Difference between revisions of "Geoff Mulgan"

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'''Geoff Mulgan''' initially worked at the Greater London Council. He was a 1986-87 Harkness Fellow (which reinforces Anglo-American links) at MIT, and has led [[Demos]] since 1993. Mulgan's CV on the Demos website<ref>"[http://www.demos.co.uk/people/geoffmulgan Geoff Mulgan]", Demos website, accessed February 2009.</ref> doesn't mention that he joined the [[British American Project]] (BAP) in 1996.<ref>Andy Beckett, "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/nov/06/usa.politics1 Friends in high places]",  The Guardian, 6 November 2004, accessed February 2009.</ref>
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'''Geoff Mulgan''' initially worked at the Greater London Council. He was a 1986-87 Harkness Fellow (which reinforces Anglo-American links) at MIT. He was co-founder and director of the London based think tank [[Demos]] from 1993-98.<ref>"[http://word.world-citizenship.org/wp-archive/956 Geoff Mulgan - England]", World-Wide Asian-Eurasian Human Rights Forum, accessed February 2009.</ref> Mulgan's CV on the Demos website<ref>"[http://www.demos.co.uk/people/geoffmulgan Geoff Mulgan]", Demos website, accessed February 2009.</ref> does not mention that he joined the [[British American Project]] (BAP) in 1996.<ref>Andy Beckett, "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/nov/06/usa.politics1 Friends in high places]",  The Guardian, 6 November 2004, accessed February 2009.</ref>
  
 
== Background ==
 
== Background ==

Revision as of 18:41, 5 February 2009

Geoff Mulgan initially worked at the Greater London Council. He was a 1986-87 Harkness Fellow (which reinforces Anglo-American links) at MIT. He was co-founder and director of the London based think tank Demos from 1993-98.[1] Mulgan's CV on the Demos website[2] does not mention that he joined the British American Project (BAP) in 1996.[3]

Background

Geoff Mulgan was described in an article in The Guardian as "the ultimate New Labourite" [4]. He has been a key advisor to Tony Blair and was one of the founders of the think tank Demos which has close ties to New Labour.[5] He was one of the key figures in the drive to 'modernise' left-wing politics.

In the 1980s Mulgan was in Comedia which (with Roger Liddle's Pieda), discreetly advised city administrations, spreading a politicised cultural 'redevelopment' purge of 'old-fashioned' left-wing people in positions of power in an effort to 'modernise'. From 1990-92 Mulgan was special adviser to Gordon Brown when he was shadowing the Department of Trade and Industry, and became 'the Clinton campaign's link to Labour, which involved lots of telephone calls with the Americans - mainly advising them how not to repeat our mistakes.'(Independent On Sunday 24 January 1993)

Demos aimed to transpose the mishmash of Marxism Today's 'fetishised' Thatcherism into Labour policy. Mulgan was part of a 1995 'secret committee' led by Mandelson 'to examine policy changes', which met with Blair on alternate Fridays. The group contained no MPs, preferring Roger Liddle and Derek Scott (both former SDP), Patricia Hewitt (not then an MP), and TV producer Michael Wills. Here Mandelson and Liddle urged Blair to use the SDP as a party model. (Guardian 15 July 1995)

As Demos' 'policy entrepreneur' Mulgan was 'seconded' to concoct a consensus around key issues. Typically this connected markets and the future as a matter of inevitability, as determinism; or conflated Daniel Bell's end of ideology dictum with a British (Atlanticist) version of neo-Conservatism.

His appointment to the PM's Policy Unit converted Demos' experiments into new shibboleths surrounding 'social exclusion' largely to coerce NGOs dealing with the poor. He is the first person to go from political adviser to civil servant as Director of the Cabinet Office's Performance and Innovation Unit (PIU) and Forward Strategy Unit. [3]

The PIU reviewed the UK's energy policy at a 4 July 2001 seminar: Mulgan introduces, hands over to Chair, Kevin Tebbit (MOD). Then there are presentations by Sian Davies (the Henley Centre, which has several Demos members), Bob Tyrrell (Demos) and Ged Davis (Shell, a Demos funder) and closing comments from Mulgan. Lunch everyone? [4]

He's also a trustee of the Political Quarterly (with BAP's Richard Holme) and Prospect magazine. There is an American Demos and an American Prospect (with the Congress for Cultural Freedom's Daniel Bell on board).

Mulgan is a Trustee of Crime Concern, the Prudential's (�750,000 Home Office-funded) adjunct to their 'Corporate Social Responsibility' initiatives. The board includes: Princess Anne, Lords Brittan, Carr, Hunt and Merlyn-Rees, Sir Geoffrey Mulcahy (Kingfisher plc), Michael Hastings (BBC), Nathaniel Sloane (Accenture), Matt Baggott (Deputy Chief Constable, West Midlands Police), Liz Wicksteed (Home Office) and Sir Stanley Kalms (Treasurer of the Conservative Party). [5]

Demos brought over several free-market ideologues including Philip Bobbitt (LBJ's nephew). He was Reagan's legal counsel from 1980-81, on the Select Committee/cover-up on Iran/Contra and Director for Intelligence at the NSC 1997-98. Demos also advertised an April meeting with George Soros.

Biography

As of February 2009 Geoff Mulgan is:

Director of the Young Foundation[6]

A semior fellow of the Australia and New Zealand School of Government - which is run by another former Demos director Tom Bentley[7]

A member of the controversial British American Project[8]

previously he:

Worked for the greater London Council

Worked for Comedia

1990 - 1992 - Special Advisor to Gordon Brown who was then in the shadow cabinet

1993 - Co Founder of think tank Demos and its first director

1997 - Worked for the U.K government in various roles including as head of the policy unit in the Prime Ministers office[9]

Books

  • Good and Bad Power: the ideals and betrayals of government (Penguin, 2006
  • Connexity (Harvard Business Press and Jonathon Cape, 1998)
  • Saturday Night or Sunday Morning (Comedia, 1987)
  • Communication and Control: Networks and the New Economies of Communication (Blackwells, 1991)
  • Politics in an Antipolitical Age (Polity, 1994)
  • Life After Politics (Harper Collins, 1997


Notes

  1. "Geoff Mulgan - England", World-Wide Asian-Eurasian Human Rights Forum, accessed February 2009.
  2. "Geoff Mulgan", Demos website, accessed February 2009.
  3. Andy Beckett, "Friends in high places", The Guardian, 6 November 2004, accessed February 2009.
  4. John Harris, "The power of influence", The Guardian, 26 May 2006, accessed 15 April 2009
  5. John Harris, "The power of influence", The Guardian, 26 May 2006, accessed 15 April 2009
  6. http://www.youngfoundation.org.uk/about Accessed 15 Apr 2008
  7. http://www.anzsog.edu.au/staff/staff.php Accessed 15 April 2007
  8. Andy Beckett Guardian 6/11/04 [1] Accessed 13 April 2008
  9. [2] Accessed 15 April 2008