Difference between revisions of "New Labour: Donors"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Donors in May 2001)
(1999 Donors)
Line 274: Line 274:
 
D. Clayton-Jones Gave £2,000
 
D. Clayton-Jones Gave £2,000
 
Christopher Ondaatje Gave £1,000
 
Christopher Ondaatje Gave £1,000
 +
 +
==1999-2000==
 +
Many of the donors on this page have also given money to the Labour Party before 1999 and are featured on other pages. If you want to find out more about the individuals listed, please follow the links to their individual pages, click on their picture or investigate this section page by page using the numbers at the bottom.
 +
 +
Lord Hamlyn Christopher Ondaatje Lord Sainsbury
 +
 +
At the start of January 2001 the Labour Party revealed three new donations of £2 million from 3 very rich men: Lord Hamlyn, Lord Sainsbury and former Tory supporter Christopher Ondaatje.
 +
 +
2 donors knighted in 2000 New Years Honours List: Dr [[Chris Evans]] and [[Ronald Cohen]] of [[Apax Partners]].
 +
 +
Demetrios Apostolou
 +
Director of electrical equipment retailers
 +
 +
===Donors in 1999-2000===
 +
All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000:
 +
*[[Paul Adamson]] - Jon Aisbitt
 +
Demetrios Apostolou
 +
Lord Alex Bernstein
 +
Professor S.K. Bhattacharyya
 +
Robert Bourne - Jimmy Boyle
 +
John Boyle - Melvyn Bragg
 +
David J.B. Brown, Multidrive Ltd
 +
Leslie Butterfield
 +
City Grove Leisure plc
 +
Leonard Collinson, Newsco Publications
 +
David J.B. Brown David J.B. Brown
 +
Managing Director of Multidrive Ltd, military vehicle manufacturers
 +
 +
Leonard Collinson Leonard Collinson
 +
Former Chairman, Newsco Publications. Director, Collinson Grant Group
 +
 +
 +
Henry Tinsley Henry Tinsley
 +
Chairman, Tinsley Foods Ltd
 +
 +
Felix Dennis
 +
James G. Duncan
 +
Eastern Group
 +
Dr Chris Evans
 +
Audrey Eyton - Lord Gavron
 +
Lord Grantchester, Millionaire dairy farmer
 +
Sally Greene - Ruth Harding
 +
Lord Chris Haskins
 +
William Haughey
 +
Mick Hucknall
 +
Isaac Kaye
 +
Clive W. Leach
 +
Frank Lowe
 +
Christopher Mackenzie
 +
Moni Varma Moni Varma
 +
Managing Director, Veetee Rice Company
 +
 +
Eastern Group Eastern Group
 +
Multi-utility company
 +
 +
 +
Severn Trent Severn Trent
 +
Utility Company formerly run by Vic Cocker
 +
 +
Alan McGee - Robert Murray
 +
Gulam Noon - Vision Posters
 +
Dr Chai Patel - Ian Skelly
 +
Professor Alec Reed - Gerry Robinson
 +
Lord Sainsbury
 +
SLP Investments Ltd
 +
Neil Tennant - Peter J. Thompson
 +
Henry Tinsley - Tinsley Foods Ltd
 +
Moni Varma - Veetee Rice Company
 +
Robert A. Wann, former Leicester councillor and Chair of Leicester Police Authority
 +
Sprintinca (Peter Coates)
 +
J. Barbour & Sons - the posh coat manufacturers
 +
James Fisher & Sons
 +
J. Barbour & Sons J. Barbour & Sons
 +
 +
Glenyork Glenyork Ltd
 +
Electrical wholesale company run by Uri David
 +
 +
 +
Bell Pottinger Bell Pottinger
 +
PR company
 +
 +
===Sponsors 1999-2000===
 +
Sponsors of the Labour Party for more than £5,000:
 +
*[[BAE Systems]]
 +
*[[Bell Pottinger]], PR company
 +
BG plc - British Midland
 +
BSkyB - Butler Kelly
 +
Cable Communications Association
 +
Clayton, Dubilier & Rice
 +
Connex Rail
 +
DLA Upstream, PR company
 +
First Software UK Ltd
 +
The Independent
 +
Manchester Airport plc
 +
British Midland British Midland
 +
Airline run by Sir Michael Bishop
 +
 +
Connex Rail Connex Rail
 +
Train company owned by Vivendi, a French utility company
 +
 +
 +
DLA Upstream DLA Upstream
 +
PR company
 +
 +
McDonalds
 +
McNiff Civil Engineering
 +
The Mirror
 +
New Statesman
 +
One 2 One
 +
Pfizer Ltd
 +
SEEBoard, utility company
 +
Severn Trent plc, utility company
 +
Tesco plc
 +
UPS (UK) Ltd
 +
Vauxhall Motors
 +
Wiggins Group
 +
William Haughey
 +
Yorkshire Television
 +
Zurich Financial Services (UKISA) Ltd
 +
First Software First Software UK Ltd
 +
Supply software to local authorities
 +
 +
McDonalds McDonalds
 +
McMurder
 +
Gave £15,000 for drinks at a reception during the 20001 Labour Party Conference.
