The Scotsman

Badenoch sacked Post Office boss over ‘difficulti­es with governance’

- Nina Lloyd scotsman.com

Kemi Badenoch has said she was forced to intervene over "difficulti­es" with Post Office governance by sacking its former chairman as the company reels from the Horizon IT scandal.

The Business Secretary would not be drawn on whether there will be other departures from the board of directors after Henry Staunton stepped down from the role on Saturday.

She told broadcaste­rs there needed to be a "change of personnel" and it "just wasn't working" as the company remains under heightened scrutiny over the wrongful prosecutio­n of hundreds of sub-postmaster­s.

"It was very sad that we had to come to this conclusion... and one of the things that I think is important when we do need to have a change of personnel is that we don't hound the people or go after them," Ms Badenoch told Sky's Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips.

"The issues that the Post Office have go well beyond the Horizon scandal, so this wasn't just about Horizon and the ongoing inquiry into the Post Office; it's about the Post Office as an entity and the governance of it.

"There is a board, there have been disagreeme­nts across the board, and my view is that sometimes you just need a different person to deal with different issues."

Mr Staunton stepped down as chairman of the stateowned business, having only been appointed in December 2022 following nine years as chairman of WH Smith.

Ms Badenoch said she had a phone call with him at the weekend and they had "parted ways with mutual consent", but later added that she had asked him to go.

He had been tasked with leading the board of directors as the business reels from the fallout of what has been described as the UK'S biggest miscarriag­e of justice.

More than 700 branch managers were prosecuted by the Post Office between 1999 and 2015 after faulty Horizon accounting software made it look as though money was missing from their branches.

Hundreds of sub-postmaster­s and subpostmis­tresses are still awaiting compensati­on despite the Government announcing that those who have had conviction­s quashed are eligible for £600,000 pay-outs.

It comes at one of the most turbulent points in the company's history, with a statutory inquiry into the saga under way and renewed public anger following its dramatisat­ion in ITV'S Mr Bates vs The Post Office earlier this month.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has also announced blanket legislatio­n to exonerate those wrongly prosecuted after the Tv series returned the scandal to the spotlight.

On Sunday, Ms Badenoch denied the Government is only taking action in response to the ITV drama, when asked whether she is ashamed of the timeline of decision-making.

"It wasn't TV that made this happen. It had been happening ... The drama is not what has been prompting Government action," she said.

Asked whether there will be further resignatio­ns, she said: "I won't be making any further comments around personnel changes.”

 ?? ?? Henry Staunton has been ousted as chairman of the Post Office
Henry Staunton has been ousted as chairman of the Post Office

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