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Profiles of Gordon's five new talents

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  • Profiles of Gordon's five new talents

    Profiles of Gordon's five new talents

    Daily Telegraph/UK
    L30/06/2007


    Sir Alan West

    Some recruits to Gordon Brown's new-style, non-partisan Government
    share one thing - a record of fierce criticism of the previous
    administration.

    Admiral Sir Alan West, the former First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval
    Staff, has spent much of the last 12 months turning his guns on Labour.

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    Just before he stood down as head of the Navy last year, Sir Alan, a
    war hero whose ship was sunk in the Falklands conflict, warned that
    cuts to the service under Labour would make it incapable of protecting
    Britain's coastline.

    "I don't think anything should ever be sacred but we do have to be
    careful that we do not reduce the Navy to a level that makes recovery
    difficult," he warned.

    Last December, he told The Sunday Telegraph that the Ministry of
    Defence's lack of investment could turn Britain's Armed Forces into a
    "tinpot gendarmerie" incapable of defending the nation's interests.

    "I suppose we could retire to our island and hope that no one gets to
    us," he said.

    And as recently as April, he condemned the decision to allow Royal Navy
    hostages held by Iran to sell their stories.

    "It does leave a slightly tacky taste in one's mouth. It is not good,"
    he said.

    Sir Alan, 59, joined up before his 18th birthday and spent most of his
    career at sea, serving in 14 different ships and commanding three of
    them. In the successful retaking of the Falklands, his ship, the
    frigate Ardent, was sunk. He was subsequently awarded the Distinguished
    Service Cross and led the Victory Parade through the City of London.

    Knighted in the Millennium New Year's Honours List, he was First Sea
    Lord from 2002 until last year.

    By Brendan Carlin


    ----------------------------------------- --------------------------------
    -------

    Sir Digby Jones

    A big, bluff Brummie, Sir Digby Jones has put aside past criticisms of
    Labour to enter Gordon Brown's big tent as a peer and trade promotion
    minister.

    In 2002, the then CBI director-general was so critical of the
    Government that Margaret Thatcher bumped into him and said: "I know
    you, you're the official opposition."

    In March 2000 he said: "I have to say that [reassuring business] is not
    even on [Brown's] radar and that worries me considerably."

    Three years later, Sir Digby, 51, savaged Labour over pensions policy
    and business taxes, and spoke of a "seam of discontent" among business
    leaders which the Tories could capitalise on.

    But at the CBI from 2000 to 2006 he built a good relationship with Mr
    Brown.

    Last December, Sir Digby was appointed "skills envoy" for the
    Government but felt no need to pull his punches. In January, he said
    standards of adult literacy were a "national disgrace".

    He began his career at corporate law firm Edge & Ellison in 1978,
    becoming a partner in 1984, and made a name for himself in corporate
    finance and client development.

    Labour sees him as proof of Mr Brown's desire to reach out beyond
    traditional politics.

    The appointment is also designed to upset the Tories on the flimsy
    basis that Labour thinks every businessman has voted Conservative since
    birth.

    But Sir Digby, who was of no known political affiliation, has
    disappointed his new colleagues by refusing to join the Labour Party.
    He will be bound by the Labour whip in the Lords in an arrangement
    described by one Labour MP last night as "odd".

    By Brendan Carlin


    ----------------------------------------- --------------------------------
    -------

    Shriti Vadera

    If Alastair Campbell was Tony Blair's real deputy, Shriti Vadera has
    been the real number two at the Treasury.

    But rather than remain the power behind the throne, the publicity-shy
    former investment banker has entered the limelight by becoming an
    international development minister.

    The Tories said her appointment showed that Gordon Brown, like Mr
    Blair, hands jobs to "cronies".

    But relief agencies and charities were pleased by the arrival of Miss
    Vadera, the brains behind many of the Government's flagship policies
    for Africa and debt relief.

    Oxfam, where she was a trustee, lauded her "extremely strong commitment
    to poverty eradication and international development".