 +
 +
 +
McNiff Civil Engineering McNiff Civil Engineering
 +
Cardiff-based engineering contractor
 +
 +
"Tickets for dinners"
 +
Paul Adamson
 +
Brunswick Group Ltd, PR company
 +
Butler Kelly Ltd, consultants
 +
Citigate Public Affairs, PR company
 +
Crag Group Ltd, consultancy
 +
Enron Europe Ltd
 +
Finsbury Ltd, PR company
 +
GJW Government Relations Ltd
 +
Haris Sophoclides - Glenyork Ltd
 +
Kingfisher plc, owners of Woolworths, B&Q and Comet
 +
One 2 One One 2 One
 +
Owned by Deutsche Telekom, the largest telecommunications company in Europe
 +
 +
Pfizer Ltd Pfizer Ltd
 +
Multinational pharmaceutical company
 +
 +
 +
Zurich Financial Services Zurich Financial Services
 +
UK division is run by Sandy Leitch, head of the New Deal Task Force
 +
 +
Carole Stone
 +
Swiss Life (UK) plc
 +
Tesco plc
 +
Zurich Financial Services (UKISA) Ltd
 +
"Services in kind"
 +
Ernst & Young
 +
KPMG
 +
Peoples Ltd (transport)
 +
Lotus
 +
Oracle
 +
Andersen Consulting
 +
Freeserve
 +
Carole Stone Carole Stone
 +
London socialite (not Socialist!)
 +
 +
Swiss Life Swiss Life (UK) plc
 +
One of the largest life and pension companies in Europe
 +
 +
 +
Caparo Caparo Industries
 +
Steel manufacturer owned by Labour Peer Lord Paul
 +
 +
===Donors in 2000-2001===
 +
All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000:
 +
Duncan Bannatyne - Margaret Barbour
 +
Professor John Beddington
 +
Lord Bernstein - Lord Mitchell
 +
Professor S.K. Bhattacharya
 +
Bill Bottriell - Capital & Provident
 +
Lindley Catering Investments
 +
Gordon Crawford - Caparo Industries
 +
Cynthia Goldman - Bruce Jarvis
 +
Derek Johnson - John Reid
 +
Christopher Mackenzie - Gerry Robinson
 +
Gordon Crawford Gordon Crawford
 +
Chairman of London Bridge Software
 +
 +
Lord Haskins Lord Haskins
 +
Retiring Chairman of Northern Foods. Unelected Government "Co-ordinator"
 +
 +
William Haughey William Haughey
 +
Chief Executive of City Refrigeration
 +
Felix Dennis - Ruth Harding
 +
Michael Frayn - Adrian Friend
 +
Lord Haskel - Lord Haskins
 +
Sir Maurice Hatter - Tom Hunter
 +
William Haughey - Mick Hucknall
 +
Lord Joffe - Isaac Kaye
 +
Sir Frank Lowe - SLP Investments
 +
Peter Shalson - Barry Townsley
 +
Henry Tinsley - Peter J. Thompson
 +
Sir Sigmund Sternberg - G. Wright
 +
Michael V. Sternberg - Neil Tennant
 +
Isaac Kaye Isaac Kaye
 +
Deputy Chief Executive of the IVAX Corporation and Chairman of Norton Healthcare
 +
 +
Stephen Perry Stephen Perry
 +
SLP Investments Ltd
 +
 +
 +
*[[Enron]] Enron Europe Scandal-hit and bankrupt energy corporation
 +
 +
===Sponsors in 2000-2001===
 +
All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000 in sponsorship:
 +
BSkyB Ltd - BBC - BG plc - UPS UK
 +
BAE Systems - Carlton Television
 +
Birmingham International Airport - Manchester Airport
 +
Cable Communications Association - Orange
 +
Connex UK - The Independent - The Mirror
 +
McDonalds UK (gave £15,000)
 +
Nationwide - Seeboard Ltd - National Power
 +
Sema plc - Thomson-CSF Racal
 +
Vauxhall Motors - Yorkshire TV
 +
BAE Systems BAE Systems
 +
British arms manufacturer
 +
 +
*[[DLA Upstream]] DLA Upstream
 +
PR Department of the DLA top ten law firm
 +
 +
MFI MFI Furniture Group
 +
The largest retailer of kitchens and bedrooms in the UK
 +
 +
"Tickets" in 2000-2001
 +
All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000 for "Tickets For Dinners":
 +
Brunswick Group - Chrysalis Group
 +
Citigate Public Affairs - Crag Group
 +
Dixons Group - DLA Upstream
 +
Edelman PR - Enron Europe
 +
Finsbury Ltd - GJW Government Relations
 +
HH Associates - J&P UK Ltd
 +
MFI Furniture Group - National Express Group
 +
Just2Clicks.com - Sea Containers Services
 +
Winterthur Group - Zurich Financial Services
 +
Microsoft UK also provided more than £5,000 of "benefits in kind".
 +
sema Sema
 +
IT consultancy company, part of the Schlumberger Group
 +
 +
Winterthur Group Winterthur Group Services
 +
Insurance company, owners of Churchill Insurance
 +
 +
  
