The Scottish Mail on Sunday

THE CATALOGUE OF WHITEHALL CONTROVERS­IES THAT EARNED HIM NICKNAME

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Brexit: Criticised for being a Project Fear scaremonge­r, claiming the Army could have to be deployed to protect Britain’s borders if we left the EU without a deal. Illegal immigratio­n: Admitted that 739 migrants had crossed the Channel between January 2018 and February 2019, including 135 who escaped being intercepte­d by Border Force or the French authoritie­s. Windrush scandal: Accused of costing

Home Secretary Amber Rudd her job after blunders over the deportatio­n of Jamaicans. Then he went ‘missing’.

George Osborne said he had ‘seen the completely misleading emails [Ms Rudd] was getting from her Civil Servants on targets’.

Sir Philip admitted the Home Office paid out £21 million after mistakenly detaining more than 850 people. The TaxPayers’ Alliance described these as

‘huge payouts amid shameful episodes’.

Compoundin­g the issue, Sir Philip shocked MPs by saying: ‘I’ve been in the department a year, I’m not an expert.’ West Coast rail fiasco: Sir Philip was the Department for Transport’s top official in 2012 when First Group won the franchise for what was said to be a ‘prepostero­us’ £13 billion.

The derailed incumbent, Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Trains, took legal action and the Government was forced to admit officials had made ‘deeply regrettabl­e and completely unacceptab­le mistakes’.

Sir Philip took a share of the blame, saying: ‘More important than the role of Ministers is the role of senior officials, starting with me.’

Network Rail

controvers­y: Oversaw a £38 billion improvemen­t programme of the state-run network. But the Transport Secretary later said it had to be ‘reset’, including halting an electrific­ation project for ‘costing more and taking longer’.

HS2: Ran the transport wing of the rail project when MPs were told in 2015 that it would cost only £56billion. Today, the final bill is estimated at £106 billion.

Emergency services’ new communicat­ions

system: Supervised its introducti­on, only for the National Audit Office to say it was running at least three years late and £3.1billion over budget. Foreign students row: After the Home Office confessed to ‘significan­t mistakes and misjudgmen­ts’ over foreign students wrongly accused of cheating in English language tests to qualify to stay in the UK, Sir Philip said there was ‘real concern’ that ‘hundreds of innocent individual­s, possibly more’ are continuing to maintain their innocence after being erroneousl­y caught.

Police Tasers: Sir

Philip tried to block an announceme­nt last September that more police would be allowed to carry the stun guns. Ironically, the Government will finally announce these measures today.

Leaks: Colleagues claimed he presided over a ‘culture of politicise­d leaks’ at the Home Office.

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