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A Brief History of the Labour Finance and Industry Group
by Peter Slowe,
Vice President and former Chairman and Honorary Secretary of LFIG
The Labour Finance and Industry Group was founded in 1972 by a dozen
senior business-people who wanted to support the Labour opposition to the
Heath government. During the Wilson and Callaghan governments, 1974-1979,
the Group played an important advisory role.
In 1982, the Group was joined by the Labour, Economics, Finance and
Taxation Association (LEFTA) and thus acquired for the first time a
"grassroots" business membership. Indeed, during the 1980s, the Labour Finance and Industry Group’s membership increased from 65 to
nearly 500.
During the period of Labour opposition under Neil Kinnock, the Labour
Finance and Industry Group developed a system of Study Groups to support
particular shadow ministers. Time and again, shadow ministers would find
themselves having to speak on a whole range of subjects where information
and ideas from the business community were particularly useful. The Labour
Finance and Industry Group represented practical and experienced members
of the business community, who were also loyal members of the Labour
Party. Example of day-to-day work undertaken during this period included
working with Robin Cook, Bryan Gould and Mo Mowlam on their work on
financial services and the City, and working with Jeff Rooker, Jack
Cunningham and Roger Stott on their work on housing and the construction
industry. The Labour Finance and Industry Group also worked in broader
areas of policy development, contributing, for example, to the
major
Policy review of 1987-8 and helping to develop whole new policy areas, for
example, in company law and in the field of competition, monopolies and
mergers.
In the Labour opposition period 1992-97, the Labour Finance and Industry
Group developed its work, meeting regularly with Gordon Brown, as Shadow
Chancellor, Margaret Beckett as Shadow Trade and Industry Secretary and
other key figures in the industrial and economic policy fields. The Group
did much of the preparatory work for PFI, and was responsible for much of
the work which went into developing systems for using private sector
funding to deliver public sector capital projects and service provision.
Its working procedures included private seminars and dinners for open
exchanges of views between shadow ministers and Group members and
conferences to provide platforms for controlled publicity.
The advent of the new Labour government in 1997 coincided with the 25th
anniversary of the Labour Finance and Industry Group which was celebrated
in 11 Downing Street. With Labour in government, the Group has continued
to work with ministers in a wide variety of industrial and economic
fields, meeting regularly behind the scenes and contributing a unique
Labour business input. Currently, the Labour Finance and Industry Group
has close working relations with a number of secretaries of state and
senior ministers, and is working on policy development with ministers in
the field of industry, transport, energy, financial services and small
firms.
PETER SLOWE
20th July 2001 |
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