 
==1999 Donors==
 
==1999 Donors==

Revision as of 17:01, 21 February 2007

This section features details of the many 'high-value' donors and sponsors of the Labour Party since 1996. All those listed here have given more than £5,000 (the exact figures are given when we could find them). The Labour Party's accounts for 1999 show that 60% of its income comes from donors (20% from donors over £5,000) and 10% comes from commercial activities (events and sponsorship). The Trade Unions, who once generated 90% of the Party's income, now provide only 30% (and only 3 high-value donations in 1998-9).

The proportion of New Labour's funds coming from very rich individuals has dramatically increased in the last 4 years and continues to do so, as Tony Blair moves to distance himself from any responsibility to the Unions and the Party's traditional core of working class supporters. What was supposed to be the 'Party of the working class' is funded by the rich and packed out with businessmen.

The rewards are big for the big spenders - for example, of the 97 official high-value donors in 1998-9 more than 30 have received some kind of Government job. A large number of rich donors have received peerages, knighthoods or Task Force jobs, establishing a set of unelected bosses and millionaires in the heart of the Labour Government - from Lord Sainsbury's peerage and Science Minister job (he has given more than £3 million since 1996) to Robert Devereux's job as Chair of the Creative Industries Task Force.

The list also includes companies like Raytheon Systems, an arms manufacturer bidding for Government contracts and Enron, the failed energy multinational which is the subject of a huge financial scandal. Lobbying companies with clients that include Rupert Murdoch's News International, Tesco and Scottish Power also feature heavily.


In September 1999 an opinion poll (ICM) found that 52% of people thought that Tony Blair did not care enough about Labour's traditional working class supporters. Almost the same amount thought Blair paid too much attention to rich people who give Labour large donations.

