Economists estimate extreme poverty could be drastically reduced for a fraction of global defence spending, yet military budgets continue to expand year on year, says JON TRICKETT MP, ahead of the Stop the War International Conference on Saturday
British ministers, opposition MPs and top civil servants all went to a secretive, corporate-sponsored conference in a luxury hotel in France in January. I’ve pulled together some of the details, but who paid for the conference remains secret — although French energy firm EDF clearly had a big role.
Earlier this year some MPs listed attendance at the January “Franco-British Colloque” in the register of MPs’ interests. The Colloque is a long-running, government-business political conference, like an Anglo-French version of the Bilderberg or Davos conferences. The MPs said they got transport and hotel costs worth £590 each for the conference, so Commons rules meant they had to register the event.
The Franco-British Colloque was founded by BP boss Lord Simon back in the 1990s, and has always been corporate-sponsored. The conference committee invite 50 British and 50 French “delegates” to come debate the big issues. Like Bilderberg, this is where some corporate Establishment “grandees” invite younger political faces. It’s one of the ways business and political elites have a conversation.
Established as a landmark victory for the climate movement, the CCC promised to hold governments to account. Today, it is understating the danger of climate chaos and impeding the radical action needed, says IAN SINCLAIR
Martin Taylor, the hedge-fund multimillionaire who has poured millions into pushing Labour rightwards, helped finance Lucy Powell’s supposedly dissenting campaign — suggesting her victory was not the ‘soft-left’ rebellion some have claimed, says SOLOMON HUGHES
SOLOMON HUGHES asks whether Labour ‘engaging with decision-makers’ with scandalous records of fleecing the public is really in our interests