    Miss Vadera, 44, was born on the shores of Lake Victoria in Uganda to
    an Indian family. She came to the UK in 1974 and read politics,
    philosophy and economics at Somerville College, Oxford, where Margaret
    Thatcher and Indira Gandhi studied.

    She has a formidable reputation and is said to be capable of reducing
    junior officials to quivering wrecks.

    After 14 years at the investment bank UBS Warburg, she joined the
    Treasury in 1999 and became as indispensable in advising Mr Brown as
    the better-known Ed Balls.

    Miss Vadera was involved in the renationalisation of Railtrack and the
    part-privatisation of the London Underground.

    She dismissed Railtrack shareholders as "grannies" who had "added no
    value to the company", which came to light during the investors' High
    Court case against the Government.

    By Brendan Carlin and Martin Beckford

    ---------------------------------------- ---------------------------------

    Ara Darzi

    The surgeon drafted into the Brown government to help boost the NHS is
    one of Britain's leading experts in keyhole surgery.

    But Sir Ara Darzi has already crossed swords with ministers,
    recommending in vain two years ago that two hospitals in Hartlepool and
    Stockton should remain open.

    Sir Ara, 47, has pioneered techniques for making operations less
    invasive, including surgery for cancer patients.

    Already a government adviser on the NHS, Sir Ara, who was born in
    Armenia, has taught minimal access surgery at the Royal College of
    Surgeons and set national guidelines for education and training in this
    area.

    He pledged to stay on the "front line" and said that it was a
    "privilege and honour" to be able to work in Gordon Brown's
    administration.

    Sir Ara said yesterday that he would work from Monday to Thursday as a
    health minister - although he is paid for just three days.

    He will work for free as an NHS surgeon on Fridays. The professor is
    the current holder of the Paul Hamlyn Chair of Surgery at Imperial
    College London, where he is head of surgery, oncology, reproductive
    biology and anaesthetics.

    He is also honorary consultant surgeon at St Mary's Hospital and The
    Royal Marsden Hospital in London. Sir Ara's team has developed the use
    of surgical robots and image-guided surgery, and he has called for more
    research in this area. In 2001, his team won a Queen's Anniversary
    Prize in recognition of their achievements in pioneering techniques and
    in addressing training requirements.

    Sir Ara said of his appointment: "My career has been dedicated to
    improving the health of patients.

    `It is a great honour and privilege to be asked by the Prime Minister
    to continue that work for patients across the country. `

    By Brendan Carlin

    ------------------------------------------ -------------------------------

    Lord Stevens

    Since retiring from the most senior police job in the country two years
    ago, Lord Stevens has never been busier.

    The 64-year-old peer and former commissioner of the Metropolitan Police
    has headed both the Operation Paget inquiry into the circumstances
    surrounding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, and the Premier
    League investigation into alleged football bungs.

    Now "Captain Beaujolais", as he is nicknamed because of his love for
    fine wines and vintage champagne, will bring his wealth of experience
    to Gordon Brown's government.

    Born in Kent, educated at boarding school in Ramsgate, he began his
    policing career in Hammersmith, west London where he received no less
    than 27 commendations for his detective work. Top postings with
    regional forces followed. He was appointed commissioner in 2000,
    receiving a knighthood in the process.

    Admired by his fellow officers he was regarded as a "copper's copper"
    and was universally popular.

    With a reputation for outspokeness, he has never been afraid of
    delivering unpalatable truths and has been entrusted with several of
    the most sensitive and high-profile inquires. These included the
    investigation, begun in 1989, of collusion by the Royal Ulster
    Constabulary and loyalist terrorists in the murders of republicans in
    Northern Ireland. The longest and most complex such investigation in
    British history, it resulted in some 98 convictions.

    His relations with Labour politicans have not always gone smoothly. He
    accused David Blunkett, then Home Secretary, of being anti-police and
    was furious when reports that Mr Blunkett had given him a "real
    roasting" appeared in the media. He laid the blame at Home Secretary's
    door. "There were only three people in that office - myself, the Home
    Secretary and his dog," he wrote in his autobiography. "And it [the
    leak] didn't come from the dog".

    By Caroline Davies
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