Tim Montgomerie
Tim Montgomerie is the founder and editor of the website ConservativeHome.com.
Montomerie was born in 1970, and grew up in Hampshire and Germany. He studied Economics and Geography at Exeter University.[1]
In December 1990, he founded the Conservative Christian Fellowship with David Burrowes. He was the organisation's director for 13 years.[2]
From 1998 to 2003, Montgomerie ran the Conservative Party's outreach to faith communities and the voluntary sector. He was Iain Duncan Smith's chief of staff for his last two months as Conservative leader and in 2004 helped him to establish the Centre for Social Justice.[3]
Montgomerie launched the ConservativeHome website in 2005.[4]
In November 2008 he launched the London Centre for the Study of Anti-Americanism. In June 2009 he launched ConservativeIntelligence.com.[5]
Montgomerie is a co-founder of Nothing British.[6]
History
1990s
In the 1990s Tim Montgomerie was a student at Exeter University. While he was there studying, alongside fellow student Sajid Javid, he created the Exeter Enterprise Forum. The forum was a campaign group created in order to 'promote capitalism to students'.[7] Montgomerie also founded and became chairman of the Conservative Christian Fellowship. According to The Guardian, Montgomerie was inspired by Dr Adrian Rogers a previous Conservative candidate for Exeter who was expelled from the part for making 'anti-gay' comments[8][9] Montgomerie regularly contributed letters to broadsheet newspapers in his capacity as chairman of the Conservative Christian Fellowship between 1991-1994. He continued to write the letters following this period but instead of being the chairman he described himself as 'director' or 'director of fellowship'.[10][11]
In early 1997 40 Conservative MP's and four cabinet ministers were members of the Conservative Christian Fellowship, members included Brian Mawhinney, Peter Lilley, John Gummer, Anne Widdecombe and Lord Mackay. At this time the group were receiving advice from the U.S. on how best to 'strip Tony Blair's New Labour of its claims to be Christian'. Montgomerie was also working as a banker during this period.[12] Montgomerie worked at the Bank of England, where his responsibilities included the Russian economy and the study of systemic risk in financial systems.[13]
In September 1997 Montgomerie criticised William Hague for sharing a hotel room with his then fiancee Ffion Jenkins for the 1997 Conservative conference in Blackpool, Montgomerie criticised the arrangement because it 'fell short of the Christian ideal'.[14] According to Nick Cohen, writing in the Observer, Tim Montgomerie argued that the Conservative Party 'should not ask gays to vote for us', he argued that instead they must 'expose the unbiblical and the libertine'.[15].
Cohen argues that the Conservative Christian Fellowship's journal 'denounced gay soldiers as suicide risks, security risks, blackmail risks, health risks and rape risks' and that Montgomerie said that he was willing to give 'sacrificial care' to homosexuals who saw the error of the their ways.[16].
2000s
In 2000 William Hague set up a 'Renewing One Nation' task force to shadow Labour's Social Exclusion Unit. The group was mainly funded by Stanley Kalms and Tim Montgomerie was selected to be the groups national director. When the task force was set up Montgomerie argued that 'The Conservative Party has not done enough to show that it cares about the same problems that they [Labour] do. We need to use a different language on some issues and we need to do a lot more policy thinking.'[17]
Montgomerie was criticised for being an unsuitable director for the groups because of his views on homosexuality, he was also criticised for arranging a visit to the UK for Marvin Olasky, a US christian 'guru' who 'condemns homosexuality and public welfare'.[18]
In July 2003, Conservative Party leader, Iain Duncan Smith appointed Montgomerie as his chief political adviser.[19] Prior to taking up the post advising Duncan Smith, Montgomerie posted a series of prayers online, The Telegraph described tha prayers as similar to those raised in any church on any Sunday, with a few exceptions including a prayer asking for 'MPs Andrew Selous and Gary Streeter as they seek to approach a number of potentially high-value donors'.[20] Montgomerie's role with Iain Duncan Smith meant that he relinquished his role as the director of the Conservative Christian Fellowship.[21]
In November 2003 Duncan Smith lost the Conservative Party leadership following a vote of no confidence. The following year Duncan Smith and Mongomerie set up the Centre for Social Justice.
On 28 March 2005 Montgomerie set up the ConservativeHome blog in an attempt to 'combine the concepts of a think-tank and online newspaper and its aim is to provide a forum for the revival of Conservative thinking and policies'.[22] Conservative Party Francis Maude sent Montgomerie to Washington in 2006 to help develop an online campaign strategy similar to the US campaigns that had succesfully discredited John Kerry's Democratic hopes in 2004. Montgomerie argued that the ConservativeHome blog could be used to tackle the 'left-wing bias' of the BBC.[23]
Affiliations
- Centre for Social Justice | Conservative Christian Fellowship | ConservativeHome | New Culture Forum | AmericaInTheWorld | London Centre for the Study of Anti-Americanism
Contact
- Twitter TimMontgomerie
External Resources
- Chris Cook, Christian Tories rewrite party doctrine, Ft.com, 12 February 2010.
- Tim Montgomerie, Christians in the Conservative Party, 13 February 2010.
- Wikipedia Tim Montgomerie
Notes
- ↑ Introducing Tim Montgomerie, ConservativeHome, accessed 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Introducing Tim Montgomerie, ConservativeHome, accessed 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Introducing Tim Montgomerie, ConservativeHome, accessed 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Introducing Tim Montgomerie, ConservativeHome, accessed 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Introducing Tim Montgomerie, ConservativeHome, accessed 14 February 2010.
- ↑ Friday BNP news round up, Nothing British, 2 October 2009.
- ↑ Tim Montgomerie, Sajid Javid selected for Bromsgrove, ConservativeHome.com, Accessed 30-January-2010
- ↑ Tim Montgomerie, Riots and deprivation, The Times, 27-September-1991
- ↑ Kevin Maguire, Policy and politics: 'Caring' unit head alarms Tories, The Guardian, 1-November-2000
- ↑ Tim Montgomerie, Letter: The Gospel According to Tony Blair, The Guardian, 10-April-1996
- ↑ Tim Montgomerie, Letter: Christians bring honesty to Westminster, The Independent, 10-April-1996
- ↑ Martin Wroe, Tories get US Election Aid for Holy War on Labour, The Independent, 26-January-1997
- ↑ Profile, Tim Montgomerie, Centre for Policy Studies, Accessed 30-January-2010
- ↑ Maurice Chittenden and Christopher Morgan, Tories' hotel pillow fight hits Hague where it hurts, The Sunday Times, 28-September-1997
- ↑ Nick Cohen, Comment: Without Prejudice: Let us pray for William Hague. Oh well, suit yourself, The Observer, 12-September-1999
- ↑ Nick Cohen, Comment: Without Prejudice: Let us pray for William Hague. Oh well, suit yourself, The Observer, 12-September-1999
- ↑ Tom Baldwin and Ruth Gledhill, Hague sets up unit to foster one nation, The Times, 8-September-2000
- ↑ Kevin Maguire, Policy and politics: 'Caring' unit head alarms Tories, The Guardian, 1-November-2000
- ↑ Benedict Brogan, Tory leader appoints evangelical as adviser, The Telegraph, 25-July-2003
- ↑ Andrew Sparrow, E-mails urge Tories to pray for Duncan Smith, The Telegraph, 05-September-2003
- ↑ News, IDS On His Knees, The Mirror, 11-October-2003
- ↑ Philip Webster, Tories plan to beat 'bias' by bringing in bloggers, The Times, 28-March-2005
- ↑ Tom Baldwin, Tories copy Republican dirty tricks on the web, The Times, 13-February-2006