In another poll the month before, only 26% of workers said they believed that management and employees were 'on the same side' (Joseph Rowntree Foundation study). In a country where 55% of the population consider themselves to be working class (ICM poll), Blair's 1999 speech to the CBI that he is 'proud to be pro-business' places him very squarely in opposition to those same workers.

According to one of his former aides, Tony Blair is almost boyishly impressed - even wide-eyed - in the company of rich businessmen. Perhaps that is why he boasts that, even after the Fairness at Work legislation, British law was 'the most restrictive on Trade Unions in the Western world'.

When Peter Mandelson was Trade and Industry Secretary, he told the CBI that his brief from Blair was 'to act as a vocal and tenacious advocate of the needs of wealth creation and business'. His replacement, Stephen Byers told the House of Commons in March 1999 that he was 'putting the interests of business first'.

Each person or company on the list has a picture and a brief description of who they are and what they do. You can then move on to find more in-depth information by clicking on their picture, which will take you to pages providing details about their company, business or personal history. You can also navigate between pages by clicking on the appropriate page number.

Where individuals are part of the networks of power and influence woven around Tony Blair's New Labour Party, you can follow links which will take you through the trail of interconnections that runs through the site. If at any time you want to move to another section of the site, you can use the top navigation bar.

The Donors

Donors and Sponsors for 2001

With the introduction of the Electoral Commission in February 2001, there is now much more access to the details of large donations to the Labour Party. Conversely, some of the really big donors appear to have rushed to get their money in before they needed to be listed, so the figures are unusually small for a pre-election period. The details of some of these 'missing' donors were released in September 2001.

  • Lord Sainsbury The biggest donor of the year was Lord David Sainsbury, who gave £2 million to the Labour Party in January 2001, and again in December 2001, making a total of £9 million in 5 years.

Donors in March 2001

Jonathan Altaras (celebrity agent) Gave £1,500 William Bottreill (recruitment company S3) Gave £2,000 Lord Chris Haskins Gave £10,000 Graham Jones Gave £5,050 Alexandra Marks (Partner at Linklaters law firm) Gave £1,300 Joan Morgan Gave £4,000 Lord Joel Joffe Gave £10,000 Christopher Ondaatje Gave £1,200 Lord Swarj Paul Gave £10,000 Alec Reed Gave £10,000 John Reynolds Gave £4,000 Vanni Treves Gave £1,600 David Yallop Gave £2,000 Engineering and Maritime Training Authority Gave £5,875 Law Business Research Ltd Gave £1,500 Richalis Ltd (software ccompany) Gave £8,000 Robert Wann Gave £5,000 Ruobal Properties Ltd (landlords) Gave £4,000 UPS (UK) Ltd Gave £17,625 PriceWaterhouseCoopers (as workers' salaries) Gave £22,958

Sponsors in 2001

Scottish Power Gave £1,500 (February) Bloomberg Gave £11,548 (May)

Services in kind

Peoples Ltd (car dealers) Gave £2,000 (June) QSP Ltd (web hosting) Gave £8,000 (March)

Donors in May 2001

Alan Sugar Gave £200,000 Sir Sigmund Sternberg Gave £100,000 Geraldine Jeffrey Gave £12,000 Charles Peel Gave 6-figure sum Gerry Robinson Gave £20,000 Ruth Harding Gave £6,000 Tim Waterstone Gave £12,000 Lakshmi Mittal Gave £125,000 Christopher Ondaatje Gave £100,000 Michael Frayn, writer Gave £10,000


Vanni Treves Vanni Treves Chairman of Equitable Life, Chairman of Channel 4 Gave £1,600

David Yallop David Yallop Millionaire author and journalist Gave £2,000

Lord Haskins Lord Chris Haskins Chairman, Northern Foods and Express Dairies Gave £10,000


John Reynolds John Reynolds Co-Head of European Utilities at Credit Suisse First Boston bank. Gave £4,000

Bill Bottriell Bill Bottriell Director of Solutions in Staffing & Software Gave £2,000

