Danny Kushlick | |
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Personal details | |
Nationality | British |
Political party | The People's Manifesto |
Spouse(s) | Fi Hance |
Children | 2 |
Residence | St Andrew's, Bristol |
Occupation | Head of External Affairs, TDPF[1] |
Danny Kushlick is a British politician and founder of the Transform Drug Policy Foundation (TDPF).[2] He stood in the 2010 United Kingdom general election for The People's Manifesto.
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Kushlick founded the Transform Drug Policy Foundation in 1996.[3] He is currently the organisation's head of external affairs. He has previously worked with various support organisations, covering learning difficulties, unemployed ex-offenders, drug counselling, and homelessness. He is on the council of the International Harm Reduction Association, and is a member of the British Society of Criminology's Advisory Council.[2]
In 2004, he co-authored the report After the War on Drugs: Options for Control, which is a critique of current drug policy in the UK and recommendations for reform.[4]
In 2010, Kushlick was chosen to stand for Mark Thomas's The People's Manifesto in the 2010 general election in the Bristol West constituency. Kushlick only stood on policy – the legalisation and regulation of drugs – which was drawn from the original manifesto.[1][5]
At Mark Thomas's show at the Royal National Theatre on 7 April 2010, a selection of policies were directly put forward to Kushlick by members of the audience:[6]
Kushlick's party platform indicates that he will avoid taking the UK to war, and thinks that "the most important 'special relationship' isn't with the US, but with your mum".[2]
Kushlick lives in St Andrews, Bristol, with his partner and two children. His partner, Fi Hance, is a Liberal Democrat councillor for the Redland ward in Bristol.[1]