The Scotsman

Who will dare say ‘No, Minister’?

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Good luck to the newly-appointed Permanent Secretary to the Scottish Government, John-paul Marks.

After a blameless civil service career overseeing such tasks as the introducti­on of Universal Credit, he will find Edinburgh full of possibilit­ies and pitfalls.

My best advice is to avoid blogging. His predecesso­r but one, Sir Peter Housden, was ten minutes in the place when he fell into the Salmond clutches and was advising the entire Scottish civil service to watch Braveheart on grounds that it ‘does genuinely speak to our present condition as a nation’. The Scotsman devoted an editorial to parodying Sir Peter’s starry-eyed musings.

However, the politicisa­tion of the Scottish civil service was no laughing matter. It culminated in the White Paper of 2013 which serves as a reminder of what happens when civil servants are forced to lend credence to political fabricatio­ns – like the “likely average price of oil” being $112 a barrel, an assumption, it is timely to recall, on which the economics of independen­ce depended.

Then we had Lesley Evans, who Mr Marks will replace, as another object lesson in what goes wrong when politician­s and civil servants become intertwine­d in a shared project. They end up in court spending large sums of public money defending the indefensib­le. And so it goes on from there.

Much of the past 14 years have been devoted to underminin­g the independen­ce of the Scottish civil service and holding safeguards like Freedom of Informatio­n in contempt. Mr Marks’ first duty is to create a climate in which civil servants again feel safe to say: “No, Minister”. Good luck, indeed.

 ?? ?? 0 Can the new Caledonian Sir Humphrey ‘manage’ Scottish ministers like Jim Hacker?
0 Can the new Caledonian Sir Humphrey ‘manage’ Scottish ministers like Jim Hacker?

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