Yorkshire Post

IGNORE LIFE’S LETTER WRITERS AT YOUR PERIL

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I WAS not surprised when

recently exposed two Cabinet Ministers, Chris Grayling and Michael Gove, for inordinate delay in replying to letters from local MPs.

Gove, the Environmen­t Secretary, was asked weeks ago for an urgent decision on flood defences for Leeds. His department eventually stated that a reply was being drafted for his deputy, Thérèse Coffey: let us hope that flood waters kindly spare the city long enough for the draft to be approved.

Grayling, the Transport Secretary, took more than 120 days to respond to North-East MPs last autumn.

Theresa May’s government is the worst I can remember for replying to correspond­ence. It is a melancholy achievemen­t by a government which needs all the friends it can get – in and out of Parliament.

I have written to every Prime Minister since Harold Macmillan in the 1950s (I was a precocious little nerk) and I can still remember the thrill of getting a reply on his behalf. My best experience with correspond­ence came from Margaret Thatcher: until Mrs May, my worst came from Tony Blair.

Jeremy Corbyn and his Shadow Cabinet are equally bad at replying. I feared that I had been blackliste­d after some rude remarks about Labour’s policy towards Putin’s Russia (there isn’t one). So I wrote some sycophanti­c Lord Hailsham, Mrs Thatcher’s Lord Chancellor, often made elegant personal additions in beautiful Elizabetha­n handwritin­g.

All this effort was an unwritten tribute to British democracy and an expression that any government’s first duty was to account to Parliament.

We also took care over replies to letters from mere members of the public. I had to deal with thousands, on different topics, during the 1970s. I was instructed that I was replying on behalf of a Minister, and was expected to meet the same standards for speed and courtesy. I had to sign such letters myself. Lately, this requiremen­t has disappeare­d. I receive anonymous official replies from some branch of a department. This suggests (probably rightly) that the reply is entirely automatic and that no human being has paid any attention to my letter.

Eventually, Someone In Authority decided that the civil service was over-concerned with correspond­ence and the fine art of drafting replies. This was replaced by a new emphasis on management: private business people and copious expensive consultant­s were enlisted to teach this to civil servants. Predictabl­y the civil service became much worse at answering correspond­ence and writing intelligib­ly while offering little or no evidence of better management.

Modern government’s treatment of letter writers is matched by businesses and outside organisati­ons – even campaignin­g bodies seeking to engage the public. Two honourable exceptions from my experience are the Church of England and the Britvic soft drink company, but hundreds of others appear to treat any letter as a tiresome interrupti­on of business routine, to be answered (if at all) by some drudge exiled to the Siberia of Customer Relations.

Organisati­ons often plead that they have far less time for letters than in the past owing to the modern deluge of communicat­ion by social media and email. They are still foolish to ignore letters. Most social media communicat­ions are instantly composed and instantly forgotten. They require little thought or content, and are ideal for expressing raw sentiment uncluttere­d by fact or argument, which makes Twitter the ideal medium for Donald Trump. Thought is possible in emails, but only optional. These can be composed in momentary joy or rage and copied freely to multiple people.

By contrast, letters require some effort. A letter writer is virtually compelled to achieve coherence and is given multiple opportunit­ies to improve the letter by the processes of composing, reading and preparing it for final despatch. Almost by definition, letter writers are those most motivated to communicat­e to their addressee and those most likely to have something worth saying. For government­s, letter writers may be a small minority of voters but they are those most engaged in politics and very likely to influence the opinions of others. They are also a free source of talent and ideas.

From early times, American politician­s have paid deep attention to correspond­ence. Thomas Jefferson as President used to answer letters by hand, even from scroungers and place-seekers. Harry Truman, an active modern President, often did the same. Bill Clinton had an awesome correspond­ence unit. I have seen replies from him preserved lovingly in many American homes, for all that his signature is an evident facsimile, because they showed that their owners’ letter to him had been read and understood. This was part of Clinton’s astonishin­g empathy with the American people, which saw him through crises which might have felled another President.

Theresa May is given to holding away-days with her Ministers. They would all be far better occupied having an away-day with their letters.

Richard Heller was chief of staff to Denis Healey and Gerald Kaufman, both prolific letter-writers.

 ??  ?? Theresa May holding an away-day with her Ministers at Chequers. It has been argued that they would be far better occupied having an away-day with their letters.
Theresa May holding an away-day with her Ministers at Chequers. It has been argued that they would be far better occupied having an away-day with their letters.
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