The Daily Telegraph

Mandarin absent at Vennells CBE decision

- By Nick Gutteridge WHITEHALL correspond­ent

A SENIOR civil servant has said he “undoubtedl­y” signed off on Paula Vennells’ nomination for a CBE, but admitted he missed the meeting where it was rubber stamped.

Sir Alex Chisholm told MPS that the nomination for a CBE, which the former Post Office boss has now handed back, “undoubtedl­y would’ve come across my desk”.

But he insisted he was not present at a committee meeting where the controvers­ial final decision was made to go ahead and award her the honour.

He also said that Ms Vennells was not a “personal recommenda­tion” and suggested that it was the Post Office which put her forward for the CBE.

Ms Vennells was granted her honour in December 2018 despite having run the Post Office at a time when it was embroiled in the Horizon scandal.

A year earlier, hundreds of sub-postmaster­s had launched legal action against conviction­s based on evidence from faulty accounting software.

The victims had their reputation­s ruined and lost their livelihood­s as a result, with many left bankrupt and some even being wrongly imprisoned.

Sir Alex, who is now permanent secretary at the Cabinet Office, was the most senior civil servant in the Department for Business (BEIS) when Ms Vennells was awarded her CBE.

He was asked in an appearance before the Commons public administra­tion and constituti­onal affairs committee if he had signed off on the nomination.

“Certainly that recommenda­tion would have come through my department at that time, no question,” he told MPS. “I didn’t recall the discussion at the economy and honours committee, and when I asked the secretaria­t they said that’s because you weren’t there.

“So I missed that particular meeting, so I can’t help the committee with understand­ing that final process.”

Pressed further on whether he had put Ms Vennells’ name forward, he added: “Not a personal recommenda­tion but undoubtedl­y Post Office Ltd, as a body under BEIS, would have come forward with the recommenda­tion of the sponsoring department. It would’ve been on a list of names, a large list of names, and undoubtedl­y would’ve come across my desk at that time.”

Ms Vennells has apologised for her role in the Horizon scandal and agreed to forfeit her CBE. The King formally stripped her of the honour last Friday.

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