Camilla Cavendish

From WikiCorporates
Jump to navigation Jump to search
  • 2015: became Cameron’s policy adviser.[1]
  • When he resigned as prime minister she was made Baroness Cavendish of Little Venice.[1]
  • As a Times journalist, she repeatedly wrote about her concerns that social workers misused their powers, and misled family courts, to get children removed from families. It is of some surprise that such a critic of social workers has just been appointed as the chair of Frontline, the company preferred and funded by the govt to train the future generation of children’s social workers and social work leaders.[1]


Articles

  • Apr.08.2018: Sweet triumph is just the start. When I first proposed a sugar tax to David Cameron when he was prime minister, there was outrage. The drinks industry professed itself unable to stomach the idea that it might be really, really easy for it to cut down on sugar. However, the tax came into force last week without demonstrations on the streets. The government should ban the advertising of unhealthy foods in online games and on television programmes, and it needs to get firms to reformulate processed food, just as Lucozade and Tesco have reformulated their own-brand soft drinks. Camilla Cavendish, The Times.
  • Oct.18.2017: The NHS must surely share Richard Branson’s pain. Here’s another one for the collection, who was also a contemporary of David Cameron, George Osborne and Boris Johnson at Oxford: Camilla Cavendish, who as a Times journalist repeatedly wrote about her concerns that social workers misused their powers, and misled family courts, to get children removed from families. In 2015 she became Cameron’s policy adviser. When he resigned as prime minister she was made Baroness Cavendish of Little Venice. It is of some surprise that such a critic of social workers has just been appointed as the chair of Frontline, the company preferred and funded by the govt to train the future generation of children’s social workers and social work leaders. Dr Ray Jones, Emeritus professor of social work, University of London, The Guardian: Letters.

References

  1. ^ a b c Here’s another one for the collection. Camilla Cavendish was also a contemporary of David Cameron, George Osborne and Boris Johnson at Oxford. Dr Ray Jones, Emeritus professor of social work, University of London, The Guardian: Letters, Oct.18.2017.