I thought I’d left political geekiness behind but that neglected facet of my character is being richly indulged by the farce that is the ongoing collapse of the Atlantic Bridge – a helpless Liam Fox perched atop it. It was always obvious that the Bridge wasn’t just a talking shop for hawks and a social club for the elites, it was an ego-trip for its founder. The details of his little enterprise are amusing…
The crisis facing the defence secretary, Liam Fox, over his links to his self-styled adviser and friend, Adam Werritty, has deepened after it emerged that Werritty ran a controversial charity from inside Fox’s office in the houses of parliament.
The Guardian has established that Werritty used Fox’s room 341 in the MPs’ block at Portcullis House as the official headquarters of a rightwing charity, the Atlantic Bridge, which works in conjunction with a major US business lobby group. The office was provided to Fox at taxpayers’ expense while he was in opposition until last year.
Was Fox never, y’know – working in it? Hrm – if he wasn’t it may not be something to lament.
It also emerged that between 2007 and 2010, Werritty earned more than £90,000 as chief executive of the Atlantic Bridge, and that the most senior civil servant in the Ministry of Defence had warned Fox about his connections to Werritty.
£90,000? Goodness, well, I’ve no complaints if Fox wants to squander the money of his donors – arch-Tory Michael Hintze, BICOM deputy Michael Lewis and the lobbyists at the American Legislative Exchange Council – but what was that generous salary for? Besides some bits and bobs of interventionist rhetoric they bunged onto their website they never published anything. Their “work” consisted of the odd speech and cocktail party. Werrity has been a glorified event planner and an idle one at that.
One way he’s earned his wage is posing as an adviser to Liam Fox. This is what begun this week’s controversy – because the man was never on the public payroll and never had his background checked. Despite this, he accompanied Fox on official visits and brokered important meetings. He’s been the fantastic one’s loyal companion for some time. In this report from the 2009 Herzliya Conference – where Fox spoke on a panel that asked “Can European-Israeli Relations be Decoupled from the Palestinian Issue?” – he’s grandly described as an “Advisor, Office of Shadow Defense Secretary”.
Me? I don’t really care. I’m far more troubled by Fox’s open relationship with powermongers and plutocrats than his secretive one with an obscurity. Still, in a world enthusiastic about protocol I’m sure these sloppy dealings will be more harmful to his career. In truth, I feel just a little sorry for the Minister. (Cruel, if hilarious, picture notwithstanding. From the Daily Mash.) As powerful as he is, he’d clearly hoped to be so much more. Through the Bridge he’d managed to surround himself with veritable sultans of statecraft – Rove, Ashcroft, Kissinger – and he’s ended up as just another dubious and derided little politician. C’est la vie. Or something.