James Sassoon

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Lord James Sassoon was appointed as the first Commercial Secretary to the Treasury in May 2010.

A former banker and Labour government adviser he had defected to the Conservative Party in late 2008. Until 2010 he acted as an advisor to the Shadow Chancellor, was a member of the Economic Recovery Committee of the Shadow Cabinet and conducted The Tripartite Review. He joined the House of Lords in 2010. [1]

Defection to the Tories

The Daily Telegraph reported Sassoon's defection from Labour in 2008 as follows:

Sir James Sassoon is to be unveiled as a Tory supporter only weeks after quitting as an adviser to the Prime Minister. Earlier this month it was announced that Sir James had relinquished his position as the Treasury's Special Representative for Promotion of the City. His departure led to charges that Labour's relations with the Square Mile had hit a new low following earlier rows over issues including changes to capital gains tax and a tax crackdown on "non-domiciled" foreign citizens in the UK. Sir James has now agreed to become an adviser to George Osborne, the Conservative shadow chancellor on the reform of the regulatory regime covering the banking sector.[2]

Biography (circa 2008)

Sassoon was:

the UK Chancellor's and the UK Treasury's Representative for Promotion of the City, a part-time role in which he will continue. He was appointed to this role in December 2005 to champion the interests of the UK's financial and business services firms and markets internationally.
From 2002 he served three years as a member of the Treasury Board and Managing Director of the Treasury's Finance and Industry Directorate. The Directorate was responsible for financial services and for industry policy, including productivity, enterprise and growth and public-private partnerships. He was the Chancellor's Deputy on and chaired the UK Standing Committee on Financial Stability, the Treasury's non-executive director on the board of Partnerships UK and representative on a number of Ministerially chaired committees, the global Financial Stability Forum and the EU Financial Services Committee.
From 1985 - 2002 Sir James Sassoon was at UBS Warburg, latterly as Vice Chairman, Investment Banking with responsibility for the firm's global privatisation business. He advised Government departments on a variety of public-private sector projects as well as acting for governments in Europe, Asia and the Americas over more than ten years. He qualified as a chartered accountant with KPMG.
Sir James was awarded a knighthood in recognition for his services to the finance industry and to public service in the Queen's 2008 New Year Honours list.[3]

Current activities

His role covers:

  • Treasury spokesman in the House of Lords.
  • Enterprise and productivity, including industrial strategy, better regulation, competition policy, infrastructure, and microeconomic reform.
  • Corporate finance, including public corporations and public private partnerships.
  • Assisting the Financial Secretary on financial services and banking policy, including UK Financial Investments (UKFI).
  • Working with the Financial Secretary to promote the Government’s financial services policies and the competitiveness of the UK.
  • Asset freezing and financial crime.
  • Foreign exchange reserves and debt management policy, National Savings and Investment and Debt Management Office.

Views

Affiliations

Financial Action Task Force |

Funding

Resources

Notes

  1. Commercial Secretary to the Treasury: Lord Sassoon, HM Treasury website, accessed 5 October 2011
  2. James Kirkup, Gordon Brown's former City envoy James Sassoon defects to Conservatives Daily Telegraph, Last Updated: 5:28PM BST 28 Sep 2008
  3. Financial Action Task Force Sir James Sassoon, accessed 15 March 2009