
MPs back plans for ministers to ease pub last orders without Parliament debate
But the Licensing Hours Extensions Bill, which has cleared the Commons at third reading, would let ministers effectively bypass a parliamentary debate.
MPs could still 'pray against' the Government's decision-making, if they would like a debate or vote.
Matt Turmaine said the move would allow ministers to process orders 'without using up valuable parliamentary time'.
The Watford MP, speaking in place of Labour MP for Wrexham Andrew Ranger who tabled the Bill, said the move was 'about cutting red tape, red tape that produces unnecessary and time-consuming bureaucracy for the hospitality industry and local authorities for the simple matter of wanting to be able to open earlier or stay open later when occasions of special importance emerge, as they surely do'.
Mr Turmaine, a Labour MP, said the Bill would make a 'very simple alteration' to the Licensing Act 2003.
'It is also extremely welcome that there has been broad support and consensus across the House regarding this,' he added.
'Whether that says something about parliamentarians and pints, I could not possibly say.'
Mr Turmaine said the existing process, known as the affirmative procedure, 'is problematic when an order needs to be made at short notice'.
The Home Office successfully used this procedure last month, when MPs agreed without opposition to let pubs and bars temporarily sell alcohol until 1am, if England or Wales – or both – reach the Uefa Women's Euros semi-finals or finals.
Both teams begin their Championship campaign on Saturday when the Lionesses face France and Wales will play the Netherlands.
The semi-finals take place on July 22 and 23, with the final on July 27.
Mr Turmaine had earlier told MPs: 'The negative procedure has the benefit of allowing licensing extensions to be made in the rare event that they are needed during parliamentary recess or at short notice.'
He said: 'Special occasions such as World Cups, European Championships and royal weddings are times that live long in the memory of us all, even if we are enjoying the hospitality so enabled.
'And it is only right that our pubs and hospitality venues are given the opportunity to be a part of that experience when they do occur.'
Home Office minister Seema Malhotra described a 'high degree of consensus' across the House, and added: 'I'm pleased to say that the Government fully supports it.'
Mr Ranger's Bill was one of five to clear the Commons on Friday, alongside the Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill which would pave the way for a ban on imports of puppies and kittens under six months old, dogs and cats which are more than 42 days pregnant, and dogs and cats which have been mutilated.
The Dogs (Protection of Livestock) (Amendment) Bill would add llamas and alpacas to the list of farm animals which, if attacked by a dog in England and Wales, would see pet owners fined. It would also extend dog attack protections beyond agricultural land to roads and paths, where animals might be herded.
Voters in Scotland and Wales edged closer to being able to apply for a proxy or postal vote online for devolved elections, bringing them in line with English electors, after MPs agreed to back the Absent Voting (Elections in Scotland and Wales) Bill.
The Space Industry (Indemnities) Bill also cleared the Commons, which would see liability caps in the licences granted by the Civil Aviation Authority for spaceflight.
They each face scrutiny in the Lords on later dates.
