Difference between revisions of "Julian Lewis"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(intro/categories)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Julian Lewis]] is the Conservative MP for New Forest East.<ref>[http://www.julianlewis.net/biography.php Biographical Details], julianlewis.net, accessed 12 February 2010.</ref>
+
[[Julian Lewis]] is the Conservative MP for New Forest East.<ref>[http://www.julianlewis.net/biography.php Biographical Details], julianlewis.net, accessed 12 February 2010.</ref> He has described himself as a 'counter-subversion propagandist'. <ref>HC Hansard, Volume No. 478, Part No. 118, [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200708/cmhansrd/cm080625/halltext/80625h0003.htm 25 June 2008: Column 82WH]</ref>
  
 
==Career==
 
==Career==

Revision as of 06:43, 15 April 2011

Julian Lewis is the Conservative MP for New Forest East.[1] He has described himself as a 'counter-subversion propagandist'. [2]

Career

He was a graduate student at St Antony's College, Oxford, in 1977 when he first attracted attention in the media by campaigning on behalf of Reg Prentice, a right-wing Labour Minister facing the loss of his seat at Newham North-East as a result of left-wing manipulations.
By the early 1980s, Lewis was running an organisation – called The Coalition for Peace Through Security – from a walk-up office in Whitehall. Financed by various right-wing private organisations in Britain and in the United States, the Coalition's function, Lewis says, was "to counter unilateralist propaganda". One way he set about this was to assemble massive dossiers on leading members of CND, purporting to show that many had been associated with the Communist Party or various Communist fronts.
By 1984, cruise and Pershing II missiles had been deployed, and the threat from CND had receded. Lewis became involved in a number of other causes, for example, supporting the revolt led by Lord Beloff in the House of Lords and Edward Leigh (Conservative MP for Gainsborough and Horncastle) on secret union ballots.
Lewis set up a political consultancy with Leigh and Tony Kerpel, a former assistant to Edward Heath, now a political adviser to the Secretary of State for Education, Kenneth Baker. The consultancy was called Policy Research Associates, and one of its projects was called the Media Monitoring Unit. With immense labour, in November 1986, a colleague of Lewis's, Simon Clark, working in a flat in Holland Park Avenue, published his first Media Monitoring Report.[3]

Career History

Notes

  1. Biographical Details, julianlewis.net, accessed 12 February 2010.
  2. HC Hansard, Volume No. 478, Part No. 118, 25 June 2008: Column 82WH
  3. 'THE BBC AND THE POLITICIANS' [EXTRACT] by Godfrey Hodgson, Observer – 13 December 1987
  4. http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/biography/0,,-3110,00.html