Alex Deane
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Alex Deane is a senior managing director at the London office of public relations (PR) firm FTI Consulting, which has a long history of working with the tobacco industry.1
Before joining FTI Consulting, Deane worked for PR firms Weber Shandwick and Bell Pottinger, which both represented tobacco companies. 2
Deane was an elected Common Councilman in the City of London from 2011 to 2017.3
Affiliations
British Conservative Party
Deane has been an active member of the British Conservative Party since 1995.
In 2004-2005 he was Chief of Staff to Tim Collins and David Cameron during their respective periods as Shadow Secretaries of State for Education. Up to July 2016, he regularly wrote for the ConservativeHome website.4
Deane has also previously been a member of the management board of the Young Britons Foundation, the Conservative Party’s official youth wing.56
In 2007 Deane was asked to assist the election campaign of Australian Liberal Party leader and Prime Minister, John Howard, who sought re-election.7
Libertarian Groups
Additional affiliations put Deane in a network of libertarians and pro-smoking groups.
Deane was a founding director of Big Brother Watch, a right-of-centre libertarian pressure group opposing intrusions into civil liberties, and promoter of the right to smoke in public areas.
Deane also is a member of the council of the Freedom Association8, which has links to Forest, and is an adviser to the Liberty League, a network for young libertarians.9
Opposing Sugar Tax
Since August 2015, Deane served on the executive board of People Against Sugar Tax (PAST), a self-styled grassroots campaign against the UK soft drinks industry levy (SDIL).10 The SDIL, which is set to take effect in April 2018, is a levy on sugar-sweetened beverages, the revenues of which are earmarked for school breakfast clubs and school sports activities to help fight childhood obesity.11
Between 2015 and 2016, Deane published two articles in The Telegraph strongly opposing the SDIL.1213 At the centre of Deane’s arguments against the SDIL, and that of PAST, is the assertion that the SDIL is a paternalistic ‘nanny state’ intervention which will fail to reduce obesity, and disproportionately affects the poor.14
PAST claims not to accept industry funding, instead financing its campaigns through donations, membership fees, and the selling of branded merchandise.15
Former board members include pro-tobacco libertarian blogger Christopher Snowdon.16
TobaccoTactics Resources
- Lobby Groups
- PR Companies
- Libertarians
- Third Party Techniques
- FTI Consulting
- Bell Pottinger
- Lynton Crosby
- The Freedom Association