Dido Harding

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Person.png Baroness Harding of Winscombe   Powerbase SourcewatchRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(businesswoman)
Dido Harding.jpg
BornDiana Mary Harding
1967-11-09
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Oxford, Harvard Business School
ParentsLord Harding
Children2
SpouseJohn Penrose
PartyConservative

Employment.png Chair,  NHS Improvement

In office
30 October 2017 - Present

Employment.png Non Executive Director

In office
September 2014 - Present
EmployerBank of England

Employment.png CEO,  TalkTalk

In office
February 2010 - May 2017

Employment.png Member of the House of Lords Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
September 2014 - Present

Diana Mary "Dido" Harding, Baroness Harding of Winscombe (born 9 November 1967) is an English businesswoman who is Chair of NHS Improvement.[1] She is married to Conservative Party MP John Penrose and has two children.[2]

Senior Executive

Dido Harding was named CEO of TalkTalk in 2010,[3] during the period when the group split its Carphone Warehouse retail operation from the group telecoms operation.[4] She was appointed Non Executive Director at the Bank of England in July 2014.[5]

In October 2015, TalkTalk experienced a "significant and sustained cyber-attack", during which personal and banking details of up to four million customers is thought to have been accessed.[6] City A.M. described her responses as "naive", noting that early on when asked if the affected customer data was encrypted or not, she replied: "The awful truth is that I don’t know". Her "inflexible line" on termination fees was also criticised.[7] Marketing magazine ran a headline, "TalkTalk boss Dido Harding's utter ignorance is a lesson to us all".[8] The Evening Standard noted that "It has been a tough week for TalkTalk boss Dido Harding, facing complaints from customers and calls for her head."[9] The company admitted the hack had cost it £60 million and lost it 95,000 customers.[10]

In February 2017, Baroness Harding announced she would stand down after seven years as CEO of TalkTalk in May 2017, to focus more on her public service activities.[11]

NHS Improvement

In October 2017 Baroness Harding was appointed chair of NHS Improvement, which is responsible for overseeing all NHS hospitals, comprising foundation trusts and NHS trusts, as well as independent providers that provide NHS-funded care.[12]

In May 2020, Health Secretary Matt Hancock announced that Baroness Harding was to be put in charge of the "Track, Test and Trace" effort as part of the UK government's response to the COVID-19/Pandemic.[13]

 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/20169 June 201612 June 2016Germany
Dresden
The 2016 Bilderberg meeting took place in Dresden, Germany.

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Britain’s creeping cronyismArticle1 September 2020Richard Norton-TaylorThe culture of the Johnson government may be very different from that of Whitehall’s “permanent government”. But the two have one thing in common, lack of accountability and addiction to official secrecy.
Document:Senior spy appointed to lead UK’s joint biosecurity centreArticle5 June 2020Helen Warrell
Sarah Neville
Devi Sridhar, chair of global public health at Edinburgh University, says: “The virus is not worried that you’re tracking its progress, it’s not going to change its tactic. Cybersecurity is not your worry with a virus. It’s a biological phenomenon.”
Document:Track and Trace. Stay Elite.Article29 May 2020David BlackPoor Dido was pressed into service early by Boris and the lads when she launched her Track and Trace initiative some days ahead of its scheduled June 1st slot in a ludicrously transparent attempt to draw fire from Corporal Cummings, whose lockdown breaching escapades were causing havoc in Tory ranks.
Document:Why the NHS Covid-19 contact tracing app failedArticle19 June 2020Matt BurgessOn 18 June 2020, Matt Hancock announced that the planned centralised NHS Covid-19 contact tracing app, which has been trialled on the Isle of Wight and downloaded by tens of thousands of people, has been ditched in favour of a decentralised system developed by Google and Apple.
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References

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