UK London zoo boss quits amid claims of ‘unacceptable workplace behaviour’ - Exclusive: Matthew Gould, close friend of George Osborne and former envoy, resigns before investigation concludes

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
A former high-flying diplomat who is a close friend of George Osborne has quit as the head of London zoo after the launch of an investigation into his “unacceptable workplace behaviour”.

Matthew Gould, who previously worked in Downing Street and as ambassador to Israel, resigned as chief executive of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) last week.

In a letter to staff, ZSL’s chair of trustees, Jim Smith, wrote that an “investigation into claims of unacceptable workplace behaviour found that Matthew Gould’s conduct fell below the standard we expect. He resigned before this investigation had concluded.

“We are committed to living up to our values at every level of the organisation and ensuring a safe, respectful and inclusive workplace for everyone.”

Smith said the executive director of ZSL, which runs London zoo and Whipsnade zoo in Bedfordshire, had stepped in as interim chief executive and was “focused on leading an organisation with honesty, integrity and accountability at its heart”.

No further details were provided. At the top of Gould’s LinkedIn account, he has written: “Plotting my next move”.

A spokesperson for ZSL confirmed the contents of the letter to staff. She said: “This investigation was not related to ZSL’s financial operations. This matter was addressed promptly and appropriately, and there are no wider implications for our staff or operations. We are not sharing any further details on an internal matter.”

The spokesperson added: “ZSL’s work continues unchanged and we are committed to maintaining a culture that lives up to our values and ensuring the organisation continues to be a supportive and respectful place to work.”

The resignation comes at a difficult time for ZSL, before its bicentennial in 2026 and at a point when cuts to aid funding by the Trump administration and the UK government has forced it to look for savings.

In October, it launched a voluntary redundancy scheme in an effort to reduce costs by £2m a year. Gould said at the time he could not rule out compulsory redundancies but he was “doing everything possible” to avoid them.

The 54-year-old has known Osborne since they were both members of the same chess club at St Paul’s, a public school in west London, and spoke at the former chancellor’s wedding to Thea Rogers in 2023.

Before joining ZSL, Gould was a career civil servant with a glittering array of top government positions. After eight years in junior roles in the Foreign Office, including as speech writer to the then Labour foreign secretary, Robin Cook, he moved to Downing Street in 2007 to be private secretary for foreign affairs at the end of Tony Blair’s premiership.

Postings followed in Islamabad, Tehran and Washington DC and five years as the British ambassador to Israel.

During the Covid pandemic, he had a central role as the first chief executive of NHSX, the health service’s digital innovations wing, a position to which he was appointed by the then health secretary, Matt Hancock, who was also a former chief of staff to Osborne.

Gould joinedZSL in September 2022 and told the Daily Telegraph in an interview in 2023 that he stayed in London during the week before rejoining his wife, Celia, a photographer and textile designer, and two daughters at their home in Somerset at the weekend.

Speaking of his time at the centre of government during the pandemic, he said: “I found [that] trying to do really difficult things under immense pressure with a massive spotlight of public, internet, media and parliamentary scrutiny was really difficult.

“I think it’s harder to be a public figure now. The respect has gone down. The suspicion and the scrutiny has [increased]. Back then, you needed a thick skin, but now you have to be a pretty strong character to survive the presumption of ill intent and constant searching for evidence of wrongdoing. And the constant knowledge that at any point somebody might pour a bucket of ordure over your head.”

Of his job at ZSL, Gould said: “I don’t want to say for ever, but I can’t see anything I’d rather be doing.”

L

A

IMG_6902.jpeg
 
Who was caught with his dick out pissing in front of Osbourne's house a few weeks ago?

I bet Mandelson and this guy are friends.
 
The resignation comes at a difficult time for ZSL, before its bicentennial in 2026 and at a point when cuts to aid funding by the Trump administration and the UK government has forced it to look for savings
Excuse me but what the fuck? Why are we funding the London zoo??!?
 
Before joining ZSL, Gould was a career civil servant with a glittering array of top government positions
So in other words, a worthless cunt that kept being bounced around departments. He looks like a nonce who hasn't worked a day in his life.

“We are committed to living up to our values at every level of the organisation and ensuring a safe, respectful and inclusive workplace for everyone.”
If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys.
 
Matthew Gould, who previously worked in Downing Street and as ambassador to Israel

resigned as chief executive of the Zoological Society of London
What? How you go from Ambassador to Israel to chief of a zoo? One of these jobs was likely not very deserving.

According to Google:

Matthew is currently CEO of the Zoological Society of London, a conservation charity which runs London and Whipsnade Zoos, a global network of conservation projects, and the scientific Institute of Zoology.​
As CEO of NHSX Matthew led the digital transformation of health and care in England. His team helped the NHS through the pandemic by developing the NHS Datastore, allowing the crisis to be managed using real-time data, and built the award-winning NHS Covid Pass.
He was previously the Government’s first Director General for Digital and Media at DCMS, the Government’s cyber security director, and Britain’s Ambassador to Israel, where he built an ambitious programme of scientific collaboration on regenerative medicine.​

He's either super smart or he just has good friends.
 
Back
Top Bottom