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Can Labour avoid the stench of scandal? Keir Starmer's government must practise what it preaches

(Tolga Akmen/EPA/Bloomberg/Getty)

(Tolga Akmen/EPA/Bloomberg/Getty)


August 30, 2024   6 mins

Keir Starmer is clearly no Lynn Anderson fan. On Tuesday, he stood in the Downing Street Rose Garden, addressing assembled public sector workers, and promised that “this garden and this building are back in your service”. He said this with no acknowledgment that Bank Holiday weekend’s papers were full of the latest twist in the Labour’s cronyism row, the most recent of which took the drama right to that very garden.

Starmer’s personal donor, Lord (Waheed) Alli had, according to the Sunday Times, been furnished with a Downing Street pass and allowed to organise a party in that same garden, with a guest list of other donors. This is most unusual. But when the Prime Minister was asked a few perfectly reasonable questions about the growing concerns about cronyism and jobs-for-mates, he snapped back: “most of these allegations and accusations are coming from the very people that dragged our country down in the first place!”

It’s now some weeks since the cronyism scandal first started to emerge. And, by the morning of the Prime Minister’s speech, it had built up quite a head of steam. That’s why it’s odd that Downing Street thought the Prime Minister could ignore it entirely. At that point, four of his senior ministers were understood to have overseen the appointment of donors to Civil Service jobs. The Chancellor had appointed Ian Corfield, a personal donor. The Deputy Prime Minister had appointed Rose Grayston, who seemingly doctored her LinkedIn profile to remove a reference to “Labour Together” — a sort of Labour Super PAC that donated to Angela Rayner. Peter Kyle took a large donation from Public Digital, before appointing a former Public Digital partner (and a Labour Together staffer) Emily Middleton to a very senior position. And Nick Thomas-Symonds took a donation from Labour Together before appointing Jess Sargeant.

In none of the cases has there been the slightest shred of transparency.

We do know, though, that the Chancellor failed to declare the Corfield donation to her permanent secretary, meaning she could be in breach of the Ministerial Code. She also did not declare the £5,000 donation (nor presumably his appointment) to the Civil Service Commission — Whitehall’s regulator. When the truth surfaced, Mr Corfield’s civil service role was terminated. But questions about the Ministerial Code remain unanswered. Without answers, there can be no accountability. And the termination of Corfield’s role suggests that the Chancellor realised that there might be questions to answer.

“The toughest questions for Starmer’s administration are over the Ministerial Code.”

We do not know if the other ministers declared their donations to their departments, or to the Civil Service Commission. And we do not know how many other such appointments have been made, though there are likely to be many — especially at more junior levels where the roles can be signed off within departments.

I should say at this point that, having worked in and around Whitehall for nearly 15 years, I am in favour of ministers having greater personal powers of appointment. It is ludicrous that most Secretaries of State running entire department of thousands of staff, with billion-pound budgets, can appoint fewer than five Special Advisers, or spads. And even those appointments require Downing Street sign off. But that is our current system, and those in favour of change should advocate reform, not practice subversion by stealth.

Ten years ago, as a spad working in the Cabinet Office, I helped Francis Maude develop the idea of an Extended Ministerial Office. Echoing the Continental Cabinet system, ministers would be allowed to appoint a team of several dozen drawn from Whitehall and beyond. The reforms would have allowed ministers to make a few key appointments to roles such as diary management, strategy advice, speech writing, digital communications or policy advice. I had seen how difficult it was to drive change in Government — how, when a Secretary of State pulled a lever, all too often nothing happened. This reform was intended to address those problems. This would have brought the United Kingdom closer into line with other Westminster-model democracies — Australia for example. The plan was killed off by Theresa May for reasons I still do not understand, but perhaps relating to a desire to appease the then Cabinet Secretary.

The new Government has thus far shown no interest in Civil Service reforms nor in moving to an Extended Ministerial Office system. But in any case, some of their appointments are fundamentally of a different order. A function of the Extended Ministerial Office was that the personal ministerial appointments would be contained in that office, not spread throughout a department. They would not have wider responsibilities. Emily Middleton, in contrast, is being made a Director General — Whitehall’s second most senior grade. She would be expected to manage a large team, control significant budgets, and to oversee the departments’ core policy advice within her field.

