Regina Leader-Post

U.K.’S top civil servant pushed out in shakeup

- ELIZABETH PIPER

‘HARD RAIN’

LONDON• Britain’s most senior civil servant stepped down on Sunday after reports of clashes with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s top political adviser, part of what is expected to be a wider shakeup of officials at the heart of power.

Johnson’s senior political adviser, Dominic Cummings, has long been critical of the civil service, saying government is not nimble enough to deliver change. Some newspapers reported he warned aides last week that a “hard rain is going to fall.”

Earlier this year, Johnson forced the resignatio­n of his finance minister, tightening his control over the treasury, and just earlier this month he announced the merger of its diplomatic and aid department­s.

Mark Sedwill, a career diplomat, was appointed cabinet secretary and national security adviser by Johnson’s predecesso­r Theresa May. In a letter to Johnson released on Sunday, he wrote that, having stayed on for “the acute phase” of the coronaviru­s crisis, he was now leaving as “the government’s focus is now shifting to domestic and global recovery and renewal.”

He said he would leave government service at the end of September.

Johnson’s office released a letter in which he thanked Sedwill for his “outstandin­g service,” and asked him to lead a new G7 panel on global economic security as Britain assumes the presidency of the rich nations’ group and hosts its summit next year.

David Frost, Britain’s chief negotiator with the European Union, will replace Sedwill as national security adviser around the end of August and there will be a competitio­n to appoint a new cabinet secretary and head of the civil service.

Britain’s main opposition Labour Party raised questions over the timing of the move. Helen Hayes, policy chief shadowing the cabinet office, said: “On the day it was revealed millions of jobs across the country could be under threat in the coming months, it is very concerning that Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings are preoccupie­d with reshufflin­g Whitehall.”

Johnson’s team has been criticized over its response to the coronaviru­s crisis, blamed by opposition parties and some scientists for being too slow to tackle the pandemic.

Britain now has one of the world’s highest death tolls from the disease and both the Bank of England and government budget forecaster­s have warned of the potential for unemployme­nt to surge as the government phases out temporary support measures for workers hit by lockdown measures.

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