Decision

Advice Letter: Lord Cameron, Speaker, Washington Speakers Bureau

Updated 10 December 2024

1. BUSINESS APPOINTMENT APPLICATION: The Rt Hon The Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton, former Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs and previously Prime Minister. Paid appointment with Washington Speakers Bureau. 

You approached the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments (the Committee) under the government’s Business Appointments Rules for former ministers (the Rules) seeking advice on taking up an appointment as a speaker with Washington Speakers Bureau (WSB). 

The purpose of the Rules is to protect the integrity of the government. The Committee has considered the risks associated with the actions and decisions made during your time in office, alongside the information and influence you may offer WSB. The material information taken into consideration by the Committee is set out in the annex below.

The Committee’s advice is not an endorsement of the appointment - it imposes a number of conditions to mitigate the potential risks to the government associated with the appointment under the Rules.

The Ministerial Code sets out that ministers must abide by the Committee’s advice. It is an applicant’s personal responsibility to manage the propriety of any appointment. Former ministers of the Crown, and Members of Parliament, are expected to uphold the highest standards of propriety and act in accordance with the 7 Principles of Public Life.

2. The Committee’s consideration of the risks presented

The Committee[footnote 1] noted you did not meet with nor have any official dealings with WSB in office, and therefore the risk this role could reasonably be seen as a reward for decisions made, or actions taken, in office is low.

3. The Committee’s advice

The Committee does not consider joining a speaking agency to raise any particular concerns under the government’s Business Appointment Rules, provided it is subject to standard conditions which prevent improper use of information and influence.

It is an individual’s responsibility to manage the propriety of the specific pieces of work undertaken. In particular, as the former Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs and previously the Prime Minister, you must be careful not to offer any unfair insight as a result of your access to information and potential influence in government - which the conditions below seek to mitigate.

As a former member of the Cabinet you are subject to a standard three month waiting period. 

Taking into account these factors, in accordance with the government’s Business Appointment Rules, the Committee advises this appointment with Washington Speakers Bureau be subject to the following conditions:

  • a three month waiting period from your last day in office; 

  • you should not draw on (disclose or use for the benefit of yourself or the persons or organisations to which this advice refers) any privileged information available to you from your time in ministerial office;

  • for two years from your last day in ministerial office, you should not become personally involved in lobbying the UK government or its arm’s length bodies on behalf of Washington Speakers Bureau (including parent companies, subsidiaries, partners and clients); nor should you make use, directly or indirectly, of your contacts in the government and/or ministerial office to influence policy, secure business/funding or otherwise unfairly advantage Washington Speakers Bureau (including parent companies, subsidiaries, partners and clients) and; 

  • for two years from your last day in ministerial office, you should not undertake any work with Washington Speakers Bureau (including parent companies, subsidiaries, partners and clients) that involves providing advice on the terms of, or with regard to the subject matter of a bid with, or contract relating directly to the work of, the UK government or its arm’s length bodies.

The advice and the conditions under the government’s Business Appointment Rules relate to your previous role in government only; they are separate from rules administered by other bodies such as the Office of the Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists, the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards and the Registrar of Lords’ Interests.[footnote 2] You are reminded that as a Member of the House of Lords you are prevented from any paid lobbying under the House of Lords Code of Conduct. It is an applicant’s personal responsibility to understand any other rules and regulations they may be subject to in parallel with this Committee’s advice.

By ‘privileged information’ we mean official information to which a minister or Crown servant has had access as a consequence of his or her office or employment and which has not been made publicly available. Applicants are also reminded that they may be subject to other duties of confidentiality, whether under the Official Secrets Act, the Civil Service Code or otherwise.

The Business Appointment Rules explain that the restriction on lobbying means that the former Crown servant/Minister “should not engage in communication with government (Ministers, civil servants, including special advisers, and other relevant officials/public office holders) – wherever it takes place - with a view to influencing a government decision, policy or contract award/grant in relation to their own interests or the interests of the organisation by which they are employed, or to whom they are contracted or with which they hold office.”

You must inform us as soon as you take up employment with this organisation(s), or if it is announced that you will do so. Please also inform us if you propose to extend or otherwise change the nature of your role as, depending on the circumstances, it may be necessary for you to make a fresh application.

Once the appointment has been publicly announced or taken up, we will publish this letter on the Committee’s website, and where appropriate, refer to it in the relevant annual report.

4. Annex - Material information

4.1 The role

You informed the Committee you wish to take up a paid, part-time role as a Speaker with WSB - a speaking agency. You said you would be contracted as a speaker, to speak about the contemporary (global) political environment.

You confirmed this role would not involve contact with government. 

You said that you were represented by WSB from 2016 – 2023, having had this engagement approved by ACOBA previously in 2016. On returning to government service in November 2023, your association with WSB was also declared to the Permanent Secretary at the FCDO and to the Prime Minister’s Independent Adviser on Ministerial Interests, and included on my entry in the Ministerial Register of Interests, Having left government, you wish to resume your role with WSB. 

4.2 Dealings in office

You did not meet with WSB while in office and there is no relationship between WSB and your former department. You also confirmed you did not have any involvement in policy, nor did you make any decisions relevant to WSB while in office. 

4.3 Department Assessment

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) confirmed the details in your application. 

FCDO recommended the standard conditions.

  1. This application for advice was considered by Andrew Cumpsty; Isabel Doverty;Hedley Finn OBE; Sarah de Gay; Dawid Konotey-Ahulu CBE DL; The Rt Hon Lord Eric Pickles; Michael Prescott; and Mike Weir. 

  2. All Peers and Members of Parliament are prevented from paid lobbying under the the House of Commons Code of Conduct and the Code of Conduct for Members of the House of Lords. Advice on your obligations under the Code can be sought from the Parliamentary Commissioners for Standards, in the case of MPs, or the Registrar of Lords’ Interests, in the case of peers.