The Guardian (USA)

Cronyism in Britain is rampant and goes unpunished. We're turning into a banana republic

- Polly Toynbee

The sums are so vast, the secrecy so shocking, that “chumocracy” doesn’t begin to capture what Britain has become – redolent as we are of banana republics, the Russian oligarchy and failed states. Lost is Britain’s self-image as the bowler-hatted beacon of civic rectitude, as our erstwhile Rolls-Royce civil service goes the way of, well, Rolls-Royce, no longer a British-owned car company.

The Good Law Project, the admirable not-for-profit public-cleanser, last week proved in the high court that the government had breached what the judge called the “vital public function” of transparen­cy over “vast quantities” of taxpayers’ money. A VIP fast-lane for protective equipment contracts made the contacts of ministers, MPs, peers and officials 10 times more likely to win contracts. PPE prices sky-rocketed: even bodybags were being charged at 14 times their previous cost. The Good Law Project’s demands for publicatio­n of those favoured suppliers, their VIP sponsors and prices paid have been denied so far.

Why the secrecy? The Guardian has already revealed that the medical regulator is investigat­ing Alex Bourne, health secretary Matt Hancock’s ex-neighbour, who won £30m of work producing medical vials, despite having no experience in the field.

In the panic over empty PPE shelves in hospitals and care homes, that dash to procure might be forgiven were it not that favours to friends is the everyday modus operandi for Boris Johnson. But before a litany of his civic shame, pause here to enjoy this, the foreword he wrote to the ministeria­l code: “There must be no bullying and no harassment; no leaking; no breach of collective responsibi­lity. No misuse of taxpayer money and no actual or perceived conflicts of interest. The precious principles of public life enshrined in this document – integrity, objectivit­y, accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, honesty and leadership in the public interest – must be honoured at all times; as must the political impartiali­ty of our much admired civil service.” Ha!

Alex Allan felt it impossible to stay on as the prime minister’s official adviser on that code, after his finding against the home secretary, Priti Patel, for bullying was rejected. Nor could Jonathan Jones remain as permanent secretary to the government legal department while Johnson broke internatio­nal law with the internal market bill. Altogether, under Johnson six permanent secretarie­s have gone – not so permanent in this regime.

The Good Law Project now also seeks a judicial review into the Guardian’s revelation of a £564,000 contract for opinion polling, given without tender to Dominic Cummings’ close chum Rachel Wolf, who co-wrote the 2019 Tory party manifesto. What an irony that in her Downing Street days she planned for all civil servants to face constant exams to guard against a culture where “everyone rises to their position of incompeten­ce”. Yet she was put to no test, not even basic tendering for a fat contract.

The Sunday Times reveals that Lord Udny-Lister, as deputy mayor of London under Johnson, helped approve £4bn of property schemes for developers – and within months of leaving office went on to work for them. As Downing Street strategic adviser last year, he stayed on their payrolls, though this was in compliance with codes of conduct.

In a blast at Tories “rife with conflicts of interest”, Rachel Reeves, the shadow cabinet office minister, made a “sack Serco” pledge that Labour would return private contracts to the public sector. Yet it seems nothing shames this government. The National Audit Office is a fine institutio­n for checking on financial integrity and value for money. But, though it found that business owners with political ties to the Tories were given high-priority status over pandemic contracts, it has no machinery to force a government that doesn’t give a damn to act on these findings. Which leaves the public-spirited crowdfunde­rs of the Good Law Project as a last stand against collapsing civic integrity. Although, as Hancock told the BBC’s Andrew Marr, he doesn’t even care that he’s broken the law.

The commission­er for public appointmen­ts, Peter Riddell, all too rarely makes public protests, but recently he rose up against “unregulate­d appointmen­ts”, such as that of Tory peer Dido Harding to head the chaotic test-and-trace programme. Last week the health department’s own evidence showed the £22bn she has spent had had a “relatively small” effect. Riddell also protested against stacked interview panels: utterly unqualifie­d ex-Tory MP James Wharton was appointed head of the Office for Students by a selection panel devoid of higher education experts.

Four non-executive directors appointed as “independen­ts” to oversee Michael Gove’s Cabinet Office are all Gove allies, including Gisela Stuart of his Vote Leave clan. According to a recent survey, omore than half of all department­al board appointmen­ts, far from being independen­t outsiders, are special advisers and close political allies.

Riddell lobbed a warning at briefings that the Ofcom chair will go to the former Mail editor-in-chief Paul Dacre, a man rabidly biased against the BBC, judges, Europe and migrants, to name just a few. Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s good chum, the Tory donor Richard Sharp, was made BBC chair. Why no investigat­ion into communitie­s secretary Robert Jenrick’s improper initial interventi­on to help Tory donor Richard Desmond avoid tax over a £1bn planning bid? Not only this, but packing the Lords with donors is the Putinesque new normal.

Not since the 1853 Northcote-Trevelyan civil service reforms has a government so impudently and defiantly ignored appointmen­ts principles. Had Labour committed any of these outrages, the Tory press would have hounded it to death. Remember Jennifer Arcuri, Johnson’s “close friend”, given £10,000 from his London mayoral fund and invited on potentiall­y lucrative trade missions? The Independen­t Office for Police Conduct found that the officers making decisions on sponsorshi­p and trade missions knew of this relationsh­ip, “and this influenced their decision-making”. Imagine if that were Keir Starmer.

Clean democracie­s are defined by how well they guard against their leaders favouring family and friends. But the essence of chumocracy runs far deeper. People instinctiv­ely appoint their own kind: “merit” tends to be spotted only in those who talk, think and believe like those doing the choosing. In a wild blog, Dominic Cummings pretended to break out of this straitjack­et, calling for “super-talented weirdos” with “genuine cognitive diversity”. But no, his rambling job ad required economics graduates with “an outstandin­g record at a great university”: he was a prince among tribal chum-appointers.

Breaking the spirit of favouritis­m is ferociousl­y hard: when I was at the BBC, a valiant attempt was made to recruit raw talent outside top graduates with manicured hinterland­s. Ads, leaflets and notices were posted in hairdresse­rs, pubs, McDonald’s, mosques, temples and on buses: no name, education or experience, just write to us with your programme ideas. Thousands applied.

When these had been whittled down to 30, the disappoint­ed selectors found they had mainly picked identical top graduate types. By instinct, unconsciou­sly, they chose the kind who wrote like them, thought like them. Unconsciou­s bias courses help us understand inbuilt prejudices, but eradicatin­g it from deep within is far harder.

Due process in public appointmen­s matters not just for good government, but because it sets a benchmark of fair employment. Nepotism stinks as badly as awarding contracts to VIP pals: glorying in both, the government, rotting from the head, spreads the stench of corruption through everything it touches.

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 ?? Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/ Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Matt Hancock told the BBC’s Andrew Marr that he doesn’t even care that he broke the law over Covid contracts.’
Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/ Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘Matt Hancock told the BBC’s Andrew Marr that he doesn’t even care that he broke the law over Covid contracts.’

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