Alongside art and design, Brumwell pushed for good communication between scientists, artists, and political movements. Brumwell established in the early 1950s through informal dinner parties a "group of VIP scientists", where his friends in science like Waddington,
Blackett, and
Bernal met together with elites in other fields like academics like
Charles Frederick Carter and
C. P. Snow, and
Harold Wilson and
Richard Crossman in politics. Brumwell's cause notably escalated in the late 1950s, where these discussions led to a short document,
A Labour Government and Science, published in 1959, which driven by Wilson became the
Labour Party's basic policy science in the run up to the
general election in 1964, most famously in the "white heat of technology" speech in September 1963. Arising from this work, Brumwell helped found the related
Science of Science Foundation in 1964 (later the Science Policy Foundation and then the International Science Policy Foundation), and served on its Advisory Council until his death. The SSF, led by Maurice Goldsmith, pushed for domestic and later international governmental interest in science and technology policy and its practical implementation, including publishing the
Science and Public Policy journal. == Art ==