Richard Williams Richard Williams Managing Director, Richalis Ltd Gave £8,000


Christopher Ondaatje Christopher Ondaatje Former banker who gave £2 million in 2000 Gave £101,200

Sponsors in 2001

Scottish Power Gave £1,500 (February) Bloomberg Gave £11,548 (May)

Services in kind

Peoples Ltd (car dealers) Gave £2,000 (June) QSP Ltd (web hosting) Gave £8,000 (March) Alec Reed Alec Reed Chairman of Reed Executive Gave £10,000

Lakshmi Mittal Lakshmi Mittal Billionaire CEO of Ispat International Gave £125,000


Alan Sugar Alan Sugar Chairman of Amstrad and Executive Chairman of Viglen Ltd Gave £200,000

Sir Sigmund Sternberg Sir Sigmund Sternberg Chairman of Isys plc Gave £100,000

Charles Peel Charles Peel Chairman of City stockbrokers, Peel Hunt


Dr David Potter Chairman of Psion, computer manufacturers. Gave £90,000

Donors in June 2001

Tom Hunter Gave £100,000 Gulam Noon Gave £100,000 James Boyle Gave £5,500 Sir Ronald Cohen Gave £100,000 Len Collinson Gave £6,600 Tony and Rita Gallagher Gave £9,999.98 Lord Haskel Gave £6,000 Eddie Izzard Gave £10,000 Lord Mitchell Gave £25,000 Dr David Potter (Psion) Gave £90,000 Euan Snowie (Snowie Group) Gave £5,000 Tom Hunter Tom Hunter Made £252 million by selling Sports Division in 1998. Gave £100,000

Snowie Group Euan Snowie Snowie Group. Director of Stirling County rugby club Gave £5,000


Peter Gilman Peter Gilman Chairman of GMI Holdings and Thorpe Park (Leeds) Gave £5,000 GMI Holdings (Peter Gilman) Gave £5,000 Sukhbinder SW Sandha Gave £10,000 Moni Varma Gave £10,000 Martin Webb Gave £1,500 Sunil Wickremeratne Gave £6,000 Richard Wilson (actor) Gave £6,500 Peter Thompson Gave £20,000 Lord Taylor Gave £2,000 Ballathie Estates Gave £25,000 Castle Point Heating & Gas Gave £6,500 CBA Enterprises Gave £2,500 De Brus Marketing Services Gave £3,000 Esson Properties Ltd Gave £5,000 Peter Thompson Peter Thompson Chairman of the Hong Kong Port and Maritime Board Gave £20,000

Veetee Rice Moni Varma Managing Director of the Veetee Rice company Gave £10,000


Wales and West Passenger Trains Wales and West Passenger Trains

Gave £1,500 Wales and West Passenger Trains Gave £1,500 John McInespie (lawyer) Gave £6,634 Brian Abbs (author) Gave £1,931.17 Fiona Bell (actress) Gave £7,000 Texacan Trousers Gave £2,000 Mirror Group Newspapers Gave £5,000 Maurice Millward (former Chairman of Millward Brown) Gave £1,500 Leo Abse & Cohen (solicitors) Gave £2,100 Highgate Beds Gave £2,000 Delta Cloud Ltd Gave £2,000 Westmere Ltd Gave £2,000 Other donors include: John O'Farrell (writer), Mr T Cooper, Richard Hunt, A Patel, Hannah Reed, Mr T Suliaman, Giles Wright. Mirror Group Newspapers Mirror Group Newspapers

Gave £5,000

Leonard Collinson Leonard Collinson Former Chairman, Newsco Publications. Director, Collinson Grant Group

Dr Paul Drayson Dr Paul Drayson Chief Executive of Powderject, a pharmaceutical company. Gave £50,000

Donors in July/August 2001

Bloomberg UK plc Gave £17,625 Brunswick Gave £9,000 GMI Holdings (Peter Gilman) Gave £2,000 Sanderson Knight Properties Gave £1,500 Wiggins Group Gave £8,000 Dr Paul Drayson Gave £50,000 Cormac Hollingsworth (bond trader) Gave £2,000 Mohamed Ramzan Gave £2,000 Mrs C.D. Woodward Gave £10,000 H. Ennis Gave £3,000 Brunswick Brunswick Group International PR firm Gave £9,000

Wiggins Group The Wiggins Group Property developers Gave £8,000


Peter Coates Peter Coates Lindley Catering Investments Gave £25,000

Donors in September 2001

British Airways Gave £1,450 DLA Partners Gave £11,050 Independent News and Media Gave £25,000 Compaq Computers Ltd Gave £7,500 Lindley Catering Investments (Peter Coates) Gave £25,000 SEEBOARD plc Gave £8,700 Fiona Bell Gave £3,366 Christopher Ondaatje Gave £1,500 Russell Sullman, East London dentist Gave £1,500 DLA DLA Partners Top Ten law firm Gave £11,500

Airtours plc Airtours plc Gave £6,000

Peel Holdings Peel Holdings plc Property development company, owners of the Trafford Centre and the Manchester Ship Canal Gave £5,287

Donors or Sponsors in Nov/Dec 2001

Lord David Sainsbury Gave £1,000,000 Airtours plc Gave £6,000 DLA Corporate Advisory Ltd Gave £5,554 Citigate Westminster Gave £16,161 Ortivus UK Ltd Gave £5,875 Peel Holdings plc Gave £5,287 Vauxhall Motors Ltd Gave £7,050 Charles Peel Gave £50,000 Ortivus UK Ortivus UK Ltd Swedish medical manufacturer's UK branch Gave £5,875

Vauxhall Motors Vauxhall Motors Car manufacturers Gave £7,050

Barbara Follett Barbara Follett

Gave £3,000 Sally Tan Gave £10,000 Barbara Follett Gave £3,000 Mr D. Barker Gave £1,750 D. Clayton-Jones Gave £2,000 Christopher Ondaatje Gave £1,000

1999-2000

Many of the donors on this page have also given money to the Labour Party before 1999 and are featured on other pages. If you want to find out more about the individuals listed, please follow the links to their individual pages, click on their picture or investigate this section page by page using the numbers at the bottom.

Lord Hamlyn Christopher Ondaatje Lord Sainsbury

At the start of January 2001 the Labour Party revealed three new donations of £2 million from 3 very rich men: Lord Hamlyn, Lord Sainsbury and former Tory supporter Christopher Ondaatje.

2 donors knighted in 2000 New Years Honours List: Dr Chris Evans and Ronald Cohen of Apax Partners.

Demetrios Apostolou Director of electrical equipment retailers

Donors in 1999-2000

All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000:

Demetrios Apostolou Lord Alex Bernstein Professor S.K. Bhattacharyya Robert Bourne - Jimmy Boyle John Boyle - Melvyn Bragg David J.B. Brown, Multidrive Ltd Leslie Butterfield City Grove Leisure plc Leonard Collinson, Newsco Publications David J.B. Brown David J.B. Brown Managing Director of Multidrive Ltd, military vehicle manufacturers

Leonard Collinson Leonard Collinson Former Chairman, Newsco Publications. Director, Collinson Grant Group


Henry Tinsley Henry Tinsley Chairman, Tinsley Foods Ltd

Felix Dennis James G. Duncan Eastern Group Dr Chris Evans Audrey Eyton - Lord Gavron Lord Grantchester, Millionaire dairy farmer Sally Greene - Ruth Harding Lord Chris Haskins William Haughey Mick Hucknall Isaac Kaye Clive W. Leach Frank Lowe Christopher Mackenzie Moni Varma Moni Varma Managing Director, Veetee Rice Company

Eastern Group Eastern Group Multi-utility company


Severn Trent Severn Trent Utility Company formerly run by Vic Cocker

Alan McGee - Robert Murray Gulam Noon - Vision Posters Dr Chai Patel - Ian Skelly Professor Alec Reed - Gerry Robinson Lord Sainsbury SLP Investments Ltd Neil Tennant - Peter J. Thompson Henry Tinsley - Tinsley Foods Ltd Moni Varma - Veetee Rice Company Robert A. Wann, former Leicester councillor and Chair of Leicester Police Authority Sprintinca (Peter Coates) J. Barbour & Sons - the posh coat manufacturers James Fisher & Sons J. Barbour & Sons J. Barbour & Sons

