Difference between revisions of "Dick Taverne"

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Taverne and [[Tracey Brown]], co-authored ''Over-precautionary tales: The precautionary principle represents the cowardice of a pampered society'' {{ref|prospect}}.  It is an attack on the precautionary principle.     
 
Taverne and [[Tracey Brown]], co-authored ''Over-precautionary tales: The precautionary principle represents the cowardice of a pampered society'' {{ref|prospect}}.  It is an attack on the precautionary principle.     
  
Taverne also has a background in PR consultancy. In the late 1980s  Taverne and [[Roger Liddle]] founded the consultancy firm [[Prima Europe]]. In 1990 Prima published "The case for Biotechnology", a paper authored by Taverne. In 1996,  [[Derek Draper]] joined Prima's board. Prima's clients included [[Unilever]], RTZ, [[BNFL]], and [[Glaxo Wellcome]].     
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Taverne also has a background in PR consultancy. In the late 1980s  Taverne and [[Roger Liddle]] founded the consultancy firm [[Prima Europe]]. In 1990 Prima published "The case for Biotechnology", a paper authored by Taverne. In 1996,  [[Derek Draper]] joined Prima's board. Prima's clients included [[Unilever]], RTZ, [[BNFL]], and Glaxo Wellcome (now [[GlaxoSmithKline]]).     
  
 
In April 1998, Taverne resigned from Prima, as a result of lobby-firm rules prohibiting employment of sitting MPs and peers, after its merger with [[GPC Market Access]]. GPC's clients included Pfizer, Novartis and SmithKline Beecham.  Three months after Taverne's departure his former Prima co-directors{{ref|lobbygate}}.
 
In April 1998, Taverne resigned from Prima, as a result of lobby-firm rules prohibiting employment of sitting MPs and peers, after its merger with [[GPC Market Access]]. GPC's clients included Pfizer, Novartis and SmithKline Beecham.  Three months after Taverne's departure his former Prima co-directors{{ref|lobbygate}}.

Revision as of 18:12, 12 November 2008

Dick Taverne is a politician, lobbyist and supporter of biotechnology. Taverne chairs Sense about Science, a pro-GM lobby group, which is one of the Royal Society's closest allies. Sense about Science was set up in the mid-2002 ahead of the UK's public debate on GM crop commercialisation. It promotes its point of view to peers, MPs and the media and is said to be funded by 'corporations and learned societies'.

Taverne has long enjoyed a close relationship with Lord David Sainsbury. In the late 1980s Taverne, originally a Labour MP, served with Roger Liddle and David Sainsbury (later to become Lord Sainsbury) on the Steering Committee of the Social Democrat Party, which David Sainsbury bankrolled. Taverne also joined and became the first Chairman of the Institute of Fiscal Studies, another think-tank funded by Sainsbury.

Taverne and Tracey Brown, co-authored Over-precautionary tales: The precautionary principle represents the cowardice of a pampered society [1]. It is an attack on the precautionary principle.

Taverne also has a background in PR consultancy. In the late 1980s Taverne and Roger Liddle founded the consultancy firm Prima Europe. In 1990 Prima published "The case for Biotechnology", a paper authored by Taverne. In 1996, Derek Draper joined Prima's board. Prima's clients included Unilever, RTZ, BNFL, and Glaxo Wellcome (now GlaxoSmithKline).

In April 1998, Taverne resigned from Prima, as a result of lobby-firm rules prohibiting employment of sitting MPs and peers, after its merger with GPC Market Access. GPC's clients included Pfizer, Novartis and SmithKline Beecham. Three months after Taverne's departure his former Prima co-directors[2].

Taverne is keenly concerned to prevent media distortion about biotechnology; and claims the media's sloppiness on GM issues is "undermining the health of our democracy". Taverne served on a Forum established by the SIRC and the Royal Institute which laid down a Code of Practice and Guidelines on the Communication of Science and Health issues in the Media, which tells journalists how to report GM and other contentious issues.[3]

Taverne was also involved in the setting up of the biotech-industry supported Science Media Centre directed by Fiona Fox (also part of the Living Marxism network).

In July 2002 Lord Taverne was reprimanded in the House of Lords after he called for Prince Charles to be made to relinquish the throne if he made any more statements critical of GM crops. On another occasion Taverne told his fellow peers that, "There is a moral imperative for the Government to do everything they can to encourage and promote the spread of this technology [ie GM]".

Taverne's attitude to organic agriculture is somewhat different describing it as voodoo science. According to Taverne, not just the Soil Association but even the National Consumer Council base their opposition to GM "on ideology, and they will not allow evidence to disturb their preconceived opinions." He is even more scathing about Greenpeace, "With its anti-science dogma, Greenpeace is in some ways our equivalent of the religous right in the US" [4]. On the other hand, Taverne is a great admirer of Sir John Krebs who he has described as, "the excellent and admirable chairman of the Food Standards Agency".

Despite his preoccupation with the accurate reporting of science Taverne told his fellow peers in the House of Lords: "The Pusztai saga and the GM food scares are a shameful indictment of British journalism. It all started when Dr Pusztai fed harmful lectins inserted in potatoes to rats, which he claimed poisoned them." Pusztai's experiments, in fact, involved a type of lectin that is not normally harmful to mammals.

In November 2002, Taverne chaired the Scientific Alliance conference on GM called "Fields of the Future". In April 2004, 'Prospect published "Safety Quacks", another article by Taverne. In this article he drew extensively from a book by Adam Burgess (Tracey Browne's husband, and another LM contributor). In this article, Taverne is critical of public involvement in decision making about technologies while accepting some public discussion where there are 'ethical' concerns. However, public discussion, he says, "needs to be structured carefully to prevent domination by special interests". Here Taverne gives two contrasting examples:

  1. an example of effective consultation. The parliamentary public discussion that took place in a largely non-adversarial atmosphere about the use of human embryos for stem cell research was and
  2. and example of a botched public debate on GM crops. Taverne criticized the fact that Anti-GM lobby groups were allowed to dominate the exercise, while the public in general showed little interest.'

What is interesting about this partisan account of the two debates is that while the UK's official public debate on GM was very poorly funded and so minimally advertised, it attracted far more public attention and involvement than the "public discussion" of human embryo cloning for research. The latter (??) debate, was orchestrated by lobby groups like the Genetic Interest Group (GIG) and Progress Educational Trust, with connections to the pharmaceutical-biotechnology industries. Again, the key figures involved in these groups are part of the LM network, e.g., GIG John Gillott and Progress Juliet Tizzard.

Taverne criticised GM campaigners for not protesting against GM drugs while protesting against GM foods [5]. He argued that the same technology is used for both, and thus found a contradiction to the response. Taverne ignored the fact that drugs are extensively tested before being released, and that drugs are taken by choice, where users may consciously weigh the risks of taking the drug. An individual's choice to take such a drug also does not limit another individual's right to avoid it. GM food crops are quite different in this respect.

There are more questions about Taverne's other "research findings" like those relating to the 'Love Canal' issue in Niagara, New York where "a community living in homes built on top of an old chemical waste tip claimed that they suffered an unusual incidence of birth defects, cancers and other diseases". Such claims are dismissed by Taverne as baseless, yet five separate studies (two of them by the New York Department of Health) showed that children at Love Canal suffered an excessive number of major and minor birth defects, chronic illnesses, and stunted growth.[6]

Affiliations

References