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Ross Clark (born 12 September 1966) is a British journalist and author whose work has appeared in The Spectator , Daily Telegraph , The Times and other publications. [1] He is the author of several books, including How to Label a Goat: the silly Rules and Regulations that are strangling Britain and The Great Before, a novel which satirised the pessimism of the Green movement. [2] He is a frequent critic of British government policy, especially on its interventions in the housing market [3] and net zero emissions strategy. [4]
Clark was born in Worcester and brought up in East Kent, where he attended the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys. He studied at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. [5]
In 1989, Clark won The Spectator Young Writers Award, part of the prize for which – a lunch — he later claimed not to have received. [6] He established himself as a freelance journalist, with his work appearing in The Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph , the Daily Express , the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday and The Times , where he frequently writes the Thunderer column. His work is strongly associated with libertarianism and free market economics, writing the "Banned Wagon" [7] and "Globophobia" columns in The Spectator. [8] In 2013, he was co-winner of the Bastiat Prize run by the Reason Foundation. [9] He was also shortlisted for the prize in 2004.
In 2010, shortly before the general election, he co-wrote, with Neil O'Brien, The Renewal of Government, the manifesto of Policy Exchange, a think tank strongly associated with David Cameron. [10] However, he later showed hostility towards some Coalition policies; in a piece in The Times in March 2013, he accused the Chancellor, George Osborne, by means of a plan to underwrite £130 billion of mortgage debt, of forcing the taxpayer to take the same speculative risks which had caused the banking crisis. [11]
In 2012, Clark's musical Shot at Dawn was performed as a workshop at the Etcetera Theatre in Camden. The musical was a success and was later restaged as a full-scale professional production in 2014 at Upstairs at The Gatehouse in Highgate, north London and the Mumford Theatre, Cambridge. [12] He also wrote, with Martin Coslett, The Perfect City , which was performed at the Etcetera Theatre in March 2013. [13] In 2015, the musical Shot at Dawn was renamed The White Feather and performed at the Union Theatre in Southwark. [14]
He lives in Reach, Cambridgeshire. In 2011, he was elected to be a member of the village's parish council. [15]