Difference between revisions of "Notting Hill set"
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− | [[Alice Thomson]] The Daily Telegraph. She and her husband, [[Edward Heathcoat Amory]], 'are loyal members'<ref>http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tory-boy-backing-camerons-mediapolitical-relations-418221.html</ref> | + | The term used to describe a number of young Tory radicals around the leader [[David Cameron]]. |
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+ | *[[David Cameron]], Conservative leader. Married to Samantha, a baronet's daughter and a director of Smythson, the Bond Street stationers. Three children. | ||
+ | *[[George Osborne]] Married to Frances, a successful author whose first book was praised by Cherie Blair. Two children. | ||
+ | *[[Steve Hilton]], 36, advertising and polling guru who is seen very much as the backroom brains of the set. The key figure behind Mr Cameron's speeches, press articles and strategy. | ||
+ | advertisement | ||
+ | *[[Rachel Whetstone]], 37, director of corporate affairs for Google's European offshoot. Was political secretary to Michael Howard. | ||
+ | *[[Catherine Fall]], 35, ambassador's daughter who is nicknamed "the Gatekeeper" because of her meticulous control over Mr Cameron's diary. Met him at Oxford. | ||
+ | *[[Nicholas Boles]], 40. Openly gay Tory who narrowly lost the Hove constituency at last year's general election. Runs the Policy Exchange think-tank. | ||
+ | *[[Michael Gove]], Oxford-educated (like almost all the set) former Times journalist and highly influential MP. | ||
+ | *[[Ed Vaizey]], Telegenic MP for Wantage and son of Lord Vaizey, the economist, who defected from Labour in the 1970s.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/02/26/ncam326.xml Who are the Notting Hill Set?], Daily Telegraph, Last Updated: 11:53pm GMT 25/02/2006</ref> | ||
+ | *[[Alice Thomson]] The Daily Telegraph. She and her husband, [[Edward Heathcoat Amory]], 'are loyal members'<ref>Jane Thynne [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tory-boy-backing-camerons-mediapolitical-relations-418221.html Tory boy backing Cameron's media-political relations] Peter Oborne, political journalist and, say some, an anarchist, enjoys a bet - and he's backing Cameron to herald a new era in media-political relations a long way from the strong-arm tactics of Alastair Campbell, Independent on Sunday, Sunday, 1 October 2006</ref> | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 12:43, 2 March 2008
The term used to describe a number of young Tory radicals around the leader David Cameron.
- David Cameron, Conservative leader. Married to Samantha, a baronet's daughter and a director of Smythson, the Bond Street stationers. Three children.
- George Osborne Married to Frances, a successful author whose first book was praised by Cherie Blair. Two children.
- Steve Hilton, 36, advertising and polling guru who is seen very much as the backroom brains of the set. The key figure behind Mr Cameron's speeches, press articles and strategy.
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- Rachel Whetstone, 37, director of corporate affairs for Google's European offshoot. Was political secretary to Michael Howard.
- Catherine Fall, 35, ambassador's daughter who is nicknamed "the Gatekeeper" because of her meticulous control over Mr Cameron's diary. Met him at Oxford.
- Nicholas Boles, 40. Openly gay Tory who narrowly lost the Hove constituency at last year's general election. Runs the Policy Exchange think-tank.
- Michael Gove, Oxford-educated (like almost all the set) former Times journalist and highly influential MP.
- Ed Vaizey, Telegenic MP for Wantage and son of Lord Vaizey, the economist, who defected from Labour in the 1970s.[1]
- Alice Thomson The Daily Telegraph. She and her husband, Edward Heathcoat Amory, 'are loyal members'[2]
Notes
- ↑ Who are the Notting Hill Set?, Daily Telegraph, Last Updated: 11:53pm GMT 25/02/2006
- ↑ Jane Thynne Tory boy backing Cameron's media-political relations Peter Oborne, political journalist and, say some, an anarchist, enjoys a bet - and he's backing Cameron to herald a new era in media-political relations a long way from the strong-arm tactics of Alastair Campbell, Independent on Sunday, Sunday, 1 October 2006