Civil Service World

ED REZA SCHWITZER CHANGING THE NARRATIVE

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(even amongst politicos, I have been shocked to find).

The final reason is, bluntly, there are things in the civil service that do need to change. It is perfectly legitimate to question whether the civil service’s structure provides the right amount of accountabi­lity for senior officials, whether more civil servants should be based outside of London, or whether “churn” amongst the senior civil service is too high. Sometimes I fear we flip-flop too much on some of these issues – not long ago, civil servants used to be accused of staying in one job for too often and getting “siloed” in their thinking, for example. But there is certainly a debate to be had.

But the recent criticism the civil service has been subjected to is light years from these sensible debates. The civil service’s total paybill is around £14bn a year – so for Rees-Mogg to be right about the NI increase, we’d basically have to abolish the whole civil service. I’m not sure how efficient that would be.

Rees-Mogg and others are no fools – they are smart enough to know exactly what they’re saying and why. So simply responding with “that’s not true!” will not diminish the attacks in any way or lessen their impact.

So what if, like me, you believe an impartial and effective civil service is fundamenta­l to our democracy, and that we need to protect against these attacks? I offer three thoughts.

Firstly, former civil servants can be more vocal. There are plenty of highly intelligen­t, erudite former permanent secretarie­s and others who could do an excellent job of giving the other side of the debate.

Secondly, we must reduce the sense of “otherness”. Civil servants are human beings. Having moved from the civil service to the private sector in the last six months, I can assure you that civil servants go to work much like anyone else. They have the same pride in their jobs, and the same gut-wrenching feel when things go wrong (which is often, at the moment). We need people to better understand the work of almost half a million civil servants through a lens that isn’t a clip of Yes, Minister from four decades ago. How many people know that the Border Force officials and jobcentre staff they interact with are civil servants? Institute for Government reports help, but I suspect their reports do not have the same level of cut through as a comment from Dowden or ReesMogg splashed over the front pages of a tabloid.

Finally, we need to present an alternativ­e narrative in response to more reasonable criticisms. The answer to “aren’t civil servants skiving off at home?” can’t be that they’re actually superheroe­s who are working 60-hour weeks. The response must be realistic – that, yes, many of the issues raised are relevant to the civil service, but they’re also relevant to every large organisati­on. And actually, don’t most of us want to live lives where we work a reasonable number of hours and have time at the end of the day to see family or friends? There is much that the civil service can learn from the private sector, but we should also be bolder in reminding the country of the best of the civil service.

So the next time a minister blames the Rizla papers on the civil service, let’s resist the urge to cry foul, and focus more on reminding the public that these are working people who, for the most part, are much like them.

THE CIVIL SERVICE CAN CERTAINLY LEARN FROM THE

Ed Reza Schwitzer is an associate director in the education practice at Public First and a former DfE civil servant

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“Rees-Mogg and others are no fools – they are smart enough to know exactly what they’re saying and why. Simply responding with ‘that’s not true!’ will not diminish the attacks”
New minister for government efficiency “Rees-Mogg and others are no fools – they are smart enough to know exactly what they’re saying and why. Simply responding with ‘that’s not true!’ will not diminish the attacks”

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