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Friday, December 21, 2007

Patricia Hewitt cashes in on health post

Patricia Hewitt, the former health secretary who left the government six months ago, has been offered jobs with at least five companies with links to the health sector.

The disclosure has led to renewed calls for more stringent rules to stop politicians from cashing in too quickly on their time in office.

Hewitt, who resigned in June, has been inundated with consultancy jobs since leaving the Department of Health. She is set to be the latest in a series of health ministers and senior officials to move into the private sector.

Lord Warner and Alan Milburn, both former health ministers, have also benefited, moving to healthcare jobs soon after leaving office. Liz Kendall, Hewitt’s former special adviser, is now a healthcare consultant to a number of organisations, including private sector companies.

Hewitt, who was health secretary from May 2005 but stood down when Gordon Brown took over as prime minister, is expected to take up her roles in the new year.

Warner’s jobs, revealed this month, include advisory roles for Xansa, a technology company in Reading, Berkshire, that has a partnership with the Department of Health to provide finance services to National Health Service bodies, and Byotrol, an antimicrobial company that sells products to the NHS.

Warner also has an advisory role with DLA Piper, which advised ministers on the NHS’s £12 billion IT programme. Warner was responsible for this while a health minister.

The move into consultancy will raise fresh questions about whether companies are gaining a strategic advantage by hiring ministers with recent experience of the highest levels of government.

Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrat health spokesman, said: “There is a question about whether they could exploit their continuing links with the government. We need a far greater cordon sanitaire to prevent any suspicions.”

Hewitt confirmed that she had received a number of offers and was likely to decide which ones to take up after Christmas. She said: “I haven’t taken up any appointments and I will only do so after I have had the advice from the Advisory Committee [on Business Appointments].”

This committee vets private sector roles for former ministers to ensure there is no conflict of interest. It often imposes a cooling-off period before such job offers can be taken up.

From:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article3056703.ece

Considering Hewitt's inept performance as a labour government minister, Health Direct is surprised to learn that any company would consider touching her with a ten foot pole.

Health Direct wonders if the companies that are offering Hewitt the chance of gravy are either stupid, given her demonstrable lack of any ability, or hope to gain some advantage from employing a labour politician-I wonder what it could be ?

Ms Hewitt does however confirm a diagnosis of complete cynicism and a sickness in the body politic which will take many years to heal.

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