That sort of question should keep me busy for a little while, shouldn't it? Let's start with the mandate.
We don't get our mandate from the government or in fact from anywhere else. We established the principles and objectives that we believe are important to us as an independent charitable trust. They are enshrined within our memorandum as a charity and as a company, and we deliver them to the best of our ability, in partnership with those people who are like-minded. So when the government is doing something well, we support the government passionately. When it's doing something badly, we criticize it as toughly as we possibly can. We work with those people who share our ideals and our passion for giving the best possible outcomes for kids through the school process and beyond. So where we see meanness, or inconsistency, or hypocrisy, or an undue influence by large multinational companies, particularly who are interested in profits, not children's health, we will swing into action and bring as much influence to bear as we can.
We are a very small organization, so we partner up as often as we can with as many people as we can.
As for budgets and funding, we have very little budget; we have very little funding. We work on a shoestring, and I actually earn my living doing a whole lot of other things.
The money we get tends to do things. This document I'm holding up in front of you is the toolkit for healthy vending that we wrote for the Welsh Assembly government. They gave us a grant to deliver that one. Here is another one that relates to whole-school food policy; another one on vending; and another one on water policy.
I'm also chair of the Caroline Walker Trust, and these are guidelines, public health nutrition guidelines, for other institutions. This one is for old people.
So the work that's done is usually done on the back of grants to do specific pieces of work. Our lobbying is normally done on the back of other earned income.