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The Herald Scotland
40 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Family hubs to be rolled out across every council in England
The Education Secretary has said that the scheme will 'give a lifeline' to families. Family hubs were originally rolled out across 75 local authorities at the start of 2024 by the then-Conservative government. Officials say that the hubs will be rolled out in every local authority by April 2026, and there will be expanded so there are up to 1,000 of them by the end of 2028. Among the services available at the locations will be birth registration, debt advice, midwifery services and support for parents who are separating or have separated. Officials hope that the spaces will also provide families access to other services and social care. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson praised the scheme (Ben Whitley/PA) Bridget Phillipson said: 'It's the driving mission of this government to break the link between a child's background and what they go on to achieve – our new Best Start family hubs will put the first building blocks of better life chances in place for more children. 'I saw firsthand how initiatives like Sure Start helped level the playing field in my own community, transforming the lives of children by putting in place family support in the earliest years of life, and as part of our plan for change, we're building on its legacy for the next generation of children. 'Making sure hard-working parents are able to benefit from more early help is a promise made, and promise kept – delivering a lifeline of consistent support across the nation, ensuring health, social care and education work in unison to ensure all children get the very best start in life.' The Conservatives have said that the announcement 'brings little clarity on what's genuinely new and what simply rebrands existing services'. Shadow education secretary Laura Trott (Stefan Rousseau/PA) Shadow education secretary Laura Trott said: 'That lack of clarity is part of a wider pattern. 'This is a Government defined by broken promises and endless U-turns.' Charity Save The Children has said it is 'pleased' to see the Government 'making it easier for families to get the help they need'. Dan Paskins, executive director of Policy, Advocacy and Campaigns at Save The Children UK, said: 'Focusing on family services for the under-fives will be vital in securing better outcomes for children, and we welcome the Best Start In Life announcement. 'We know from our work in local communities that bringing together parenting, healthcare and education support services in one place is an approach which works, so we are pleased to see the UK Government making it easier for families to get the help they need. 'With ministers now demonstrating an increasingly ambitious plan for children in the UK, we hope this drive for change continues when the child poverty strategy is released in autumn. 'This must include scrapping the two-child limit to Universal Credit, which is the only meaningful way to reduce the UK's record child poverty rate.' The head of the NAHT union welcomed the move. General secretary Paul Whiteman said: 'This is a positive step forward towards ensuring all children get the best start – and we are pleased to see tangible investment following this week's announcement of new targets for school readiness.'


Times
44 minutes ago
- Times
Met chief calls for regional mega-forces in radical police overhaul
The country's most senior police officer has called for the number of forces in England and Wales to be slashed by two thirds and urged the government to conduct the most radical overhaul of crime fighting in 60 years. Sir Mark Rowley, the Metropolitan Police commissioner, said the model of 43 county-based forces has not 'been fit for purpose for at least two decades' and suggested they should be replaced by 12 to 15 regional mega-forces. Writing for The Sunday Times, Rowley said these 'bigger and fully capable' forces would be able to make better use of modern technology and the 'limited funding available'. There would also be less replication of back office services, such as human resources departments. • Sir Mark Rowley: police exist to protect the public, we are not social workers The regional forces would be supported by a new national policing body responsible for 'key capabilities', such as police helicopters and intelligence. Rowley said that chief constables were now 'united' on the urgent need for reform, adding that the home secretary Yvette Cooper shared a 'commitment to reform'. It is Rowley's first major intervention since