The Guardian Australia

National Trust AGM set for fresh battle over culture wars

- Ben Quinn and Helena Horton

A Tory donor, an activist opposed to critical race theory and two “anti-woke” Conservati­ve historians are among candidates being promoted by a rightwing campaign group seeking to wrestle control of the National Trust.

Restore Trust, the self-styled “antiwoke” insurgents who want to reverse policies such as rewilding and LGBT+ friendly practices, had limited success at last year’s National Trust AGM, when a number of resolution­s it supported were defeated.

However, the group – favoured in the right-wing press – now says it only needs a few thousand former members of the charity to return in order to pass a number of resolution­s designed to put pressure on the Trust’s leadership this month.

Using paid-for social media adverts, it has returned with a strategy of backing candidates for the Trust’s council. They include Philip Gibbs, once regarded as one of Britain’s most talented fund managers, who donated more than £500,000 to the Conservati­ve party between 2009 and 2020.

He declined to comment when approached by the Guardian but wrote in a statement pitching for votes from Trust members that the charity should be “less political”.

The other five candidates include Bola Anike, who has campaigned against local authority anti-racism training, which she claimed was based on “critical race theory”. Anike’s campaign against the local authority’s approach to anti-racism training in Brighton has been supported by Don’t Divide Us, a campaign group which organised an event at this year’s Conservati­ve party conference.

Also backed by Restore Trust are Jeremy Black, a former Exeter University professor who has railed against the threat to “British civilisati­on” from what he see as “wokeness” in universiti­es and elsewhere, and Zareer Masani, a conservati­ve historian and activist with the right-wing History Matters project.

The former head of History Matters, Zewditu Gebreyohan­es, is now a Restore Trust director, along with others including Neil Record, a City currency manager and former Tory donor who has given money to a climate denying lobby group the Global Warming Policy Foundation.

Record has also chaired Net Zero Watch, a new campaign group which was launched last year and which seeks to “highlight the serious economic and societal implicatio­ns of expensive and poorly considered climate and energy policies”.

Resolution­s due to be voted on at this year’s AGM in Bath include one deploring the rewilding of some Trust farmland, which the proposers described as an irresponsi­ble and “fashionabl­e environmen­tal fad”. This is rejected by the charity’s board of trustees, which asserts that the policy is based on scientific evidence.

Another resolution “deplores” the Trust’s participat­ion in Pride parades, describing it as a “divisive and unaccounta­ble waste of members’ subscripti­ons”. The Trustees describe the resolution as counter to the Trust’s ethos and assert that they want to foster “a culture of understand­ing and respect”.

Originally set up in 2020, Restore Trust appeared to be a collection of grassroots activists unhappy with the direction the charity. Issues that had exercised some members included allegation­s about the treatment of some staff and a report published by the Trust in 2020 detailing the connection­s some of its properties have with slavery and colonialis­m.

By 2021, Restore Trust had profession­alised, registerin­g a new company and creating a slick new website, with new directors and communicat­ions support from an experience­d London public relations expert. Its latest director, announced this month, is property developer and Ukip donor Mark Roberts, whose company gave £10,000 to the party in 2018.

While it has ramped up a social media presence over the past two years, the group has now been accused by the National Trust of targeting older members of the charity by paying for leaflets to be pushed under car windscreen wipers, in the properties’ tea rooms, and through the doors of people who live nearby.

These leaflets proclaim that something is wrong with the National Trust, and urgent help is needed.

Restore Trust did not provide any comment when approached by the Guardian.

Celia Richardson, the National Trust’s director of communicat­ions, said that Restore Trust’s aim was to populate the council of the Trust with people who share what she described as its anti-progressiv­e views.

The council is made up of 36 people – half directly elected by members and half appointed by NGOs and charities. Last year, Restore Trust ran paid social media campaigns to get their preferred candidates on to the National Trust council, including Stephen Green, Director of Christian Voice.

She has also accused the group of encouragin­g trolling of National Trust staff, as it replied to a Twitter user which called the Trust a “cess pit” and said they hoped it would “lose more members” by encouragin­g them to join

their mailing list and vote in the AGM.

“The National Trust’s council is elected by members and made up of members acting as volunteers. We have a long, proud tradition of openness and healthy democratic process underpinni­ng our governance. This will continue, but we will work hard to protect our independen­ce,” said Richardson.

• This article was amended on 31 October 2022 to make the headline better reflect the article.

 ?? Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters ?? The National Trust has accused Restore Trust of targeting older members of the charity
Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters The National Trust has accused Restore Trust of targeting older members of the charity

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