Glenyork Glenyork Ltd Electrical wholesale company run by Uri David


Bell Pottinger Bell Pottinger PR company

Sponsors 1999-2000

Sponsors of the Labour Party for more than £5,000:

BG plc - British Midland BSkyB - Butler Kelly Cable Communications Association Clayton, Dubilier & Rice Connex Rail DLA Upstream, PR company First Software UK Ltd The Independent Manchester Airport plc British Midland British Midland Airline run by Sir Michael Bishop

Connex Rail Connex Rail Train company owned by Vivendi, a French utility company


DLA Upstream DLA Upstream PR company

McDonalds McNiff Civil Engineering The Mirror New Statesman One 2 One Pfizer Ltd SEEBoard, utility company Severn Trent plc, utility company Tesco plc UPS (UK) Ltd Vauxhall Motors Wiggins Group William Haughey Yorkshire Television Zurich Financial Services (UKISA) Ltd First Software First Software UK Ltd Supply software to local authorities

McDonalds McDonalds McMurder Gave £15,000 for drinks at a reception during the 20001 Labour Party Conference.


McNiff Civil Engineering McNiff Civil Engineering Cardiff-based engineering contractor

"Tickets for dinners" Paul Adamson Brunswick Group Ltd, PR company Butler Kelly Ltd, consultants Citigate Public Affairs, PR company Crag Group Ltd, consultancy Enron Europe Ltd Finsbury Ltd, PR company GJW Government Relations Ltd Haris Sophoclides - Glenyork Ltd Kingfisher plc, owners of Woolworths, B&Q and Comet One 2 One One 2 One Owned by Deutsche Telekom, the largest telecommunications company in Europe

Pfizer Ltd Pfizer Ltd Multinational pharmaceutical company


Zurich Financial Services Zurich Financial Services UK division is run by Sandy Leitch, head of the New Deal Task Force

Carole Stone Swiss Life (UK) plc Tesco plc Zurich Financial Services (UKISA) Ltd "Services in kind" Ernst & Young KPMG Peoples Ltd (transport) Lotus Oracle Andersen Consulting Freeserve Carole Stone Carole Stone London socialite (not Socialist!)

Swiss Life Swiss Life (UK) plc One of the largest life and pension companies in Europe


Caparo Caparo Industries Steel manufacturer owned by Labour Peer Lord Paul

Donors in 2000-2001

All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000: Duncan Bannatyne - Margaret Barbour Professor John Beddington Lord Bernstein - Lord Mitchell Professor S.K. Bhattacharya Bill Bottriell - Capital & Provident Lindley Catering Investments Gordon Crawford - Caparo Industries Cynthia Goldman - Bruce Jarvis Derek Johnson - John Reid Christopher Mackenzie - Gerry Robinson Gordon Crawford Gordon Crawford Chairman of London Bridge Software

Lord Haskins Lord Haskins Retiring Chairman of Northern Foods. Unelected Government "Co-ordinator"

William Haughey William Haughey Chief Executive of City Refrigeration Felix Dennis - Ruth Harding Michael Frayn - Adrian Friend Lord Haskel - Lord Haskins Sir Maurice Hatter - Tom Hunter William Haughey - Mick Hucknall Lord Joffe - Isaac Kaye Sir Frank Lowe - SLP Investments Peter Shalson - Barry Townsley Henry Tinsley - Peter J. Thompson Sir Sigmund Sternberg - G. Wright Michael V. Sternberg - Neil Tennant Isaac Kaye Isaac Kaye Deputy Chief Executive of the IVAX Corporation and Chairman of Norton Healthcare

