Lynton
Crosby must go, urges former Lib Dem health minister, as cross-party anger
grows over U-turn on cigarettes
Lynton Crosby is facing calls from the Lib Dems to quit or be sacked over his links to the tobacco industry. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex Features |
David Cameron faces calls from senior Liberal Democrats to sack his controversial
election strategist Lynton Crosby over his links with the tobacco industry, as
the coalition descended into open warfare over public health policy.
As the
latest row over the role of big money in politics hit Downing Street, Paul
Burstow, who was a health minister until September last year, said Crosby
should either quit or be sacked by Cameron after it emerged that his lobbying
firm works for global tobacco giant Philip Morris.
Other
Liberal Democrats also made clear they were furious and would fight to ensure
Crosby was removed from any role in which he could influence health or any
other coalition policy.
Amid the
growing furore, the Tory chairman of the all-party select committee on health,
former health secretary Stephen Dorrell, announced that his committee would
look into why the government had changed its mind on the question of cigarette
packaging.
Last
Friday, the government revealed that it was shelving plans to introduce plain
packaging on cigarettes, prompting a furious reaction from the health lobby and
MPs from across the political spectrum. The Observer understands that health
ministers were almost uniformly in favour of plain packaging but were overruled
by Downing Street.
Dismay at
the sudden about-turn deepened yesterday when Philip Morris, one of the Big
Four tobacco companies, said it had employed Crosby's lobbying and
communications firm CTF to give it advice "on a range of matters"
since November. Crosby has been employed by the Tory party as chief strategist
since last autumn. CTF has consistently refused to say who its clients are,
despite long-standing suspicions that it works for big names in the tobacco and
drinks industries.
This week
the government is also expected to announce that it is shelving its plans to
introduce minimum pricing on alcohol.
Amid
increasing Liberal Democrat anger, Burstow said it was time for Crosby to go.
"Lynton Crosby cannot remain at the heart of government while he is also
serving the interests of the tobacco industry. If he does not go the prime
minister should sack him."
Steven
Williams, Liberal Democrat MP and chairman of the all-party group on smoking
and health, also said Crosby's position was untenable. "It is a massive
conflict of interest to have someone who works for the tobacco industry at the
heart of government," Williams said. "The prime minister should be
considering whether he believes Crosby's position is tenable."
Moves are
now under way from MPs and peers of all parties to try to amend the children
and families bill as it passes through the Lords in order to reinstate the
policy.
Cameron has
insisted that Crosby is only employed by the Conservative party and not by the
government and does not lobby him on policy. But Labour wrote to Cameron asking
about any meetings with him, his officials or ministers on tobacco policy.
Shadow
cabinet office minister John Trickett asked: "Will you now be asking
Lynton Crosby to give up Philip Morris and any other clients who could
potentially benefit from government decisions on which he advises?
"If
Lynton Crosby refuses to give up his conflicting interests, will you undertake
to cease to employ him as a Conservative party adviser?"
The row is
a huge embarrassment to Cameron, coming just a week after he appeared to have
turned the political heat on Labour over its financial links to the trade
unions.
An
Opinium/Observer poll shows that despite the row over union influence, Labour
has stretched its lead to 11%, with more voters concerned about the influence
that big-money donors have on the Conservative party than about the unions'
sway over Labour.
Attention
will now be turned to government plans, set to be announced on Tuesday, to
introduce a compulsory register of lobbyists.
The
Observer can also reveal that Cameron is in a potential fix over World Health
Organisation rules aimed at preventing conflicts of interests in government
with the tobacco lobby.
The UK is a
signatory to the World Health Organisation Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control, which states that governments and other parties "need to be alert
to any efforts by the tobacco industry to undermine or subvert tobacco control
efforts and the need to be informed of activities of the tobacco industry that
have a negative impact on tobacco control efforts".
The
government says it will wait to see the results of the switch to plain
packaging in Australia before it decides whether to follow suit. But the
Department of Health's own studies have found a strong case for the move.
The extent
of CTF's links to government are also highlighted in claims made by the
company's senior director, Sam Lyon, who says on the CTF website that he
"provides senior counsel, strategic communications advice, media training
and writes opinion pieces and speeches for cabinet-level politicians and
business leaders, both in the UK and internationally". Lyon refused to
comment.
Dorrell,
chairman of the Commons select committee, said of the decision to drop plain
packaging: "I think it is a disappointing development. It is certainly
something that the select committee will wish to review with Public Health
England."
A Labour
source said: "It appears David Cameron never asked Lynton Crosby about his
links to the tobacco industry. This is negligent to the point of
recklessness."
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