A more junior but even more extraordinary appointment is that of Jess Sargeant, who had previously written about the need for “checks on power”. And yet, within weeks of Labour gaining power, she accepted a position, which was neither publicly advertised nor competed, in the heart of the Cabinet Office. Adding to the irony is the fact that she has been appointed to the Propriety and Constitution Group.

PET, as this office used to be known, runs investigations into ministerial propriety, handles the regulator of the Civil Service, decides how to handle conflicts of interest in Government, and oversees the team helping allocate honours and the committee advising on appointments to the House of Lords. It is unprecedented that a political person be given this role — which presumably was approved by the Cabinet Office Permanent Secretary. And it is shocking that she has not been removed since her presence was exposed.

In defence of these appointments, members of the new Government have resorted to shameless whataboutery, pointing to certain individuals elevated to the House of Lords by previous prime ministers, to a recent ambassadorial role allocated by another prime minister, and to endless other appointments to the boards of quangos and Non-Executive Director positions within Whitehall. There are doubtless interesting questions to be raised about the practice of previous administrations. But all those posts, while important, are substantively different from Civil Servants.

The last Labour Government legislated to put the political impartiality of the Civil Service on a statutory footing. Their Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 also dictates that appointments to Whitehall must be by “fair and open” competition, or through an exception overseen by the Civil Service Commission. So the Civil Service is bound by entirely different rules. Ambassadorial jobs are distinct. The top quango jobs are regulated by a separate process but one which sets out that political activity should neither “affect any judgement of merit nor be a bar to appointment”. Departmental non-executives are now similarly regulated, thanks to a change made by Boris Johnson. And appointments to the peerage remain a Prime Ministerial prerogative. Those who dismiss these distinctions as sophistry are dismissing the value of Civil Service impartiality.

Civil Servants have to serve the Government of the day, whatever its political complexion. Crucially, they must also — and this is set out in the Civil Service Code — retain the ability to serve with equal commitment to a future government. That value has been traduced by recent appointments. For how could a future government have confidence in the advice of a Deputy Director in the Propriety and Constitution Group, whose previous job was working for Labour Together? How could a future Government trust the new Director General in the Department of Science, who also previously worked for Labour Together? That’s why these appointments are so injurious to political impartiality.

The vast majority of Civil Servants working in the policy parts of Government, as opposed to the more frontline service delivery roles, are profoundly committed to the ethos of public service and political impartiality. Yes, most officials dress to the Left, and there is a tendency to conformism. But there are some more heterodox thinkers. Overall, though, there is a deep sense that explicit Politics (with a capital P) is not permissible. That is why so many inside government, at all levels of seniority, have been so appalled by Labour’s recent appointments.

But the toughest questions for Starmer’s administration are over the Ministerial Code. The change in Mr Corfield’s status from civil servant to Direct Ministerial Appointment, does nothing to quell the questions about whether Rachel Reeves broke the Ministerial Code by asking for him to be appointed. These are questions which demand an investigation.

Starmer has inherited an Independent Adviser on Ministers’ Interests, Sir Laurie Magnus, from the last government. He might have been tempted to appoint his own “Ethics Tsar”. But it’s too late now. Instead, he should instruct Magnus to open an investigation into Reeves, before Magnus does so himself. And the new Government should come clean. How many “exceptional” appointments have there been? If, as they claim, no rules have been broken, they should publish the names and details of all the senior roles.

I recognise that politics is a contact sport and can, often, seem a grubby business, particularly when donations are involved. Those who would argue that we should drive “the money” out of politics need to get better at making the case for taxpayer funding. Those, like me, who are thankful for political donors, need to get better at defending them, while accepting that transparency and acting with probity are vital for maintaining public confidence in politics.

I have had a front row seat for many recent political dramas. Watching them play out when you’re sat around the edge of the Cabinet Room or helping a minister prepare for an urgent Parliamentary Question is never pleasant. And so, I would offer some advice — in humility — as someone who has witnessed a scandal or two at close quarters.

