Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

The ugly

She ‘belittled and bullied’ her staff, creating a toxic atmosphere of fear ..no wonder some of them sang ‘Ding Dong the Witch is Dead’ when PM May sacked her

- BY JASON BEATTIE and BEN GLAZE

Head of Politics

WHEN Priti Patel arrived at the Home Office in July 2019, staff knew what to expect.

The Conservati­ve MP already had a reputation for wearing sharply-cut suits and wielding even more sharply-cut elbows.

Some ministers inspire loyalty, others are a cause for despair.

In Whitehall, Ms Patel was known for inciting another kind of reaction – fear.

In her apology yesterday, she said: “I am direct and have, at times, got frustrated.”

Civil servants will claim this is the understate­ment of the year.

As the ambitious Brexiteer worked her way up the ministeria­l ladder she started to amass what ma ny w o u l d regard as a disproport­ionate number of complaints about her behaviour.

S h e has b een accused of belittling officials and creating an “atmosphere of fear” with her unreasonab­le demands.

EXPLOSIVE

These may not have come to light had not Sir Philip Rutnam, the most senior civil servant at the Home Office, made his explosive resignatio­n statement in February.

Sir Philip said: “I have received allegation­s that her conduct has included shouting and swearing, belittling people, making unreasonab­le and repeated demands – behaviour that created fear and that needed some bravery to call out.” Sir Philip is now pursuing a case for constructi­ve dismissal.

Shortly afterwards, it emerged that a civil servant at the Department for Work and Pensions had received a £25,000 payout after being sacked in 2015.

Legal papers showed the junior employee brought a f ormal complaint of bullying a n d h a ra ssmen t against Ms Patel, then the Employment Minister, and the department.

According to the documents, Ms Patel had told her to “get lost” and

“get out of her face”

PLEA Stratton

and had acted “without warning ” and with an “unprovoked level of aggression”. The woman took an overdose of prescripti­on drugs following foll the alleged incident.

A third claim then emerged, em this time at the Department Depar for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Dev where Ms Patel wa was alleged to have “repeatedly ha harassed and belittled” her privat private secretary so badly that he signed off suffering from st stress.

Each of the allegati tions was s strongly denied by Ms Patel. Born

in 1972, Ms Patel is the daughter of Gujarati parents who fled Uganda in the 1960s. She was born in London and educated in Watford, at a girls’ school , where her contempora­ries reportedly included Spice Girl Geri Halliwell.

At 18, inspired by Margaret Thatcher, Ms Patel joined her local Conservati­ve Party.

She once said of Mrs Thatcher: “She had a unique ability to understand what made people tick, households tick and businesses tick. Managing the economy, balancing the books and making decisions – not purchasing things the country couldn’t afford.”

After studying economics at Keele University, Ms Patel worked

at Conservati­ve Central Office before briefly jumping ship to join the anti-eu Referendum Party.

She was returned to the Tory fold by William Hague, who made her one of his press secretarie­s.

After being elected as the MP for Witham, Essex, in May 2010, she spent most of the five-year Tory/ Lib Dem coalition on the backbenche­s, making speeches about cutting taxes and scrapping the foreign aid budget.

But when it began, Priti Patel’s ascent through the ranks of government was rapid.

In July 2014, she became a junior minister at the Treasury. After the Conservati­ves’ shock 2015 election victory – the party’s first outright

majority for 23 years – David Cameron made her Minister of State at the Department for Work and Pensions, and 16 months later new PM Theresa May appointed her to the Cabinet.

She put Ms Patel in charge at Internatio­nal Developmen­t, overseeing the foreign aid budget, but Ms Patel, say witnesses, was far from delighted.

One official watched her stomp through the entrance to the building in Whitehall and stride across “stonyfaced” without acknowledg­ing staff.

They looked on in horror as she headed straight for the lift to the Secretary of State’s office.

Staff later received an email setting out where Ms Patel believed money was being wasted and stressing things would change under her leadership. A source who worked with Ms Patel said: “If she took against an official she would let it be known and she would ask for people to be removed from j o b s . S h e’s v e r y robust, very demanding and wants impossible stuff done instantly.

“S h e w o ul d n’ t take no for an answer. I ’ve seen people trembling in meetings with her.

“But she had her favourites and would cosy up to them.” The source said Ms Patel found the Civil Ser vice “hugely frustratin­g”. They added: “She thinks of herself as a doer. She inherently dislikes civil servants, she thinks they are risk averse and are trying to stop whatever she wants to achieve.”

Ms Patel’s posting at the department did not last long. She was fired after 16 months, for holding unauthoris­ed meetings with the Isra e l i g o v e r nment while on holiday.

In November 2017, as the clamour was growing for her to lose her job, she flew to Africa for an official trip, only to be ordered back to London to be fired by Theresa May. But Ms Patel was reluctant to give up the trappings of power and asked to fly home in luxury.

An insider claimed: “On that trip when she was basically facing the sack, she flew out to Africa and was summoned back by the PM. She demanded her private office put her on a business class f light – even though she was to be sacked.”

The source said officials refused and she eventually flew in economy.

When they heard she had been fired, staff at the department were reported to have been so relieved that some broke into an impromptu rendition of Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead from the Wizard of Oz. Yet despite this, Ms Patel’s ministeria­l career was resurrecte­d when Boris Johnson entered No10 in July 2019, and promptly handed her one of the four great offices of state.

Many saw her promotion as reward for her devotion to the Brexit cause.

An official said the presence in government of Ms Patel’s Vote Leave pal Dominic Cummings, who quit as the PM’S chief adviser last week, amplified her “ruthless” streak.

At one time, Ms Patel attracted attention as a possible future leader. Now she is best known for her ability to attract controvers­y.

Her unreasonab­le, repeated demands created fear.. and that needed some bravery to call out SIR PHILIP RUTNAM EX-PERMANENT SECRETARY AT THE HOME OFFICE

 ??  ?? BY HER SIDE With PM Boris Johnson
SHAMED Theresa May fired Patel in 2017
BY HER SIDE With PM Boris Johnson SHAMED Theresa May fired Patel in 2017
 ??  ?? RESIGNED Inquiry chief Sir Alex Allan
RESIGNED Inquiry chief Sir Alex Allan
 ??  ?? BULLY FOR U Priti Patel is to stay at Home Office despite probe
BULLY FOR U Priti Patel is to stay at Home Office despite probe

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