As the deadline looms for a final Brexit agreement between the EU and the UK, the Leave and Remain camps are readying for a second campaign over the nature of the UKโs future relationship with theย union.
Both camps will seek to push their arguments into the British press, hoping to convince late-comers to theirย cause.
While national newspapers have long taken a stance on Brexit, op-eds, columns and opinion pieces will be a key tool for lobbyist from both sides of the debate to push their agenda into the publicย sphere.
Research by DeSmog UK shows how a network of hard-Brexit think tanks pushing for deregulation and with links to climate science deniers has secured a footing in the mainstreamย press.
Working out of two addresses in Tufton Street near Westminster, this network which includes climate science denial group the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF),ย has been accused by BeLeave whistleblower Shahmir Sanni of holding regular meetings to โagree on a single set of right-wing talking pointsโ and โsecuring more exposure to theย publicโ.
This Tufton Street network has strong ties with the right-wing press including the free business newspaper distributed in and around London City AM and The Telegraph โ both of which have been repeatedly used to push the groupโs agenda into theย media.
Deep ties: City AM and the Institute of Economicย Affairs
At the heart of the Tufton Street network is the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), an opaque London-based free-market think tank registered as an โeducational charityโ with the mission โto improve understanding of the fundamental institutions of a freeย societyโ.
Earlier this month, on the same day as the UK government released its โno dealโ scenarios, the IEA launched what it called a series of โโno dealโ Brexit fear-checkersโ which it said would โhelp separate theoretical risks from realityโ or what it called โProject Fear from Projectย Factโ.
Former under secretary of state for exiting the EU, Steve Baker, promoted the IEAโs briefings on Twitter as bringing โmore impartiality and objectivityโ into theย debate.
The IEA recently hit headlines after an undercover investigation by Greenpeaceโs Unearthed and The Guardian suggested the think tank was involved in a โcash for accessโ system and offered potential US donors access to UKย ministers.
The IEA denied the allegation. Undercover recordings yet showed IEA director Mark Littlewood claiming Shanker Singham, the director of the international trade and competition unit at the IEA, and his team speak with environment minister Michael Gove โevery three or four days, along with David Davis, Boris Johnson, Liam Foxโ.
Singham is a close advisor to former Brexit Secretary David Davis and Baker, who have both pushed back against Theresa Mayโs Chequersย plan.
While the IEAโs first briefings have already attracted plenty of media attention from across the political spectrum, it is worth noting that the think tank has deep connections with parts of theย press.
Christian May, editor-in-chief of City AM, is also a member of the IEAโs advisory council.
At the time of his appointment in 2015, City AM was understood to want to adopt a more eurosceptic tone, according to the Guardian. May came from the PR industry and had no senior editorial experience before hisย appointment.
Between 2008 and 2009, May was the director of operations at the Young Britonsโ Foundation, a controversial Tory party affiliate which made the news after one of its alumni Mark Clarke was accused of bullying young activist Elliott Johnson, who took his life. Clarke denied theย allegations.
The groupโs radical views previously earned it its reputation as a โTory madrasaโ used to teach young Conservatives the โdark artsโ ofย politics.
A 2013 annual meeting of the Young Britonsโ Foundation, attended by May, also included a number of people with connections to the Tufton Street network. This included Steve Baker, Taxpayers Alliance founder and former chief executive of Vote Leave Matthew Elliott, Brexit Central editor Jonathan Isaby, and ConservativeHome founder Timย Montgomerie.
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May is not the only connection City AM has with the IEA. Kate Andrews, newly appointed associate director at the IEA, also writes a fortnightly column for the paper.
Last week, City AM broke the story that David Davis is to write a foreword to a 140 page โAlternative Brexit Planโ, which is due to be published this week and will make the case for a Canada-style trade deal.ย ย
According to City AM, the proposal is being coordinated by Singham, of the IEA, and in collaboration with at least one another think tank and a City lawย firm.
Director of research at the IEA Jamie Whyte has also written four controversial columns for The Telegraph since July 2017 โ including opposing the plastic straw ban and how โturning Britain into a tax haven would make us allย richerโ.
Matthew Elliott and the Vote Leaveย campaign
Matthew Elliott, former chief executive of Vote Leave and editor-at-large of Brexit Central, is a regular columnist at City AM. Elliott is also the co-founder of the TaxPayersโ Alliance that advocates for a low-tax society and has been pushing for deregulationย post-Brexit.
Despite Elliottโs prominent role in pushing for a hard-Brexit agenda, City AM fails to identify his political affiliations in hisย short biography on the paperโs website. Instead, itย reads: โMatthew Elliott is the senior political advisor to Shore Capital.โ
Shore Capital is a London-based private equity firm. Besides regular and significant donations to the Conservative Party, the Shore Capital Group donated ยฃ50,000 to Vote Leave, then headed byย Elliott.
Founder of Shore Capital and former chief executive Howard Shore is an outspoken Brexiteer and columnist for the Telegraph. He donated nearly ยฃ50,000 to the Conservative Party sinceย 2012.
Last month, in his City AM column titled โEconomic optimism is battling the Project Fear no-deal panicโ, Elliott listed โproject fear storiesโ about what would happen in the case of a no-deal Brexit โ making the case that the economy was showing positive signs despite the Remainersโย threats.
โWith the good economic news to counter the more extreme scare scenarios, the threat of a no-deal Brexit is โ so far โ having as much impact as the first iteration of Project Fear in 2016,โ heย wrote.
