Home Office From 2010, Hill worked alongside
Theresa May in the
Home Office as a special adviser. She left government after being forced to resign as May's special adviser in a 2014 dispute with Michael Gove over alleged extremism in schools, prompting then Prime Minister,
David Cameron, to insist that May sack her. Hill then became an associate director of the
Centre for Social Justice think tank,
Downing Street On 14 July 2016, following the resolution of the
2016 Conservative leadership election, Hill was appointed joint chief of staff to Theresa May, the day after May became
Prime Minister. Little of her own political stance is on public record. Unlike Timothy, with whom she shared the post of Chief of Staff for a year, she avoided writing opinion articles. Additionally, as noted by May biographer Rosa Prince, author of
Theresa May: The Enigmatic Prime Minister, Hill was likely consulted by May before the decision in April to call the election. The
2017 general election saw the return of the Conservatives as a minority government, with their majority dependent on the
Democratic Unionist Party, leading to widespread calls within the party for both Hill and Timothy to be sacked. According to reports, Hill irritated the Scottish Conservatives in particular. They complained of her excessive "interference" and of being told not to run a campaign too detached from the one run from London.
Future Resilience Forum In October 2023, Fiona Hill founded Future Resilience Forum, a non-partisan international forum, where the key challenges of our time can be discussed under the
Chatham House rule by global experts and international political figures. The 2023
Future Resilience Forum focused on the Global South and was led at the
Old Royal Naval College in
Greenwich. The Forum was attended by a range of world leaders, including the UK Prime Minister
Rishi Sunak, Senegal's President
Macky Sall, Iraq's President
Abdul Latif Rashid, former UK Foreign Secretary
William Hague, Chairman of the Independent Energy Policy Institute Narendra Taneja, Minister for Digital in Japan
Taro Kono, CEO Control Risks Nick Allan and two former heads of MI6, Sir
John Scarlett and Sir
Alex Younger and many others. ==Personal life==