Rachel Reeves's spending review last month, the run up to which was dominated by a public row between the chancellor and police and security chiefs over cuts to law enforcement. While Reeves announced a 2.3 per cent annual increase in funding, chief constables argued it would not plug the gaps, which have been compounded by a £300 million additional cost resulting from the government's early release scheme for prisoners. Rowley describes the cash settlement as 'disappointing' and argues that while the Met was making progress tackling a number of offences, its budget would need to 'increase by 50 per cent to match policing spend per capita in New York or Sydney'. He also warned that Sir Keir Starmer's key crime targets may not be met unless the government removes 'the distractions and bureaucracy that diverts' the police 'away from crime fighting'. Starmer has pledged an additional 13,000 police officers, as well as halving knife offences and violence against women and girls in a decade. In a direct appeal to ministers, the commissioner said: 'Recruits join the police to protect the public — but too often officers effectively take on the role of social workers. Police chiefs are trying to correct this, but we need the government and public sector to help us.' He highlighted the impact on the Met and other forces of children and adolescents regularly going missing from care homes, which he said drew 'heavily on police time'. Last year alone, there were 80,000 reported incidents nationally of missing vulnerable children, who are often 'exploited by gangs and lured into crime', he said. He continued: 'Not only does this absorb thousands of officer hours, it cannot be right — financially or morally — that often the only place for vulnerable children to be held in moments of crisis is a police building.' The problem has previously been highlighted by Festus Akinbusoye, the former police and crime commissioner for Bedfordshire. He said in 2023 that force control rooms were receiving a 'deluge' of so-called 'concern for welfare' referrals from social workers every Friday evening about children who have gone missing from local authority care. Akinbusoye, who had volunteered as a special constable prior to his election as a PCC, recalled how social services were regularly sending their caseloads of missing children to the police at the start of the weekend, with officers having 'no choice but to go and find them'. Rowley has also railed against the amount of time his officers spend responding to emergency call-outs involving mental health incidents. In June 2023, he said they would no longer do so unless there was an immediate threat to life. Ahead of the new football season, he also said it was 'particularly astounding that the Met is still being asked to pick up 80 per cent of the £24 million annual cost of policing football matches in London, including the Premier League's'. There are seven Premier League clubs in the capital, with Rowley citing the fact some could 'splurge over £100 million on a single player and pay them a weekly wage equivalent to more than 600 constables'. Clubs only pay towards the cost of officers who enter their grounds. But the Met has to fund hundreds of other police who patrol the streets and transport hubs on match days, diverting them from other frontline duties. His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary suggested 20 years ago that the number of forces in England and Wales should be drastically streamlined. The proposal failed to get off the ground due, in part, to resistance from local police chiefs. Reform would probably mean some of the smaller rural forces, such as Warwickshire, being subsumed by the largest force in a region, such as West Midlands police. Some smaller constabularies already share resources. For example, Cambridgeshire, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire have a tri-force arrangement for major incidents, armed policing and forensics.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
The benefits Bill debacle offered a valuable lesson for politicians
