Difference between revisions of "Alan Sugar"
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A former Thatcherite, he is one of the 58 business leaders who wrote to the Times in May 2001 in support of the Labour Party | A former Thatcherite, he is one of the 58 business leaders who wrote to the Times in May 2001 in support of the Labour Party | ||
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+ | [[Category:Labour Party|Sugar, Alan]] | ||
+ | [[Category:House of Lords|Sugar, Alan]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Labour Party Donors|Sugar, Alan]] |
Revision as of 17:49, 4 March 2015
Sir Alan Sugar (knighted in the 1999 New Year's Honours List) gave more than £5,000 to the Labour Party in 1997. He is the Chairman of Amstrad and Executive Chairman of Viglen Ltd (he owns 73% of the company). His personal wealth is £585 million. He is also the former Chairman of Tottenham Hotspur FC.
Amstrad used to make computers and stereos, but are currently selling a phone device called an e-mailer. Viglen (a computer manufacturer which was part of Amstrad until 1997) made Sugar £115 million in one day, when news of a proposed investment in internet companies was leaked in January 2000. A large part of Viglen's market for computers is education - they supply IT to two thirds of the UK's universities and sell curriculum and network software to schools.
He owns property worth £85 million, including Gloucester House in Mayfair, London, where he has sold flats for up to £8 million each. In 1999 he sold his 170 ft yacht for £11 million.
A former Thatcherite, he is one of the 58 business leaders who wrote to the Times in May 2001 in support of the Labour Party