See also topic discussion in BooMan’s fp story – Trump’s Goldman Sachs-Style Economic Populism .
How corporate dark money is taking power on both sides of the Atlantic | The Guardian – Opinion | by George Monbiot
Soon after the second world war, some of America’s richest people began setting up a network of thinktanks to promote their interests. These purport to offer dispassionate opinions on public affairs. But they are more like corporate lobbyists, working on behalf of those who fund them.
We have no hope of understanding what is coming until we understand how the dark money network operates. The remarkable story of a British member of parliament provides a unique insight into this network, on both sides of the Atlantic. His name is Liam Fox. Six years ago, his political career seemed to be over when he resigned as defence secretary after being caught mixing his private and official interests. But today he is back on the front bench, and with a crucial portfolio: secretary of state for international trade.
In 1997, the year the Conservatives lost office to Tony Blair, Liam Fox, who is on the hard right of the Conservative party, founded an organisation called The Atlantic Bridge. Its patron was Margaret Thatcher. On its advisory council sat future cabinet ministers Michael Gove, George Osborne, William Hague and Chris Grayling. Fox, a leading campaigner for Brexit, described the mission of Atlantic Bridge as “to bring people together who have common interests”. It would defend these interests from “European integrationists who would like to pull Britain away from its relationship with the United States”.
Atlantic Bridge was later registered as a charity. In fact it was part of the UK’s own dark money network: only after it collapsed did we discover the full story of who had funded it. Its main sponsor was the immensely rich Michael Hintze, who worked at Goldman Sachs before setting up the hedge fund CQS. Hintze is one of the Conservative party’s biggest donors. In 2012 he was revealed as a funder of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, which casts doubt on the science of climate change. As well as making cash grants and loans to Atlantic Bridge, he lent Fox his private jet to fly to and from Washington.
Another funder was the pharmaceutical company Pfizer. It paid for a researcher at Atlantic Bridge called Gabby Bertin. She went on to become David Cameron’s press secretary, and now sits in the House of Lords: Cameron gave her a life peerage in his resignation honours list.
Posted in BooMan’s fp story – Trump Too Truthful, Doesn’t Lie Well Enough.
On Sept. 19, 2007 in London, Rudolph Giuliani received the “Medal of Freedom” award from former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The “Iron Lady,” who helped Ronald Reagan bring down the U.S.S.R.’s “Evil Empire,” will honor the ex-mayor after he delivers a speech to the Atlantic Bridge, a conservative British-American think tank. The award is a coup for Giuliani as he vies for the Republican nomination for the White House and comes at the expense of GOP rivals John McCain, Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson. But Atlantic Bridge U.S. executive director Scott Syfert insisted the selection of Giuliani had nothing to do with politics.
[Source: The Margareth Thatcher Foundation – Atlantic Bridge]
○ Rudy Giuliani’s Presumption of Guilt | The Atlantic |