SIR – Following the shambolic passage of Labour's welfare Bill on Tuesday (report, July 2), perhaps politicians will now realise that, once the benefit tap is turned on, it becomes virtually impossible to turn it off. Terence Gabriel Herne Bay, Kent SIR – The inevitable consequence of Sir Keir Starmer's latest U-turn on benefits is that the 'working people' he is allegedly anxious to represent are going to have to pay for it. David Nunn West Malling, Kent SIR – According to figures from the Office for National Statistics, the Government borrows about £285,000 (and rising) every single minute, £200,000 of which (also rising) is immediately used to pay interest on the nation's debt. The remainder doesn't even account for the cost of disability benefit (about £105,000 a minute). Advice to those in financial trouble would be categorical: maxing out the credit card and borrowing to pay interest has no future, and has to stop. Set against this, the emotional – some might say hysterical – contributions from several MPs to Tuesday's welfare debate in the House of Commons could be viewed as reckless. If the Prime Minister, who claims he finds it easy to be ruthless, is incapable of convincing his MPs to show financial restraint, he is failing this great nation – and I fear we all face a very dark future as a consequence. Robert Jowitt Dulverton, Somerset SIR – We have been told countless times of the £22 billion 'black hole' inherited by the Labour Government after 14 years of Conservative rule. It is worth noting that, in that time, the Tories had to find funds to restore the economy after the last Labour government departed, as well as meet the costs arising from the Covid pandemic and the Ukraine war. Now you report (June 29) that the Government's many U-turns have added to a £40 billion 'black hole', which the Chancellor needs to fill at the next Budget . This was before the announcement of the latest amendments to the benefits Bill. So, in her first year, Rachel Reeves has managed to turn a 'black hole' of £22 billion into one of more than £40 billion. One wonders how soon this Labour Government, like its predecessor, will have to admit that there's no money left. In the meantime, how much more damage will be inflicted upon the British economy? Adam Massingham Ashford, Kent Connolly's conviction SIR – Apart from the severity of the sentence, which our judicial establishment is yet to justify, to my mind there are two problems with Lucy Connolly's 'incitement' conviction ('Beware calls to change British justice in the wake of the Lucy Connolly case', Letters, June 29). The first is that Mrs Connolly, upon reflection, deleted the offending tweet. This seems to confirm that there was no intention to incite. Unless the deletion was merely a tactic, I believe that most jurors would struggle to find the defendant guilty. Secondly, one might expect a minimal requirement for a conviction to be that the Crown Prosecution Service should provide evidence that someone was incited. Has anyone convicted of crime in the post-Southport chaos cited Mrs Connolly's contribution as a motivator? Without such evidence, Mrs Connolly seems to stand accused of a fantasy crime, and is now suffering the consequences of a judgment that is at odds with most people's understanding of British justice. The criminal hurdle of 'beyond reasonable doubt' has not even been approached, let alone overcome, in my opinion. Jeremy Hosking Bantry, Co Cork, Ireland VAT on school fees SIR – The decision to add VAT to independent school fees was originally framed as a targeted measure to support state education, with the revenue ringfenced for that purpose. More recently, however, the Prime Minister has described this policy as a 'tough decision' that underpins the largest investment in affordable housing in a generation. Given that the projected income from VAT on school fees was £1.5 billion, it is surprising to hear it linked to a £39 billion housing programme, as well as to the recruitment of 6,500 new teachers and the expansion of free school meals. The scale of return being attributed to this policy appears ambitious. Meanwhile, just six months into implementation, estimates of the number of pupils leaving the independent sector have risen from 3,000 to more than 11,000. That means thousands of families are no longer paying VAT, and are instead entering a state system already under strain. The resulting disruption in the independent sector is no longer hypothetical. Several schools have closed, and prominent institutions across the UK are being taken over by private investors. Is this the intended consequence of the policy? If difficult decisions must be taken, surely it is reasonable to ask whether they are producing meaningful outcomes. In this case, many in the education sector are wondering if the social and financial cost of disruption is proportionate to the return. Andrew J McGarva Rector, Morrison's Academy Crieff, Perthshire SIR – Regarding Rhidian Llewellyn's letter (July 1), perhaps the money used to fund cricket bursaries for non-academic pupils to attend public schools could be better spent on encouraging pupils at state schools to play cricket. Susan A Smith Ashburnham, East