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About us

​TaxWatch launches the Tax and the Rule of Law project

8th April 2021 by George Turner

When we created TaxWatch a little over two years ago, our intention was to build an institution that represented the public interest in tax affairs.

The importance of this mission is clear. We are all taxpayers in one way or another. Whether this be the VAT on products and services we all buy, or income tax on our earnings. With tax at around 1/3rd of GDP, the shape of the tax system and how tax law is applied has a broad impact on the economy and society as a whole.

So much of the discussion on tax has been dominated by small, exclusive communities of tax professionals. Often these individuals are highly conflicted in terms of the interests they represent and have an interest in making tax inaccessible.

We believe that the near universal importance of the tax system to our daily lives means tax policy can only be properly developed when the public have access to clear, independent, and above all accessible information on tax issues – and in particular issues of major public concern such as tax avoidance.

To that end, we have sought to engage in high quality research which sets out the facts.

However, no matter how important that part of TaxWatch’s mission has been, our public interest mission extends beyond the production of information. We want to use the knowledge we have gained in order to make sure that the law is enforced to the benefit of all.

Today, we are launching an initiative which opens up a new, innovative and exciting front in our public interest mission – our Tax and the Rule of Law project.

This initiative will seek to improve both the application of the rule of law in tax administration by ensuring that the public interest is more sufficiently and more effectively represented in the courts and by regulators. This will involve a number of activities which we believe are ground breaking.

​Intervening in the public interest

When judges decide cases brought to them in the courts, the importance and effect of the decisions they make often go beyond any immediate impact on the people contesting the claim.

For that reason, it has long been established that there is a role to play for NGOs in making interventions in court cases to make submissions in public interest.

As set out by Lord Hoffmann in E v The Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission intervening) [2008] UKHL 66, [2009] 1 AC 536:

“Leave is given to such bodies to intervene and make submissions, usually in writing but sometimes orally from the bar, in the expectation that their fund of knowledge or particular point of view will enable them to provide the House with a more rounded picture than it would otherwise obtain. The House is grateful to such bodies for their help”

Public interest interventions are common in various areas of law, such as human rights and environmental law. However, we believe that these kinds of interventions have never been made by an NGO before concerning UK tax law.

​Holding HMRC to account on tax compliance

As the government agency responsible for the collection of tax, HMRC play a key role in enforcing the tax system. Our Tax and the Rule of Law project will seek to ensure that the law is enforced fairly, equally and appropriately. We will do this through research and advocacy looking at how the law is applied in the field of taxation.

​Holding regulators to account

Another key area of our work will be holding regulators to account. Regulators play an important role in making sure that tax professionals act in the public interest. But to ensure that duty is being carried out, the public interest has to be represented, particularly in an area where so much regulation is carried out my membership associations.

Recent years have seen a number of scandals involving regulated professionals involved in unethical and unlawful tax practices. We want to ensure that regulators are playing their role in preventing and rooting out such practices.

In order to take forward this project we are hugely pleased to announce that we have hired Dr Osita Mba. Osita comes with a vast amount of experience in tax law, having been an HMRC lawyer for seven years and completed a PhD in tax law.

His PhD research, which studied the nature and meaning of ‘Tax Avoidance’ and ‘Tax Evasion’ in English law, has an obvious relevance to much of the work TaxWatch does and a particular relevance to our new initiative. As such he will make a huge contribution to the team to advancing research and thinking in this area.

We are also pleased to announce we have secured the backing of the Joffee Trust, who has pledged £25k a year to support this project over the next two years.

Who we are

1st December 2020 by Alex Dunnagan

Our team

Director – Claire Ralph

Claire Ralph is a tax policy specialist and Chartered Tax Adviser, with a focus on the energy sector. In the years before joining TaxWatch she worked in tax practice and for a business group. She was Head of Tax for the Falkland Islands Government 2016-2018, where she reformed the oil taxation regime and ran the Tax Office there.

Tax Crime Fellow – Dr Pete Sproat

Pete Sproat has an extensive background in researching and teaching financial crime, policing, and politics, at a number of UK universities. Pete has published numerous academic articles on topics such as anti-money laundering, asset recovery and the policing of fraud and organised crime.

Researcher – Sarah Walton

Sarah Walton worked for HMRC as a fully qualified tax inspector for many years. Sarah is experienced in conducting civil investigations into complex cases of tax fraud and avoidance involving all types of taxes and taxpayers.

Executive Director – George Turner

George Turner was the founding Executive Director of Tax Watch since its launch in October 2018. In mid 2022 George was critically injured in a cycling accident and is currently away from work on the long road to recovery.

Our directors

Richard Brooks

Richard Brooks is an award winning investigative journalist with Private Eye magazine and a former tax inspector. He chairs TaxWatch’s editorial committee.

Richard is the author of “The Great British Tax Robbery: How Britain became a Tax Haven for Fat Cats and Big Business” (Oneworld, 2013). His latest book – Bean Counters (Atlantic, 2018) is an expose of the accountancy profession, including its instrumental role in tax avoidance.