Stephen Perry Stephen Perry SLP Investments Ltd


  • Enron Enron Europe Scandal-hit and bankrupt energy corporation

Sponsors in 2000-2001

All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000 in sponsorship: BSkyB Ltd - BBC - BG plc - UPS UK BAE Systems - Carlton Television Birmingham International Airport - Manchester Airport Cable Communications Association - Orange Connex UK - The Independent - The Mirror McDonalds UK (gave £15,000) Nationwide - Seeboard Ltd - National Power Sema plc - Thomson-CSF Racal Vauxhall Motors - Yorkshire TV BAE Systems BAE Systems British arms manufacturer

PR Department of the DLA top ten law firm

MFI MFI Furniture Group The largest retailer of kitchens and bedrooms in the UK

"Tickets" in 2000-2001 All these donors have paid the Labour Party more than £5,000 for "Tickets For Dinners": Brunswick Group - Chrysalis Group Citigate Public Affairs - Crag Group Dixons Group - DLA Upstream Edelman PR - Enron Europe Finsbury Ltd - GJW Government Relations HH Associates - J&P UK Ltd MFI Furniture Group - National Express Group Just2Clicks.com - Sea Containers Services Winterthur Group - Zurich Financial Services Microsoft UK also provided more than £5,000 of "benefits in kind". sema Sema IT consultancy company, part of the Schlumberger Group

Winterthur Group Winterthur Group Services Insurance company, owners of Churchill Insurance


1999 Donors

Felix Dennis Felix Dennis Chairman, Dennis Publishing (computer and lifestyle magazines like Maxim). He is worth £200 million.

1999 Donors Felix Dennis is the Chairman of Dennis Publishing. He is worth £250 million. Dennis Publishing produces lifestyle magazines like Maxim and four of the seven top-selling computer magazines.

Robert Bourne is a property developer and Chairman of Clubhaus, a golf club business with clubs in the UK, Germany and Spain. He heads Legacy, 'preferred bidder' to buy the Dome and is married to Sally Greene, former actress and theatre impressario. She is Managing Director of the Old Vic Theatre in London.

Peter J. Thompson is Chairman of the Hong Kong Port and Maritime Board. Robert Bourne Robert Bourne. Property developer. Director of Clubhaus, a golf club business. Gave £100,000 in 1999

Peter J. Thompson Peter J. Thompson. Hong Kong-based businessman. Gave £15,000 in 1999.


Sally Greene Sally Greene. Former actress and theatre impressario. Robert Murray is a Director of Sunderland FC and a former Director of FKI, Chairman of Sterling Capitol plc, the Sovereign Capital Corporation and Omega International Group plc. His personal wealth is estimated at £30 million.

Caparo Industries is owned by one of New Labour's favourite businessmen, Lord Paul. He sits on the Competitiveness working Party: Promoting The Best Of Best Practice and the West Midlands Regional Competitiveness Working Party.

Citygrove Leisure is a London-based property development company, involved in the multi-million pound development of retail and entertainment complexes. The Chief Executive and Chairman of Citygrove is David Woolf, known as the "Grandfather of the Retail Park Industry". Robert Murray Robert Murray. Chairman, Sunderland FC. Ex-Director, FKI (international engineering group). Personal wealth £30 million.

Lord Paul Caparo Group. Steel and engineering holding company owned by Lord Paul. Gave £101,000 in 1998.

citygrove leisure Citygrove Leisure. London-based property delelopers, run by David Woolf. Gave £5,000 in 1999. Stephen Barclay is an Executive Director of Talisman House, a holding company for financial service companies. His salary and bonuses came to £151,066 in 1999.

Peter Gilman is a former director of Leeds FC, who made £5.5 million from selling the club. He is the Chairman of Thorpe Park (Leeds) Ltd, a huge new "business park" being built just outside Leeds. The business park is aimed at call centres and is the site of the National Grid HQ.

next page go to the next page Talisman House Stephen Barclay. Chairman of Talisman House, a holding company for financial service companies.

Peter Gilman Peter Gilman. Ex-director of Leeds FC. Construction businessman, boss of GMI Rovinian.