Sussex Heatwave hysterics SIR – I totally agree with Philip Johntson ('Welfarism has made Britain so soft we can't even handle a heatwave', Comment, July 2). When I was five or six, I was often sent away to my grandparents for the summer, either in London or Bournemouth. I recall running around in the heat, which I understood from my grandparents was 'nearly 100 degrees' (Fahrenheit, of course). There was no need for expensive bottled water, as most parks had at least one drinking fountain. These have sadly been done away with. It's time the Met Office stopped issuing panic-stricken warnings. Mike Salter Aberdeen SIR – The BBC weather forecast, once the most gentle adjunct to the news, has over the past 10 years become an intense drama, where death and destruction are predicted on an almost daily basis. Those who have worked in the hotter parts of the world, or travelled to countries nearer the equator, must be bemused by the dire warnings given out when temperatures are due to rise to the low thirties. Perhaps the Government should introduce a summer cooling allowance for the frail and elderly, as air-conditioning is very expensive to install and run. Brian Farmer Carmarthen SIR – I was astounded to read of the 'heat strike' motion put forward by members of the British Medical Association (BMA), demanding that NHS staff should not be forced to work in conditions above a certain temperature (report, June 20). Unfortunately, patients do not stop being ill in hot weather. As a veteran of the Royal Army Medical Corps, I think of our motto, In Arduis Fidelis (faithful in adversity). Perhaps those in the medical profession who want to desert their patients should ponder these words, and demonstrate a little more commitment and resilience for their patients. Mike Gillingham Chelmsford, Essex Power of tablecloths SIR – The decline in restaurant standards (Letters, June 29) started when tablecloths were removed. Dining at a bare table smacks of the canteen or public bar, and leads to quick eating. This may be convenient, but there are times when only the grace of a properly set table, laid with cloth, real flowers, large napkins, sparkling glasses and several pieces of cutlery, including a dessert fork, will do. Trying to find a restaurant that provides such an arrangement can take considerable effort. A recent attempt was unsuccessful, so we settled for lunch at a five-star hotel to celebrate a family event – with a bare, incompletely set table. It did not enhance our dining experience, and we will not return. Heather Erridge Weston-super-Mare, Somerset SIR – During a visit to Simpson's in the Strand many years ago, one of my lunch guests asked for steak tartare (Letters, June 29), but added, 'Please can I have it well done?' The seasoned waiter, oozing experience and diplomacy, and without a moment's pause, highly recommended another dish from the bill of fare, which was gratefully accepted. Tim Oldfield Wye, Kent Dubious claims about gender in Shakespeare SIR – Ruth Fernando's assertion that Macbeth is a gender-fluid play (report, June 29) made me laugh out loud. The famous lines uttered in desperation by Lady Macbeth – 'unsex me here,/And fill me, from the crown to the toe, top-full/Of direst cruelty' – surely relies upon the fact that she is a woman alone and in crisis, in a world of strong, violent and unpredictable men. David Hunter St Columb Minor, Cornwall SIR – If the Royal Shakespeare Company wants to know how to interest today's youngsters in the Bard's work (Comment, June 17), it has only to consult Mrs Burrows, who taught English Literature to girls in Kent in the 1970s. Minute dissection of the language revealed plenty of insults and sexual references that ensured total attention and aided comprehension. Gillian Courage Cheltenham, Gloucestershire British philanthropy SIR – With the Giving and Impact Summit returning to the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday, we write to highlight the vital role of philanthropy in British society, and the importance of unlocking the full potential of high-net-worth giving. The UK is a generous nation. Last year, the public donated over £15 billion to charity, maintaining our position as the fourth most generous country internationally. Successful entrepreneurs and wealth creators can leverage their full range of assets – financial resources, strategic skills, time and leadership experience – to tackle society's most urgent problems. With the greatest wealth transfer in history underway, as fortunes pass to younger generations, we have a unique opportunity to embed a culture of significant giving among emerging philanthropists. The