Nick Seddon

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Nick Seddon (b.1979[1]) is a British political policy adviser. He was appointed to his position by David Cameron in May 2013. Seddon was formerly deputy director of the pro-market think tank Reform and has served as head of communications for Circle. Prior to that he spent three years as a freelance journalist before joining the political think tank Civitas as a research fellow.[2]

It is alleged that he has been rewarded for his role during the passage of the Health and Social Care Bill 2011 where he lobbied key people to defend competition in the NHS with a place in Cameron’s health policy unit, developing policies for the 2015 general election.[3]

When at Reform, he advocated cutting thousands of NHS jobs. In November 2013 Reform said that the NHS could raise £3bn per year by charging for prescriptions, GP appointments and elements of hospital care.[4] His appointment was attacked by the Labour Party on the basis that he had “little belief” in the traditional NHS model because he had called for frontline staff cuts, budget reductions and charges to patients.[5]

He was said by the Health Service Journal to be the ninth most powerful person in the English NHS in December 2013.[6]

He read English at Magdalene College Cambridge[citation needed], and was a member of the Wyverns and Ferretz Drinking Societies[citation needed].

Publications

  • 2000 Figures of Speech: An Anthology of Magdalene Writers with MEJ Hughes and John Mole (Magdalene College, University of Cambridge)
  • 2007 Who Cares? How State Funding and Political Activism Change Charity (Civitas)

References

  1. https://www.linkedin.com/pub/nick-seddon/21/692/939
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External links

Nick Seddon's articles: