 
 
===Foreign and Commonwealth Office===
 
 
Ed Owen
 
Former Special Adviser at the Home Office, he has worked for Jack Straw since 1993. Former journalist on the Stockport Messenger.
 
 
 
Dr Michael C. Williams
 
Former Senior Consultant at the Office of the High Commissioner, UNHCR. Senior Spokesman for the UN Force in the former Yugoslavia.
 
 
===Department for International Development===
 
 
David Mepham
 
Former International Policy Officer for the Labour Party. Also used to work for Robin Cook. He went to London and Oxford Universities.
 
 
 
Susannah Cox
 
 
 
==Former Advisors==
 
*[[Jo Moore]] Special Adviser at the DTLR until she resigned in February 2002. A former lobbyist for [[Westminster Strategy]] (run by former adviser to David Blunkett, [[Mike Lee]]). She was Senior Press and Broadcast Officer of the Labour Party from 1993-7. In 1999 Westminster Strategy was given the contract to handle all Islington Council's communications and marketing.
 
 
 
 
 
 
*[[James Purnell]] Now MP for Stalybridge and Hyde. Former Islington Councillor and Chair of Islington's Housing Committee. Special Adviser with responsibility for Broadcasting at No.10 from 1997-2001. Used to work at the [[IPPR]], worked with [[Tony Blair]] in Opposition and then worked for [[John Birt]] at the BBC policy and planning department. He went to the same school in Guildford as [[Tim Allan]], then Oxford University. His sister, [[Katie Purnell]], was secretary to the infamous lobbyist [[Derek Draper]] at [[Prima Europe]].
 
 
*[[Lance Price]] Former BBC political journalist (he worked there for 20 years). As a journalist on the Birmingham Evening Mail he gained a reputation for 'Rottweiler tendencies'. He was employed as [[Alastair Campbell]]'s Deputy but was transferred to the Labour Party's Millbank HQ as an employee of the Labour Party in June 2000. Friend of [[Peter Mandelson]]. He went to Oxford University, where he was known as a Tory.
 
 
*[[Pat McFadden]] Tony Blair's Deputy Chief of Staff at No.10, he was employed as a Special Adviser (he specialised in constitutional reform) but was transferred to the Labour Party's Millbank HQ as an employee of the Labour Party in June 2000. Former adviser to [[John Smith]] and [[Donald Dewar]]. Employed on a temporary basis in the [[Coalition Information Centre]] in Islamabad for the war in Afghanistan.
 

Revision as of 14:43, 12 March 2007