Meet Lord Hill, Cameron's City 'Poacher-Turned-Gamekeeper' In Brussels

Meet Lord Hill, Cameron's City 'Poacher-Turned-Gamekeeper' In Brussels
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Lord Hill
REX Features

David Cameron's European commissioner appointment Lord Hill, who has been put in charge of financial services, has drawn concern over his past in financial lobbying and continued links to the City.

Critics have also pointed out the "alarming" fact that a lobbying firm founded by the Tory peer, Quiller Consultants, works for private healthcare investor Circle Holdings, which backs a controversial US-EU trade deal - referred to as TTIP - that could "lock in the privatisation of public services, including the NHS".

Lord Hill has promised to sell his £375,000 stake in Huntsworth, a Brussels-based lobbying firm specializing in private healthcare that bought his firm Quiller in 2006. However, according to the register of interests in the House of Lords, he has not yet done so.

As the European Union's financial services commissioner, appointed by the UK government, he will represent City institutions and hedge funds in Brussels. Critics say this means Lord Hill will be representing firms like Lansdowne Partners, Odey Asset Management and BlueCrest Capital, who are heavily invested in private health firms like Circle.

Green MEP Molly Scott Cato, who sits on the European Parliament's ECON Committee which will scrutinise Lord Hill's work, told the Huffington Post UK: “This appointment would mean that a financial industry lobbyist would be in charge of financial regulation; it’s a clear case of poacher-turned-gamekeeper.

"As a founding director of Quiller Consultants, who are lobbyists working on behalf of financial interests, and with his well-developed contacts to the City of London, he would be in a key position to influence future financial market regulation."

"The revelation that he also has links to a multinational health firm which supports the controversial TTIP trade deal is equally alarming. This deal threatens to lock-in the privatisation of public services, particularly health services including the NHS."

The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) has garnered controversy due to the apparent secrecy of its negotiations and the fear that the NHS could be opened up to US companies in an "irreversible" privatisation process.

The chairman of Circle Holdings, Michael Kirkwood, sits on the advisory board of BritishAmerican Business (BAB), a group which has been "actively promoting" the controversial trade deal.

Story continues...

9 Problems You Didn't Know About The TTIP US-EU Deal
The UK could be sued for risking company profits (01 of09)
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Thanks to the proposed deal's "Investor State Dispute Settlement", companies will be able to sue governments whose regulations put future profits at risk. So fracking firms could take the government to court banning risky drilling, or private healthcare providers suing a government which protects the NHS.
The UK could be forced to adopt other countries' rules(02 of09)
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In order to trade under the TTIP, the UK could be forced to accept rules from other countries - which doesn't bode well for people complaining about the UK having too many laws from Brussels.
Your wages will suffer(03 of09)
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Unions are concerned that the weakened regulations will allow bosses to reduce wages and labour rights will suffer.
Our food regulations could be watered down (04 of09)
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So far so bureaucratic, but what could this mean? Thanks to the equalization of rules between the US and EU as part of the deal, the UK could be forced to relax regulations which could see the return of banned food products in Europe like chicken bleached with chlorine and growth hormones in beef.
Our environmental standards could be undermined(05 of09)
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In order to match US standards, UK could be forced to reverse its ban on asbestos - which has been linked to lung cancer and mesothelioma.
Your data could be at risk(06 of09)
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US citizens do not have the same level of protection for their private data as EU citizens, so e-commerce provisions under the deal could see the safety of your private data put at risk.
Experts say the deal's benefits are "vastly overblown" (07 of09)
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“An impartial reading of these key documents relating to the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership shows quite clearly that these huge figures are vastly overblown and deeply flawed,” said political scientist Dr Siles-Brügge of Manchester University.
We're in the dark about much of the deal(08 of09)
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Parts of the deal will only be unveiled once they're finally agreed by European Commission and US officials.
And you can do little to stop it (09 of09)
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The deal is being thrashed out in secret by few people you've actually elected. Green Party MEP Keith Taylor tells HuffPostUK: "Even my colleagues who sit on the European Parliament's Trade Committee don't get a proper look at the negotiating document, and most MEPs don't get any say on the deal until we're presented it as a fait accompli.

Unite general secretary Len McCluskey said in a statement: “Across the country people are calling on David Cameron to exempt our NHS from TTIP, which threatens to make the NHS sell-off irreversible. He responded by nominating a Lord with financial links to the very firms lobbying to keep it in.

"Now, Lord’s Hill’s appointment to a senior position in the Commission, where he can use his influence to get the deal agreed, is clearly compromised by this conflict of interest.

By nominating Lord Hill and then lobbying for this appointment, Cameron has once again gone to Brussels on behalf of his friends in The City, while turning his back on the groundswell of opposition which is building against this dangerous deal.

“The Tory’s Health and Social Care Act let private health firms, and the City investment firms who own them, loose on our NHS. Now David Cameron has helped these firms get a seat at the European Commission’s table."

The Huffington Post UK asked Downing Street for comment in response to the criticism of Lord Hill's appointment, but has yet to receive a response at the time of publication.

The Tory peer has been more warmly received by business groups. Simon Walker, director general of the Institute of Directors, said: "Entrusting this commitment along with financial services to a UK Commissioner is a clear demonstration that British influence in Brussels is far from waning."

“The torrent of financial sector regulation that has come from Brussels over the past 5 years has often been counterproductive," he added.

"Further liberalisation as a means of boosting business and economic growth is vitally important for both the UK and the EU as a whole."

Syed Kamall, leader of the Conservatives in the European Parliament, recently poured scorn on the "myths' surrounding the controversial TTIP negotiations.

Blogging on the Huffington Post UK, he wrote: "If the TTIP negotiations cover issues other than trade, it becomes known as a "mixed agreement" and will have to be ratified by the British Parliament.

"Democratic oversight and transparency is a core shared objective of the parties and Members of the European Parliament across the political spectrum are closely monitoring the different stages of the process in order to inform our citizens and to engage them in the process."