Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
‘Business Councils’ – the Conservatives’ corrupt corporate cronies
SOLOMON HUGHES reveals the calibre of the creeps that head up Tories’ rotten business network

THIS month Boris Johnson had a “meeting with Business Council co-chairs,” according to a No 10 press release.

These “Business Councils” are one of the key ways government consults big business. They give an interesting picture of which corporations count, politically.

One striking feature is how many of these companies have been involved in major corruption scandals: it does make it seem that the most important British corporations are always close to corruption.

Theresa May established these five Business Councils in November 2018.

May was criticised for paying too much attention to the narrow needs of the Tory Party and not enough to big business — so she created the councils to show she did care about the bosses of powerful corporations.

Johnson has stuck with the councils for the same reasons.

The chairs of the councils are:

** Roger Carr, chairman of arms firm BAE Systems (involved in numerous corruption scandals — paid a £300 million fine in 2010 in relation to corruption in Saudi Arabia, the Czech Republic and Tanzania),

** Sir Ian Davis, chair of engine maker Rolls-Royce (agreed to pay £670m in 2017 to settle charges of bribery and corruption in China, India, Nigeria and Russia),

** Emma Walmsley, CEO of drug firm GlaxoSmithKline (fines include a $3 billion settlement of fraud charges over drug promotion in the US in 2012 and $490m in China for bribing doctors in 2014),

** And Dave Lewis, CEO of Tesco (Paid £235m to settle charges of accounting fraud in 2017).

The other four chairs of Johnson’s Business Councils are Jan Du Plessis of BT Group, Shriti Vadera, chair of Santander UK, Emma Jones, founder of business advice group Enterprise Nation, and Brent Hoberman, chair of investment group Founders’ Factory.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a media conference at the end of the Nato Summit at the Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025
Features / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES explains how the PM is channelling the spirit of Reagan and Thatcher with a ‘two-tier’ nuclear deterrent, whose Greenham Common predecessor was eventually fought off by a bunch of ‘punks and crazies’

Palestinians receive donated food at a community kitchen in Gaza City, June 10, 2025
Features / 13 June 2025
13 June 2025

Israel’s combination of starvation, coercion and murder is part of a carefully concerted plan to ensure Palestinian compliance – as shown in leaked details about the sinister Gaza Humanitarian Foundation which reveal similarities to hunger manipulation projects in Vietnam, Malaya and Kenya, says SOLOMON HUGHES

Workers protest outside Google London HQ over the
Lobbying / 6 June 2025
6 June 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES reveals how six MPs enjoyed £400-£600 hospitality at Ditchley Park for Google’s ‘AI parliamentary scheme’ — supposedly to develop ‘effective scrutiny’ of artificial intelligence, but actually funded by the increasingly unsavoury tech giant itself

TREACHERY FORGOTTEN: John Woodcock, seen here in 2015, betrayed Labour under Corbyn. Now that the right is back in charge, he is welcome to schmooze Labour MPs for Ramsay Healthcare
Features / 23 May 2025
23 May 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES details how the firm has quickly moved on to buttering-up Labour MPs after the fall of the Tories so it can continue to ‘win both ways’ collecting public and private cash by undermining the NHS

Similar stories
Channel Migrants
Features / 9 May 2025
9 May 2025

Secret consultation documents finally released after the Morning Star’s two-year freedom of information battle show the Home Office misrepresented public opinion, claiming support for policies that most respondents actually strongly criticised as dangerous and unfair, writes SOLOMON HUGHES

SCANT REGARD FOR THE LAW: MSI Reproductive Choices Clinic in
Features / 13 March 2025
13 March 2025
Despite using female spokespeople for its campaigns against clinic buffer zones, ADF UK’s board consists entirely of men, with 80 per cent living outside Britain and most funding from its US parent, reveals SOLOMON HUGHES
The Grenfell Memorial Wall in west London, September 3, 2024
Features / 6 September 2024
6 September 2024
SOLOMON HUGHES exposes how executives behind lethal cladding have pocketed £302 million since the tragedy, as Labour frontbenchers continue to schmooze at luxury conferences funded and organised by implicated firms