City AM did not respond to DeSmog UKโs request for comment on how the paper discloses affiliations to lobbying and political groups in time forย publication.
Allister Heath, editor of the Sunday Telegraph and former City AM editor, helped Elliott co-found the TaxPayersโ Alliance back in 2004 along with his sister Florence Heath, who subsequently married Elliott.
In his latest column for the Telegraph, Heath defended his views for a low-tax society, attacking Theresa Mayโs โridiculous Chequersโ planโ and accusing the government of handling a โkamikaze Brexit strategyโ by endorsing a softย Brexit.
Economists for Freeย Trade
The Economists for Free Trade (EFT) is a campaign group pushing for a โno-dealโ Brexit while arguing that the adoption of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules would be โthe very bestโ option for the UK.
The group claims to be a coalition of independent economists despite having strong ties to Brexiteer Conservative MPs, right-leaning mainstream media and some well-known climate science deniers.
The group publishes reports on a range of topics related to Brexit with the aim to demonstrate the path from โproject fear to projectย prosperityโ.
An EFT advisor and climate science denier Matt Ridley quoted figures from another EFT member, Michael Burrage, in his Times column titled โWeโve nothing to fear from a world-trade Brexitโ ย to support his argument that a no-deal Brexit may benefit the UK. Yet, Ridley did not declare his own affiliation to theย group.
Ridley is also an advisor to the UKโs climate science denying group the GWPF but does not disclose his affiliation to the organisationย in hisย columns.
Graeme Leach, CEO and chief economist at Macronomics and a member of EFT, writes a weekly column for City AM.
In his City AM column dated 16 August, Leach compared Theresa Mayโs Chequersโ plan to the Monty Pythonโs ย โDead Parrotโ sketch. โWhichever way you look at it the Chequers agreement is dead,โ heย wrote.
โWe are staring at a no-deal Brexit in the faceโ he said, quoting the EFT research which claimed that for the UK to thrive after Brexit, the country had to be outside both the single market and the customs union. Unlike the others, Leach disclosed his membership to the group in the column.ย ย
Sunday Telegraphs columnist Liam Halligan is also a member of the EFT.
In a column in July this year titled โNo deal is looking increasingly likely and thatโs just fineโ, Halligan argues that โmany MPs fear โno dealโโ because of โunchallenged scare tactics of โprofessional Remainersโโ. Nowhere in the piece did Halligan disclose his membership to the EFT.ย ย
His column echoes some of the arguments used by his colleague and the convener of the EFT, Edgar Miller, who wrote a column for the Telegraph arguing โDonโt worry about the Brexit negotiations, no deal is better than what we have now with the EUโ.
The column sets out some of the work the EFT have done to show the UK would be better off trading under WTO rules than remaining in the EU.
Roger Bootle, founder of the Capital Economics and also a member of the EFT, is another Telegraph columnist described by the paper as โone of the Cityโs leading economistsโ. Bootleโs short biography on the Telegraphโs website does not disclose his affiliation with the pro-Brexitย group.
The Telegraph did not respond to DeSmog UKโs request for commentย in time forย publication.
According to Electoral Commission data, Bootle donated ยฃ200,000 to Vote Leave during the referendumย campaign.
Slamming what he described as Theresa Mayโs โBrexit disasterโ and advocating a full break-up from the EU, Bootle wrote in a column called โWhat business leaders know about Brexit โฆ and what they donโtโ in which he claimed the business community had warned against a hard-Brexit because โbusiness people areย short-mindedโ.
Partisan media and Guido Fawkesโ Leaveย recruits
The Tufton Street network boasts a growing presence in the new mediaย sphere.
Tim Montgomerie, former columnist at The Times, co-founder of Conservative Home and editor of UnHerd is a keyย example.
In an 2010 interview with the New Statesman, Montgomerie described himself as a climate change โscepticโ, adding: โIโm sceptical about policy. We should do green things, but only when they have other benefits. [โฆ] Iโm much more worried about Iran than about globalย warming.โ
Montgomerie, a hardline Brexiteer, is an advisor to the EFTย and has been close toย Elliott and the Taxpayersโ Alliance since the groupโs launch inย 2009.
That year, in a Conservative Home post, Montgomerie described the Taxpayersโ Alliance as being part of a growing โconservative movementโ and wrote that he had given a joint presentation with its co-founder Elliott at a conference at the Manning Centre inย Ottawa.
The political blog Guido Fawkes has also recently strengthened its ties to the Tufton Street network.
Hugh Bennett, former deputy editor at Brexit Central and correspondence officer at Vote Leave, and Tom Harwood who led the student Leave campaignย joined Guido Fawkes as news editor and reporter.
Both seem to get on well with Darren Grimes, former deputy editor at Brexit Central and recently appointed digital manager at the IEA. On separate occasions, Grimes tweeted pictures of friendly encounters with Bennett and Harwood.
Grimes โ founder of BeLeave, the grassroots campaign used to channel money to Vote Leave โ was fined ยฃ20,000 and reported to the police after the Electoral Commission found evidence of the Vote Leave campaign breaching electoral spending rules.ย ย
Another regular contributor to both City AM and the Telegraph is Ryanย Bourne.
Bourne is the chair for the public understanding of economics at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank based in Washington DC and co-founded by the fossil fuel magnate Charles Koch who has played a significant role in funding climate science denial in the US.
The Cato Institute has long spread disinformation about climateย change.
Through these links, the voices of a select network of pro-Brexit lobbyists and campaigners have become a regular fixture of the UKโs mainstream pressย โย oftenย without columnists declaring theirย interests.
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