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Meet our new Head of Public Affairs Jovan Owusu-Nepaul 

The man who went up against Nigel Farage in the 2024 general election will now be making the case for social enterprise to politicians. 

Taking on a media savvy political operator with more than twenty years experience in a general election when you’re just 27 years old is not for the faint-hearted. So it was no surprise that Jovan Owusu-Nepaul’s selection as the Labour candidate up against Nigel Farage for the Clacton seat raised a few eyebrows.  

Perhaps unsurprisingly given his public profile and many years in politics, Farage won with 46% of the vote but for Owusu-Nepaul, it was an opportunity to add to his political experience.  

Having joined the Labour Party whilst studying for his A Levels, he went onto become the youngest ever Chair of the Lewisham Deptford constituency Labour Party and then worked under Vidhya Alakeson, who is now Keir Starmer’s Chief of Staff. All of which will stand him in good stead as he takes on a new challenge of ensuring parliamentarians and policymakers are aware of the importance of social enterprise to British society as our new Head of Public Affairs.  

“All the work that I’ve ever done has been about some form of social change or social impact. Working for the Labour Party was one way I could do that, and now this feels like a meaningful, tangible way in which I can try and advocate for a certain type of economy, making the case more concretely for an alternative way of business,” said Owusu-Nepaul. 

He’s particularly eager for conversations about how government can better hold businesses to account, using the social enterprise sector as an example of an alternative way of doing business which can exist at a larger scale. As someone who has spent a lot of time thinking about what we value as a society and ways to embed a value structure into the economy (beyond the bottom line), he’s also looking forward to our forthcoming Social Value Leaders’ Summit

Owusu-Nepaul sees social enterprises as a tool to achieve social justice because he believes they give people agency in society, are nurturing to their communities and create beneficial social outcomes.  

He added: “Social enterprises are so much more effective than just having business as a kind of raw parasitic form. They’re demonstrating an alternative value system within the context of a more inclusive model of capitalism, and that is exactly where political parties should be focusing because it integrates economic interests alongside social and cultural interests.” 

As someone who was the exact opposite to Farage in so many ways, not only on policy but as the only black candidate under 30 in the election, his selection was irresistible to the media. It’s lead to invitations to appear on LBC, ITV’s Good Morning Britain and Channel 5’s The Jeremy Vine Show, and he’s enjoying having a platform.  

“You can engage in kind of a national conversation, and you can plant ideas in people’s heads as to how an alternative society could look. It’s really important to demonstrate to people that the way things are today, that doesn’t mean that’s how it always has to be. The media’s allowed me to do that,” said Owusu-Nepaul.