Government should make more use of matched funding schemes, and simplify the gift aid process. The wealth management sector should better equip advisers to discuss philanthropy with clients, and we should explore other innovative solutions, such as introducing optional donations from lottery winners. Philanthropy built Britain's great universities, museums and cultural institutions. As we face unprecedented global challenges, we need today's successful wealth creators and wealth holders to step forward with the same boldness and vision. The opportunity for change has never been greater. Dame Vivien Duffield Chair, Clore Duffield Foundation Gary Lubner Founder, This Day Charitable Foundation John Studzinski Founder and Chair, Genesis Foundation Lord Verjee (Lib Dem) Founder, The Rumi Foundation Lord Browne of Madingley (Crossbench) Founder, John Browne Charitable Trust Baroness Rebuck (Lab) Chair, Somerset House Lord Stevens of Birmingham (Crossbench) Chair, Cancer Research UK Sir Peter Bazalgette Council Chair, Royal College of Art Professor Geeta Nargund Co-founder and Director, Social Impact Enterprises Ltd Vice Chair, British Red Cross Ajaz Ahmed Founder, and Trustee, Mission 44 and Virgin Unite Alex Chesterman Amar Shah Andrew Dixon Founder of ARC InterCapital, Woodhaven Trust and Fairer Share Andrew Harrison Chair of Trustees, Mental Health Innovations Andrew Law Chair and CEO, Caxton Associates Founding Trustee, Law Family Charitable Foundation and Law Family Educational Trust Andy Wates Chair, Wates Family Enterprise Trust Batia Ofer Chair, Royal Academy of Arts Trust Co-Founder, Idan and Batia Ofer Family Foundation Founder and Chair, Art of Wishes Bill Holroyd Founder, OnSide YouthZones Bob Wigley Chair, UK Finance Brent Hoberman Chair and Co-Founder, Founders Forum Group, Founders Factory and firstminute capital Bruce Carnegie-Brown Carol Shanahan Chair, Port Vale Football Club Trustee, The Port Vale Foundation Trust and EFL in the Community Founder, The Hubb Foundation Charles Gurassa Chair, Oxfam GB Chair, Migration Museum Chris Oglesby CEO, Bruntwood Trustee, Oglesby Charitable Trust Jane Oglesby Chair, Oglesby Charitable Trust Dame Elizabeth Corley Chair Emerita, Impact Investing Institute Chair, Schroders plc Dame Marit Mohn Co-Founder, The Mohn Westlake Foundation Dame Martina Milburn DMC Philanthropy Daniel Levy Co-Chair, The Grove Hotel President, Jewish Volunteering Network Chair, Immanuel College David Dangoor Chair, The Exilarch's Foundation and Dangoor Education David Forbes-Nixon Chair and Founder, DFN Foundation David Gregson Chair and Co-Founder, #BeeWell Chair, Gregson Family Foundation David Pearl Chair and Chief Executive, Pearl & Coutts Founder and Chair, David Pearlman Charitable Foundation Dinesh Dhamija Chair, Copper Beech Group Founder, Dr Nik Kotecha Founder, Morningside Pharmaceuticals Ltd Founder and Chair, Randalsun Capital Ltd and The Randal Charitable Foundation Dr Robert D Kilgour Dr Vijay C Patel CEO, Waymade plc Chair, Waymade Capital Dr Vikas Shah Duke of Richmond and Gordon Chair, The Goodwood Estate Company Ltd Trustee, Goodwood Education Trust, Lennox Trust and Goodwood Art Foundation Earl Cadogan Cadogan Charitable Trust Edmund Lazarus Founder and Managing Partner, EMK Capital Emma Kane Deputy Chair, Elton John AIDS Foundation Gavin Patterson Chair, Alzheimer's Research UK Graham Baker Founder, Butchers Pet Care Graham Edwards Chair, Edwards Family Foundation Trustee, The Pennies Foundation Grant Gordon Chair, Ethos Foundation Harry Hyman Founder, International Opera Awards Ian Marcus Chair, Shurgard Self Storage Deputy Chair, Saracens Multi Academy Trust Ian Rosenblatt Founder, Rosenblatt Law James Lambert Founder investor and Deputy Chair, The Bicester Collection Trustee, The National Gallery James Reed Chair and CEO, Reed Chair, Big Give Trustee, The Reed Foundation Jamie Ritblat Founder and Executive Chairman, Delancey Trustee, Heritage of London Trust Trustee, The Ritblat Family Foundation Trustee, Blenheim Palace Joanna Barnett Chair, Fields in Trust Joe Garner Chair, Tennis First John Booth Chair, The National Gallery Vice- President, The King's Trust John Caudwell Founder, Caudwell Children and Caudwell Youth John Hartz Co-Founder, Inflexion Private Equity Trustee, Inflexion Foundation Founder, Hartz Family Foundation Jonathan Straight Chair, WasteAid Judy Dewinter Chair, Royal Free Charity President, Myeloma UK Justin Byam Shaw Founder, The Felix Project Keith Black CEO and Chair, Regatta Chair, Regatta Foundation Trustee, Family Foundation Chair, Jewish Leadership Council Keith Breslauer Vice Patron, The Royal Marines Charity