Difference between revisions of "Philip Collins (special adviser)"
(→Notes) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | Phil Collins is a special adviser at the Number 10 Policy Unit. He was previously director at the [[Social Market Foundation]], but left after the 2005 general election to take up a post 'as a speech writer and strategic thinker. He has written widely on public service reform and for a while had sought a Labour seat.' | + | Phil Collins is a special adviser at the Number 10 Policy Unit. He was previously director at the [[Social Market Foundation]], but left after the 2005 general election to take up a post 'as a speech writer and strategic thinker. He has written widely on public service reform and for a while had sought a Labour seat.<ref>'Patrick Wintour, The Guardian 11th May 2005, [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/story/0,9061,1481113,00.html Top Blair adviser quits for her family] Last Accessed 27th July 2007</ref> |
− | Collins was scheduled to attend a Scottish Labour Party fringe event in Perth in April 2002, sponsored by the SMF and [[Scottish Power]] titled 'Corporate Social Responsibility - Who Cares?' Evidently Collins didn't as he was too busy playing football to bother showing up. | + | Collins was scheduled to attend a Scottish Labour Party fringe event in Perth in April 2002, sponsored by the SMF and [[Scottish Power]] titled 'Corporate Social Responsibility - Who Cares?' Evidently Collins didn't as he was too busy playing football to bother showing up.<ref>'Corporate Social Responsibility - Who Cares? 18 April 2002, Scottish Labour Party Conference, Perth. Transcript of session.</ref> |
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
− | + | <references/> | |
− | + | ||
+ | [[Category:Special Advisers|Collins, Philip]] |
Revision as of 09:23, 3 September 2010
Phil Collins is a special adviser at the Number 10 Policy Unit. He was previously director at the Social Market Foundation, but left after the 2005 general election to take up a post 'as a speech writer and strategic thinker. He has written widely on public service reform and for a while had sought a Labour seat.[1]
Collins was scheduled to attend a Scottish Labour Party fringe event in Perth in April 2002, sponsored by the SMF and Scottish Power titled 'Corporate Social Responsibility - Who Cares?' Evidently Collins didn't as he was too busy playing football to bother showing up.[2]
Notes
- ↑ 'Patrick Wintour, The Guardian 11th May 2005, Top Blair adviser quits for her family Last Accessed 27th July 2007
- ↑ 'Corporate Social Responsibility - Who Cares? 18 April 2002, Scottish Labour Party Conference, Perth. Transcript of session.