In order not to wade further into the mire, Downing Street needs to recognise several things. First, in opposition it’s easy (or at least seems easy) to preach about standards and demand answers; in government you have to make decisions and account for them. Second, the Prime Minister should lose all the chippy defensiveness and understand, as a former barrister, that you must answer the case that is made against you. Third, reform of the Civil Service, ideally on the basis of a cross-party consensus, is a necessity. In order for evolution, not revolution, the case should be made for incremental changes. For, lest the government forget, the political mechanisms of accountability in our system are actually effective: over the years, they have become a ruthless ministerial career-destroying machine.


Henry Newman was a Conservative special adviser to Francis Maude, Michael Gove and Boris Johnson. He writes The Whitehall Project on Substack

HenryNewman

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Jerry Carroll
Jerry Carroll
2 months ago

Ministers come and go but The Blob is forever.

Graham Cunningham
Graham Cunningham
2 months ago
Reply to  Jerry Carroll

Yes absolutely. And that is the big picture here….the one that politico journalists need to constantly memory hole in favour of the pretence that we really do live in a pluralist democracy. In truth our entire political culture has degenerated into a kind of Ideological Cronyism. As Unherd’s own Peter Franklin once wrote (reflecting on his own experience of working in two UK government departments): “How many of the civil servants that most closely serve this Conservative government are actually Leftwing? Well….I would say approximately all of them”. And it’s not just the UK. Research in the US context finds that “the political beliefs of the median federal government employee lie to the left not only of the median Republican, but also the median Democrat”. https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/carry-on-governing

Andrew R
Andrew R
2 months ago

“This garden and this building are back in your service” LOL.

I guess if he says that nonsense often enough Commissar Starmer might actually come to believe it.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

He was looking straight at the Trade Union barons as he spoke.

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
2 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Good point. They will pander to the Unions up to the point when they have to look at “In place of Strife”, Wage freezes and a Winter of Discontent with rubbish piling up and bodies unburied. It is the trajectory those of us old enough to remember living through are familiar with. Crisis no Crisis Starmer will intone – the problems will all be down to the Tories for years ahead.

Jonathan Nash
Jonathan Nash
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

I find this “simple servant of the people” stuff nauseating and sinister. It reminds me of Joe Stalin’s schtick.

Carol Staines
Carol Staines
2 months ago
Reply to  Jonathan Nash

I think he actually believes what he said/ says.

Chiara de Cabarrus
Chiara de Cabarrus
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

Um …does that mean anyone can throw a party in the rose garden? Great idea. A bacchanalian revelry in his own backyard, alcohol pilfered from Westminster. Every single night.

Dr Anne Kelley
Dr Anne Kelley
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

Nobody else will.

j watson
j watson
2 months ago

It’s not a stench yet, and to be fair they haven’t got time to do a full reform of the Civil service before needing to crack on with some important work. One suspects it’ll follow though.
It’ll be chip-paper if they start to make the differences needed. If not then the smell will increase. The scrutiny is important.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  j watson

Yep. Will they tax the houses? That’s the question. We’ll see.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
2 months ago
Reply to  j watson

Yes, important work like banning outdoor smoking and wrecking the hospitality industry, as well as destroying north sea oil and gas. It’s vitally important, obviously, to ensure that all the productive, wealth generating sectors of the real economy are completely eviscerated before bothering with something as trivial as public sector reform . . .

Oops, gotta hop, there’s a funny smell coming from somewhere . . .

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago

It’s vitally important, obviously, to ensure that all the productive, wealth generating sectors of the real economy are completely eviscerated.
Yes – more regulation and higher barriers to growth for small businesses are obviously key to the high growth economy they’re determined to create.

Dylan Blackhurst
Dylan Blackhurst
2 months ago

I love how this government was going to rid us of cronyism and bring back a better standard of ethics and values!

Utter tosh.

Well at least Mr Starmer got some nice suits out of his deal with one of his cronies. It’s just a pity he still looks pudding in them.

But it’s okay, because Two Tier is going to distract us all with talk of the far right.

More lies.

And now there’s talk of banning smoking outside pubs. Brilliant idea Two Tier!

So we get cronyism. Lies. And authoritarianism. All dressed up in a suit bought by someone else.