Chair, PTI, formerly The Prince's Teaching Institute Koolesh Shah Founder, London Town Group Lady Jill Shaw Ruddock Founder and Chair, The Second Half Foundation Laurence Geller Chair, Loveday & Co Chancellor, University of West London Founder, Geller Commission on Dementia Care Laurence Kirschel Founder, Outernet London; Founder, Adot charity Leo Noé Founding Trustee, Rachel Charitable Trust Chair, Centre for Social Justice Foundation Trustee, Project Seed Lord Gadhia (Non-affiliated) Chair, British Asian Trust Lord Lupton (Non-affiliated) Chair, The Ashmolean Museum Founder Chair, The Lovington Foundation Lord Kestenbaum (Lab) Chancellor, University of Plymouth Trustee, Teach First Chair, Chief Rabbinate Charitable Trust Lord Davies of Abersoch (Non-affiliated) Chair, Letter One Chair, Glyndebourne Opera House Lord Levy (Lab) Life President, Jewish Care, Sense, Barnet and Southgate College, JFS School and JLGB Lord Wei (Con) Co-founder and Director, The Shaftesbury Partnership Co-founder, Teach First Lord Fink (Con) Lord Stuart Marks Malik Karim Founder and CEO, Fenchurch Advisory Partners Mark Adlestone Chair, Beaverbrooks Charitable Trust Martin Port Matthew Westerman Chair, Clocktower Foundation Meheen Rangoonwala Global Programme Manager, Rangoonwala Foundation Michael Samuel Chair, Anna Freud Chair, Full Fact Chair, Somerset Community Foundation Chair, Family Foundations Michelle Pinggera Deputy Chair, The King's Trust International Mike Still Mike Welch Founder, Founder, The Welch Trust Trustee, King's Trust USA Neil Blair Founder and Chair, The Jigsaw Network Nick Wheeler Founder and Chair, Charles Tyrwhitt Shirt Nicola Loftus Senior Vice President, Jewish Care Oliver Gregson CEO, Wealth Management, Schroders plc Oliver Pawle Chair, Korn Ferry Board Paul Drechsler Trustee, The Felix Project Peter Samuelson Chair, First Star Scholars UK Philip Marsden Chair, MCC Foundation Chair, Marsden Family Trust Trustee, Royal Academy Ric Lewis Founder and Chair, The Black Heart Foundation Richard Huntingford Vice-President, The King's Trust Richard Oldfield Chair, The Christopher and Henry Oldfield Trust Richard Reed Partner, JamJar Richard Ross Chair, Rosetrees Rick Sopher Roland Rudd Chair, Tate Chair, Millfield School Trustee, Speakers for Schools Ambassador, Alzheimer's Society Trustee, Royal Hospital Chelsea Shabir Randeree Randeree Charitable Foundation Chair, King's Trust International Shahzad Malik General Partner, Advent Life Sciences Chair, MQ Shalni Arora Savannah Wisdom Sherry Coutu Chair, Founders4Schools Shobi Khan CEO, Canary Whary Group Trustee, British Library Simon Collins Chair, Global Leadership Board, University of Manchester Simon Turner Co-Founder, Inflexion Private Equity Trustee, Inflexion Foundation Chair, The Roundhouse Sir Damon Buffini Chair, National Theatre and Royal Anniversary Trust Co-Founder, Buffini Chao Foundation Sir Douglas Flint Chair, The Royal Marsden Cancer Charity Sir Jeremy Isaacs Chair, The J Isaacs Charitable Trust Honorary Life Chair, Noah's Ark Children's Hospice Sir John and Lady Sorrell Co-Founders and Trustees, The Sorrell Foundation and The National Saturday Club Sir Keith Mills Patron, Sported Sir Kenneth Olisa Founder and Chair, Aleto Foundation Chair, BusinessLDN Sir Lloyd Dorfman Chair, Royal Opera House Deputy Chair, Community Security Trust Sir Martin Sorrell Executive Chair, Founder, S4 Capital Founder, WPP Chair, JMCMRJ Sorrell Foundation Sir Mick Davis Sir Nicholas Coleridge Chair, Historic Royal Palaces Sir Paul Marshall Chair and CIO, Marshall Wace Founder, the Marshall Institute for Philanthropy and Social Entrepreneurship Sir Ron Kalifa Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou Founder and President, Stelios Philanthropic Foundation Sir Victor Blank Sonal Sachdev Patel CEO, GMSP Foundation Philanthropist in Residence, LSE Stephen Brenninkmeijer Founder, Willows Investments Stephen Grabiner Founder and Chair, The Blue Thread Foundation Steve Morgan Founder and Chair of The Steve Morgan Foundation Steve Rigby Chair, The Rigby Foundation Steven Kaye Director, The Aimwell Charitable Trust Steven Lewis Founder, Lewis and Partners President, Jewish Care Stuart Gulliver Chair, Maggie's Cancer Charity Stuart Roden Founder and Chair, Roden Family Foundation Co-Founder and Chair, Unlocking Potential Chair, the Design Museum Sunita Arora Founder, Arora Charitable Foundation Surinder Arora Founder and Chair, The Arora Group Tania Slowe and Paddy Walker Chair, J Leon Philanthropy Council Hon Charles Wigoder Founder and Chair, The Wigoder Family Foundation William Sieghart Chair, Henry Smith Foundation Yan Huo Founder, Huo Family Foundation