Over the last month
Social Investigations has researched the free market think tank, Reform, which
to the discredit of the Charity Commission rules, is also a charity. The findings led to the conclusion that a complaint to the
Charity Commission was justified under both misleading the public and questioning their
political independence.
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Reform are important because they dream up policy for selling off our
public assets like the NHS and the police and the Conservative party make
policy based on their research. Their corporate partners are major global and UK
corporations and scooping the financial rewards from the privatisation dreamed
up by Reform.
Reform is seen by many
organisations on both sides of the political spectrum as being an arm of the
Conservative party, everyone recognises this except it would seem, the Charity Commission.
The Research revealed:
· All the founders are linked to the Conservative
party
· Three out of the five trustees have direct
links to the Conservative party
· There are multiple companies who are Reform’s
corporate partners who are linked to Lords and MPs
· They were involved in lobbying to maintain
‘competition’ in the health and Social Care bill
· They make a claim on their website that is
misleading
· They hold meetings with ministers and corporations
where no minutes are held using Chatham House Rules
· The Conservatives have launched two policies at
Reform
The Complaint sent to Charity Commission
Reform
Research Trust – Charity Number: 1103739
The
complaint against Reform centre on two areas:
·
Misleading
the public
·
Political
independence
1.
Misleading the public
Misleading statement
Reform state on their website: 'We are keen
to involve corporate organisations in our research because their expertise is
often left out of the Whitehall policy discussion.'
I am providing a selection of files on
three companies that are corporate partners to Reform in order to provide
evidence that Reform’s statement on their site regarding the above statement is
at best misleading and at worst deception.
In addition to the same point above, I am
providing a list of the corporate partners with their links to MPs and Lords
and a list of what area each company influences government policy.
The companies I have selected are:
I chose three simply because I didn’t want
to inundate your organisation with files on all the companies that make up
their corporate partners to make the point. The files represent those companies
only, although the same would apply to all the other corporate partners and I
would be happy to supply more if required.
Reform currently has 31 corporate partners; many of them represent some of the
most powerful companies in the UK.
Current members are: ABI, Aviva, Balfour Beatty, Benenden Healthcare
Society, Bevan Brittan, BG Group, BVCA, Cable & Wireless, Capita, CH2M
Hill, Clifford Chance, Citigroup, The City of London, Ernst & Young,
GlaxoSmithKline, G4S, GE, General Healthcare Group, HP, ICAEW, KPMG, Maximus, McKesson,
MSD, Optical Confederation, PA Consulting Group, Serco, Sodexo and Telereal
Trillium.
These companies are not left our of
Whitehall policy. As the files will show, they are often involved at various
levels helping to develop policy.
Many of these companies are financially
linked to Lords and MPs from all parties, although largely the Conservatives
and in many cases they are in leading positions: Please see File titled Reform
MP company links.
In one particular case, the director Andrew
Haldenby specifically speaks up for and on behalf of G4S as it mentions in the
G4S file.
Reform receives money from donations and sponsorship. Companies often
sponsor an event so that they can lobby. The policy that these companies
influence ends up creating more wealth for the companies and is not for the
charitable aims of delivering economic prosperity to the people it claims to
do. Not once in their summary return do they mention promoting privatisation,
and yet through their corporate sponsorship, and work, this is exactly what
they are doing.
2. Political
independence.
The next complaint
looks at their political independence.- See links to Conservative party here.
‘The guiding principal
of charity law is that charities should be, and be seen to be, independent from
party politics.’
Based on the statement
above, Reform is not within charity law as their powerbase is almost totally
towards the Conservative party.