55 Tufton Street

Its founder and chairman of trustees, David G. Green,[9] writes occasionally in The Daily Telegraph and its former deputy director, Anastasia de Waal, frequently contributed to The Guardian's "Comment is free" section until 2010.

[7] It is opposed to green regulations, to legislation designed to reduce climate change, and to greater reliance on renewable energy.

[citation needed] The LGB Alliance is a British advocacy group founded in 2019, in opposition to the policies of LGBT rights charity Stonewall on transgender issues.

[32][33][34] Founded in 2001, the group believes that international migration places undue demand on limited resources and that the current level of immigration is not sustainable.

Speakers at NCF events, including for its annual keynote Smith Lecture, have included Martin Amis, Dame Vivien Westwood, MPs Jeremy Hunt, Michael Gove and Ed Vaizey, Nigel Farage, Justin Webb, Sir Anthony Seldon, Petroc Trelawny, Melanie Phillips, and Brendan O'Neill.

[37] The TaxPayers' Alliance (TPA) is a right-wing pressure group in the United Kingdom founded by Matthew Elliott[38] in 2004 to campaign for a low tax society.

The campaign was founded in April 2013 by five hundred business leaders, including Matthew Elliott, Phones 4u co-founder John Caudwell and former Marks & Spencer chairman Stuart Rose.

[46] The group published non-peer-reviewed and misleading research on the voting record of the United Kingdom in the European Parliament in 2014, called Measuring Britain's influence in the Council of Ministers.

[2] Feeding Britain is a charity set up in October 2015 to implement the recommendations made by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Hunger and Food Poverty.

It called for "a robust, common sense energy policy that would encourage the market to choose affordable technologies to reduce emissions", such as shale gas and small modular nuclear reactors.

[2] Vote Leave was the official pro-Brexit pressure group during the 2016 Referendum, originally based at 55 Tufton Street before moving to larger premises.

Members included its chair Nigel Lawson, its chief executive Matthew Elliott, Graham Stringer, Andrea Leadsom, Boris Johnson and Michael Gove.

It's clear they enjoy preferential access to some parts of government and, considering their small size, they are having a disproportionate impact ... [which] is undermining the democratic process.

[54][55] After the downturn in financial markets following the announced economic plans by Prime Minister Liz Truss in September 2022, the political campaign group Led By Donkeys placed an oversized blue plaque at 55 Tufton Street, reading "The UK economy was crashed here".