Tony Blair/Catalogs: Difference between revisions
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===Special advisors=== | ===Special advisors=== | ||
===Strategy Unit=== | ===Strategy Unit[http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20070101092320/cabinetoffice.gov.uk/strategy/]=== | ||
A team of about 60 civil servants and outside recruits, set up in 2001, that published a range of analyses <ref>[http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20070101092320/http://cabinetoffice.gov.uk/strrategy/work_areas/past.asp ''Strategy Work Areas'']</ref> of long-term policy issues. | |||
==Reports of inquiries== | ==Reports of inquiries== |
Revision as of 06:48, 17 September 2010
Persona
- (the notes are biographical only in respect of their subjects' associations with Tony Blair)
Campbell, Alastair
Journalist and commumications specialist. Political editor Daily Mirror, 1989-93. Spokesman for TB 1994-2003. Author The Blair Years, 2007.
"Campbell's exuberant personality was the most powerful force in Number 10 from 1997 to 2003" [1].
Cook, Robin
Politician. Foreign Secretary 1971-2001, Leader of the House of Commons 2001-2003. Resigned over Iraq 2003[2]
Falconer, Charles
Barrister. TB's childhood friend and his flatmate. Lord Chancellor 2003-07.
Gould, Phillip
Political adviser to Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair. Used focus groups to provide them with advice about what the public was thinking [3].
Irvine, Derry
Lawyer. TB's law tutor. Lord Chancellor 1997-2003. "Derry taught me how to think"[4]
Jenkins, Roy
Kinnock, Neil
Milliband, David
Milliband, Ed
Powell, Jonathan
Prescott, John
Smith, John
Straw, Jack
Thomson, Peter
Australian Anglican priest. Born 1936. TB's "friend, teacher and mentor" [5]
The machinery of government
- (describes the machinery of government as it was between 1997 and 2007 and does not refelect subsequent changes)
Cabinet[1]
Assembly of the Secretaries of States (heads) of the major government departments, chaired by the Prime Minister, and formerly (pre 1979) the Government's senior decision-making body. (Seldom used for that purpose under Margaret Thatcher and hardly ever by TB).
Cabinet committees
Specialised sub-committees of the Cabinet.
Cabinet Office[2]
Committee consisting of the Permanent Secrataries (top civil servants) of the major goovernment departments, the function of which is to coordinate the execution of the government's policies.
Cabinet Secretary
Head of the civil service and constitutionally the link between the Prime Minister and the civil service machine. (A service that TB seldom used).
Civil Service
Long-term government employees, each of whom is assigned to a government department and is only to the Secretary of State (political head) of that department.
Delivery Unit[3]
Set up by TB in 2001 to progress the execution of his decisions by government departments.
Focus group
Typically, a 2-hour informal discussion among a group of about 20 selected voters. Used to obtain an indication of more considered perceptions than can be obtained from opinion polls.
Government Information Service[4]
Otherwise known as the Central Office of information. An interdepartmental organistion staffed by civil servants whose function is to provide objective information about all aspects of government.
Joint Intelligence Committee[5]
The Cabinet Office committee that oversees the work of the security services and advises the Government on security matters. Its membership includes the heads of the British intelligence agencies, the Chief and Deputy Chief of the Defence Intelligence Staff, the Chief of the Assessments Staff, representatives of the Ministry of Defence, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and may include representatives of the United States security sevices.
Leader of the House
The cabinet minister who is responsible for the arrangement of government business in the House of Commons.
Lord Chancellor
Member of the Cabinet. Speaker of the House of Lords. Head of the Judiciary (until 2007)
Policy Unit
Combined with the Prime Minister's Private Office and renamed "Policy Directorate" in 2001, it had a staff of 30 civil servants and special advisors, working together on short- and medium-term policy questions[6].
Press Office
Royal Prerogative
Decision-making powers, formally reserved to the Monarch, that are in practice exercised by the Prime Minister without the need for parliamentary assent. The powers include the appointment of Ministers, the calling of elections and the declaration of war.
Special advisors
Strategy Unit[6]
A team of about 60 civil servants and outside recruits, set up in 2001, that published a range of analyses [7] of long-term policy issues.
Reports of inquiries
Chilcott inquiry
Inquiry of House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee into the decision to go to war in Iraq
Gershon inquiry
Hutton inquiry
References
(References, with page numbers, to Tony Blair's memoirs (Tony Blair: A Journey, Hutchinson, 2010) are shown as "Journey (xxx)", and references to Anthony Seldon's biography (Anthony Seldon: Blair, Free Press, 2004) are shown as "Blair (xxx)".)
- ↑ Blair (311)
- ↑ Robin Cook's Resignation Speech BBC News, 16 March 2003
- ↑ Blair 130-137
- ↑ Journey (12)
- ↑ Journey (78-9)
- ↑ Denis Kavanagh: "The Blair Premiership" in Anthony Seldon and Denis Kavanagh (eds) The Blair Effect 2001-5, Cambridge University Press, 2005
- ↑ Strategy Work Areas
- ↑ The Iraq Inquiry