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
2 months ago

Will we be regularly regaled by the BBC and MSM about sleazy Starmer in his donated clothes the way we were deluged with complaint about Johnson’s gold wallpaper? Tedious but only fair.

Geoff Elliott
Geoff Elliott
2 months ago
Reply to  Jeremy Bray

I think “no” is your answer there. Even discounting the wretched BBC, I don’t remember this being endlessly bleated on about at 6pm on ITV every night in the way that any of Johnson’s indiscretions were; nor a commissioned exposé after a week to artificially keep the story going; nor even Pesto sucking his teeth perched at the end of the desk. A different “class” of people are in power now…

Graham Cunningham
Graham Cunningham
2 months ago

The reality is that our entire political system has degenerated into a kind of Ideological Cronyism. As Unherd’s Peter Franklin once wrote, reflecting on his own experience of working in two UK government departments comments: “How many of the civil servants that most closely serve this Conservative government are actually Leftwing? Well….I would say approximately all of them”. And it’s not just the UK. Research in the US context found that “the political beliefs of the median federal government employee lie to the left not only of the median Republican, but also the median Democrat”. That is the big picture here…and it’s one that politico journalism needs constantly to memory hole in order to sustain the fiction that we really do still live in a pluralist democracy. https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/carry-on-governing

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
2 months ago

To some extent the left wing bent of the average Civil Servant is inevitable. If you have spent your whole life not worrying about making a profit and whether you might be sacked if your firm goes under because they don’t make a profit you inevitably have an unrealistic view of the world outside and are more inclined to indulge in fanciful social engineering thoughts untrammelled by the need to make a profit. Tax, borrow and spend are much easier when you are underwritten by the ability to extort other peoples money to pay for it through taxation.

Dylan Blackhurst
Dylan Blackhurst
2 months ago
Reply to  Jeremy Bray

It would be interesting to see how many of our political class have actually run or owned a business. Judging by the laws that have been or about to be passed, I suspect very few.
This lot already look like they’re out of their depth. And we’re only months in.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
2 months ago

I’d also add to that list of advice: maybe avoid boasting about your own moral rectitude, it will inevitably blow up in your face.
The public aren’t stupid, they know politics is a mucky game. And if there’s anything worse than politicians doing their mates favours, it’s politicians that do their mates favours and then stand in a rose garden trying to tell you how morally wonderful their gang is.
The one thing that has consistently struck me about Starmer so far is how out of touch he is.

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Yes Major rued the day he came up with Back to Basics as a slogan every time there was another sex “scandal”.Self praise is no recommendation being the right approach. Seldom adhered to by politicians and other sleazy dishonest salesmen.

Peter B
Peter B
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

His sanctimonousness – and corresponding lack of self awareness – aren’t going to last well. That and the fact that he takes himself far too seriously. Doesn’t play well in England.
That was Gladstone’s weakness and Disraeli exploited it.
Of course, Starmer’s non-league compared to Gladstone.
Got to say, I’m impressed with how badly Starmer’s Labour are doing so far. I knew they weren’t competent. But their [lack of] judgement is shocking. All the opposition need do now is what Starmer did in the election – sit back and do nothing. Never interrupt your enemy wehn he’s making a mistake …

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
2 months ago
Reply to  Peter B

He’s exceeded my negative expectations by far aswell. The “best” move so far is buttering Olaf Scholz up, seemingly in the belief that it is going to get the UK anywhere with the EU in its “post Brexit reset”.
If Labour thinks that a change of UK government is going to significantly alter the calculus on the other side of the Channel as far as Brexit is concerned, then it’s got another thing coming. Brussels calls the shots on the matter, not Berlin. And Olaf Scholz is on a pretty steep downwards trajectory in Germany anyway – it makes Starmer’s hey-bruh-love-bombing seem even more absurd!

