Fiona Hill
This article is part of the Revolving Door project of Spinwatch. |
Fiona Hill (formerly Cunningham) is joint chief of staff to the British prime minister Theresa May.
Hill, a former Sky journalist previously worked as special adviser to May in her roles as secretary of state at the UK Home Office and minister for women and equality.[1]
After being forced to resign in 2014 Hill later did a stint with lobbying firm Lexington Communications until she was reappointed by May in July 2016.
Contents
Controversy
Hill lost her job as May's special adviser as part of the fallout over the Cabinet's 'very ugly public feud' about an alleged 'Trojan Horse' plot to Islamicise secular state schools in Birmingham, widely believed to be a hoax.
She was found to be 'the source of an acidic briefing' against education minister Michael Gove. Gove had briefed The Times newspaper — as an anonymous "source" — over the alleged plot and had accused the Home Office of failing to “drain the swamp” of extremists and criticised Charles Farr, Theresa May’s counter-terrorism adviser, who is in a relationship with Cunningham.
Cunningham took up a lobbying role with Lexington Communications in 2015.
Background
Originally a press officer for shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley, Cunningham left her role at the Conservative Party to join business lobbyists the British Chambers of Commerce in June 2008. She returned to the Conservatives in March 2009 after less than a year in her previous role. According to Conservative media adviser Henry Macrory, 'She couldn’t keep away".[2]
Affiliations
Contact, Resources, Notes
Contact
Twitter: http://twitter.com/cunnersf
Notes
- ↑ Department of Information Services, "Parliamentary Information List", accessed 7 September 2010
- ↑ David Singleton,Tories' Grayling gets press chief, PR Week UK, 10 March 2009, accessed 12.09.10