Daily Mail

Andrew Pierce reporting

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Beleaguere­d Oxfam trustee Caroline Thomson, who made a ‘full and unqualifie­d apology’ to Britain and Haiti, is no stranger to being at the vortex of a major corporate scandal.

In a previous role at the BBC, she was dragged into the controvers­y over the coverup of paedophile DJ Jimmy Savile’s activities, as well as a row over excessive pay- offs for BBC executives.

There was widespread criticism of Ms Thomson — who uses her maiden name rather than her title by marriage, lady liddle — when, before she became chairman of Oxfam’s trustees, she left the BBC (where she was chief operating officer) with a £670,000 pay- off — more than twice her £ 330,000 salary. astonishin­gly, she got this eye-watering sum even though she wanted to quit.

Indeed, she was one of several BBC bigwigs who left with huge pay-offs — totalling £4 million in one year — after the Savile scandal.

as a result, Margaret Hodge, then chairwoman of the Commons spending watchdog, said there was ‘gross incompeten­ce’ in the way the BBC handled the golden handshakes. The MP had questioned senior BBC executives and said it was an ‘unedifying experience’ watching them ‘try to avoid responsibi­lity’.

during questionin­g, former BBC directorge­neral Mark Thompson defended the severance payments, denying that the Corporatio­n had ‘lost the plot’. In reference to Ms Thomson, Ms Hodge said the redundancy pay-off was effectivel­y made to ‘compensate’ her for missing out on the job of directorge­neral during the fallout from Savile.

To compound matters, when one shamed BBC executive repaid part of his £300,000 settlement, Ms Thomson was asked if she would do the same. With haughty disdain, she replied: ‘No. I’m not.’ Insisting that the money funded by the licence-fee payers was her contractua­l entitlemen­t, she said: ‘I would have earned a lot more when I was working for ITV.’

THIS debacle followed the Jimmy Savile scandal, when it was alleged that the BBC had pulled a BBC2 Newsnight investigat­ion into allegation­s that the DJ had indulged in under-age sex and that Ms Thomson, along with other executives, failed to heed warnings that Savile was a serious paedophile.

‘In retrospect,’ she said after Savile died, ‘no one thought of it as a story about the BBC. I look back now and say: “Why didn’t I think it was a problem?” But I didn’t.’

after quitting the BBC with her pay- off

(including £14,000 for lawyers to negotiate the deal) and a £ 1.9 million pension pot, she became executive director of the English National Ballet. Asked why she didn’t take a job in commercial TV (where she’d said she’d have earned much more), she responded: ‘I felt bruised by the manner of my departure and the speed of it. I wanted to do something different.’

Caroline Agnes Morgan Thomson, 63, has strong political links. Her father was Labour MP for Dundee before defecting to the SDP, became head of the Independen­t Broadcasti­ng Authority and was ennobled as Baron Thomson of Monifieth.

After studying at York University, Ms Thomson joined the BBC as a trainee journalist. There, she met her future husband Roger Liddle, an early SDP activist who was a very close friend of Peter Mandelson, with whom he coauthored The Blair Revolution, which championed an EU ‘ of deeper economic integratio­n among nation- states bound together by common rules and united by a clear social purpose’.

They also said: ‘ The single currency is the natural complement to a single market’.

Liddle then became a policy adviser to Blair on Europe, in 1997, and joined him as an aide in No 10 for seven years.

But ‘ Mandelson’s bagman’ became embroiled in a sleazy cash-for-access scandal.

Another Mandelson crony, Derek ‘Dolly’ Draper, was caught telling an undercover reporter posing as a businessma­n that he could provide early sight of confidenti­al government reports and that in exchange for money he would open government doors to him — one being that of Liddle’s office.

Draper duly pressed Liddle into service and the latter was quoted telling the undercover reporter: ‘There is a circle and Derek is part of the circle . . . Whenever you are ready, tell me what you want, who you want to meet, and Derek and I will make the call for you.’

Blair rejected demands to dismiss Liddle who denied the allegation­s — the consensus being that he was saved solely because his reported remark was not tape-recorded.

After Downing Street, Liddle was an adviser to European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso and having been ennobled for long service as a Blairite ultra is a key figure in the Lords in the battle against Brexit. During a debate about leaving the EU, he declared his intention to fight Brexit as long as he lived.

As for his wife, she continues to amass well- paid public jobs: chairman of Digital UK (which is responsibl­e for digital terrestria­l TV); a director of UKGI (a government quango responsibl­e for corporate governance); as well as two in the private sector, a director of Vitec Group (which provides services for broadcaste­rs) and on the board of CN multimedia group.

Thomson once said women in business ‘must have the self-belief to say you don’t understand something in meetings . . . Men always say when they don’t get things.’

Yet by her own admission, she did not ask the right questions about Jimmy Savile. Might she now be asking similar questions of herself about Oxfam?

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 ??  ?? Embattled: Oxfam’s Caroline Thomson
Embattled: Oxfam’s Caroline Thomson

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