Peter B
Peter B
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

I can’t believe there’s any appetite in the EU to reopen Brexit for a very long time. Too many other important problems to work on (or not work on in many cases). At least for the national politicians in Germany, France, Italy, etc. Of course, the EU bureaucrats have no such constraints – or accountability – and are free to spend/waste their time pretty much as they choose.
I’m assuming Starmer realises this is all just performative.
In any case, Scholz probably isn’t going to be leading Germany for that much longer.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

But corruption is core component of Socialism. Look how quick Labour were to reward their client class with bumper wage rises

Liakoura
Liakoura
2 months ago

The electors voted for the current government, not civil servants whose duty is to serve. And with its majority I suggest the Prime Minister can more or less do as he likes and if necessary amend existing legislation and procedures or pass new laws.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
2 months ago
Reply to  Liakoura

Only 20% of them voted for labour, and I’m betting the 4/5’s who didn’t are beginning to regret their choices

John Tyler
John Tyler
2 months ago
Reply to  Liakoura

You’re right, of course! Unfortunately, overwhelming majorities can lead to overwhelming disasters and the current direction of policy suggests a pretty major disaster in the making.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
2 months ago

No. Is being the answer to your question.

Louise Henson
Louise Henson
2 months ago

TTK should cast aside his rectitude and take a leaf out of the book of his minister for safeguarding and violence against women, Jess Phillips. She has been openly boasting that her position as a cabinet minister, coupled with her stance on Gaza, has had the happpy effect of delivering peferential treatment on the NHS. She made the admission at an event billed as ‘An Evening with Jess Phillips’ at the Kiln Theatre in north London. Following her two-tier treatment Ms Phillips made a two-tier refusal to comment further.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
2 months ago

Of course Starmer thinks he assumes he can avoid the stench of scandal no matter what type of excrement he is standing in.

Buck Rodgers
Buck Rodgers
2 months ago

Pretty sure Peter Hitchens warned that Starmer planned to pack the civil service – and was ignored or dismissed as an hysteric.

I also take issue with this statement: “ The vast majority of Civil Servants working in the policy parts of Government, as opposed to the more frontline service delivery roles, are profoundly committed to the ethos of public service and political impartiality”; the recent history of immigration in this country suggests otherwise.

Mark Phillips
Mark Phillips
2 months ago

Cer(vical) Smear Smarmer. I have long wondered what it is about him that sets my teeth on edge. I look at his face and eyes and I think that the face is a mask to try and hide his extremism and the eyes; they make me think of someone who is looking a the world through two tubes from the back of his head. That man(?) is not entirely sane nor connected to humanity.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
2 months ago

Interesting piece, which throws up a lot of serious issues.I dealt with many UK officials over the years and I would say that reform is necessary in a number of areas, including performance management, which has become a combination of box ticking and a vehicle for promoting disastrous woke agendas. Our civil service, although of course much smaller and less skilled, has been infected with the same viruses as the UK’s. Ours, however, has not declined from being “the Rolls Royce of civil services” (with the French), as a European colleague once described the UK’s to me, to something considerably less. The decline began during the Thatcher era – as limited and pig-headed a PM as any country would wish to avoid – but was turbocharged by the sofa premiership of Tony Blair. There is no place for sofas in a Cabinet system of Government (as Liz Truss found out in fifty days). It weakens rules, standards and procedures, which any country, let alone one of Britain’s size, cannot afford to abandon. Starmer’s Government is a logical follow on from Blair and Brown (although Starmer as an individual with, it would appear, strongly authoritarian instincts is also a factor).

Chipoko
Chipoko
2 months ago

I think Starmer is a dangerous man. As an ‘apolitical’ top civil servant (awarded a knighthood for his services) he couldn’t scramble fast enough into the top ranks of the Labour Party, to which he had adhered all the way through his public position beforehand. His track record as Director of Public Prosecutions left behind some massive problems and his performance in two short months of government has been shocking in the extent of the clampdown on our civil liberties and the strangling of free speech, not to mention the ‘two-tier’ approach to controlling communities. Remember, Sir Keir supported Jeremy Corbyn in that creature’s bid for the Labour leadership AND he strongly opposed Brexit. He us an utterly ruthless operator without any stable political ethics who will change tack to pursue, secure and retain power. Beware, UK! Wake up and realise what is happening to your freedoms.

Dr Anne Kelley
Dr Anne Kelley
2 months ago
Reply to  Chipoko

The problem is that there’s little or nothing we can do about it for the next five years.