According to John Stevens in the Daily Mail, the big re-organisation of government departments has been “scaled back.”
I hope so, because exactly where you put up the partitions in Whitehall is besides the point. However much you move them around you’re still going to end up with a departmental structure that gets in the way of effective government.
You could reduce the number of partitions by having fewer, bigger departments. But that way you’d get a different kind of disconnection — i.e. over-stretched Secretaries of State struggling to stay on top of their sprawling responsibilities.
Why does Dominic Cummings want to reorganise Whitehall in the first place? Not for its own sake, surely — but to facilitate change.
The trick therefore is to start with the change you most want to achieve and design the government machinery around it. From my experience in government, I’d suggest the following approach:
To begin with, define your agenda as a series of special objectives — your top ten priorities. Then put one minister in charge of delivering each objective (and only that objective). These special ministers should be the most promising people in the government, as opposed to the most senior. Each should be supported by a dedicated policy / delivery unit, of something like fifty people — at least half of whom (including the unit’s head) would be recruited from outside the permanent civil service.
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