Julian Richer

Julian Richer is a highly respected entrepreneur and philanthropist. The founder of Richer Sounds, the UK’s largest Hi-Fi retailer, Julian opened his first shop aged just 19.
The company has paid the real living wage to all employees since 2014, and gives 15% of its operating profit to charity every year. Richer Sounds has also been awarded a fair tax mark accreditation.

Julian’s latest book – the Ethical Capitalist: How to Make Business Work for a Better Society – was published in 2018.

James Timpson

James Timpson is the CEO of Timpson’s the UK’s largest retail service provider, with 2000 shops across the country. James, who is chair of the Prison Reform Trust, was responsible for Timpson’s pioneering work with former inmates, helping them to gain meaningful employment on release from prison. Today, 10% of colleagues at Timpson were recruited directly from prison. Timpson’s is also a fair tax mark accredited business.

Damien Morrison

Damien Morrison is a partner in Morrison and Associates Solicitors and has specialised in criminal law. He regularly practises as a Higher Court Advocate.

Damien is the Company Secretary of TaxWatch.

Ana Caistor Arendar

Ana is Head of Inequality Campaigns and Policy at Oxfam GB. She previously worked as Oxfam’s Campaigns, Policy and Communications Manager for Latin America and the Caribbean based in Mexico and Bolivia, and as Oxfam’s Campaigns and Policy Manager in Haiti, where she worked on the humanitarian responses following the 2010 earthquake and the cholera outbreak later that year.

Jennifer Herrera

Jennifer Herrera is the CEO of the Good Business Foundation which runs an accreditation to recognise responsible business, called the Good Business Charter. She is also Executive Director of Acts 435, a charity established to encourage small donations online to people in need.

Jennifer is a chartered accountant and a trustee of ASB Help, a charity supporting victims of anti-social behaviour and Love 146, a charity supporting trafficked children.

Editorial Committee

Richard Brooks

See Our Directors above

Felicity Lawrence

Felicity Lawrence is an investigative journalist and special correspondent with the Guardian. She has done pioneering work on corporate tax avoidance, responsible for some of the first work on the issue in a mainstream newspaper ten years ago.

She has written ground-breaking investigations on the food supply, migration, and government outsourcing and is author of the Sunday Times bestseller: Not On The Label: What Really Goes Into The Food On Your Plate.

Simon Bowers

Simon Bowers is Investigations Editor at Finance Uncovered, a journalism non-profit that trains, supports and collaborates with reporters working on financial investigations around the world. Previously, he spent four years as European Coordinator at the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a non-profit group that organises global collaborative journalism projects.

Before joining ICIJ, Simon spent 19 years at The Guardian, where he was a senior reporter working on tax and financial investigations. Simon’s reporting has featured in the New York Times, Australian Financial Review, Le Monde, Süddeutsche Zeitung, OCCRP, El Confidencial, British Medical Journal, Irish Times, The Guardian, BBC, Re:Baltica, Knack, De Tijd and Aftenposten.

He has appeared in, or contributed to, documentaries for Vice News, BBC Panorama, YLE, and Reveal News. He has also given a TEDx talk on a collaborative investigation into Nike’s pan-European tax avoidance activities. He has been part of collaborative reporting teams that have won several awards, including three George Polk awards for Financial Journalism (Panama Papers, Paradise Papers, LuxLeaks) and a Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting (Panama Papers).

TaxWatch History

27th May 2020 by Alex Dunnagan

TaxWatch History

In 2013, investigative journalist and former tax-inspector Richard Brooks published the Great Tax Robbery: How Britain Became A Tax Haven For Fat Cats And Big Business, which exposed the scale of tax avoidance in the UK, looking at the role of multi-national corporations and the British Government. In concluding, Brooks called for the establishment of an independent think-tank focussing on the tax-system, writing:

“one effective practical initiative would be to monitor systematically multinationals’ tax payments and action (or inaction) against tax avoidance, as far as they can be identified: ‘TaxWatch’, perhaps.”1

After reading the Great Tax Robbery, Julian Richer, the founder of hi-fi and TV specialist Richer Sounds, reached out to Brooks and the two of them set about establishing TaxWatch. In an interview with The Guardian, Richer stated:

“We pay our taxes but these people are just laughing at us. You can’t move these days for stories about people and companies trying to find ever more ingenious ways to avoid paying their tax bill, whether it’s tech giants, celebrities or major landowners.”2

Work started to recruit a Board of Directors, and an Editorial Committee to oversee the think tank’s output and staff. TaxWatch was officially launched in October 2018, when it incorporated as a company limited by guarantee. Investigative journalist George Turner was recruited as TaxWatch’s first Executive Director. Brooks became chair of TaxWatch’s editorial committee, and Julian Richer chair of the board of directors.

Since its establishment, research published by TaxWatch has featured in many major news outlets across the world, and our research has been cited in the House of Commons on a number of occasions.

1Pg 260, The Great Tax Robbery, Richard Brooks

2Richer Sounds boss launches crusade to expose tax avoiders. 27 May 2018, The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/may/27/julian-richer-crusade-expose-tax-avoiders-richer-sounds


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