Civil Service World

ANDREW HUDSON LOCALLY-SOURCED POLITICS

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IN WHITEHALL, THE TEMPTATION IS TO GLIDE PAST LOCAL ELECTIONS. BUT THAT WOULD MISS VITAL CHANGES

With the focus on Ukraine and rising energy bills, most people – including many civil servants – won’t have paid much attention to the fact that we had local elections across Great Britain on 5 May, and Assembly elections in Northern Ireland. For Whitehall, too, the temptation is to glide past this event. After all, most councils won’t change, and the officers are still in post. But that would miss vital changes for some.

It’s easy for civil servants to grossly underestim­ate the importance of the political and personal in the working lives of senior local government officers. Before I went to work in local government in 1999, I was in charge of the Health

Team in the Treasury. We spent a fair bit of time with local government officers, and read the local government press – indeed it was building that understand­ing that prompted me to move to Essex County Council. But I too had not fully grasped the nature of the interactio­n with local politician­s.

As a civil servant, most of your contact is likely to be with chief executives and other chief officers such as the director of adult social services. They tend to be sitting on working groups, or hosting visits from Whitehall. And there certainly used to be more focus on how a new “chief” might be livening up a sleepy council than on political change. Of course some local political leaders had a very high profile, both locally and nationally, but they perhaps stood out because they were the exception.

That started to change in the late 1990s, as the Blair government implemente­d changes to the way local councils were run, replacing the old cross-party committee system with either an elected mayor, or a leader and cabinet. The latter remains most prevalent, and it deliberate­ly puts more focus on political leadership. Individual cabinet members have a clearer and bigger role in decision making than the old committee chairs.

That trend has continued. There are more elected mayors, and more cabinet members who are full time in their roles, which wasn’t always the case, indeed would have been the exception 20 years ago. A younger generation of leading councillor­s looks to be more in this mode.

Changes in leadership are now taking place up and down the country. The outcomes locally reflect the sheer variety of local government. Some councils have remained effectivel­y one-party states. At the other extreme, some councils are always finely balanced: a colleague of mine was chief executive at a big unitary where the majority was always down to the odd seat, and one-third of the councillor­s were up for election every year, so political control could tip very easily – and that’s before the impact of illness, death, and personal fall-outs in between elections. Officers in those councils need to be particular­ly skilful at navigating changing political waters.

Others may need to acquire those skills quickly, if the electorate decides on a change.

One thing that helps – and again something not always appreciate­d in Whitehall – is that local government officers constituti­onally work for the council as a whole, rather than just for the leadership of the day. So as (effectivel­y) director of finance at Essex, I would meet the opposition ahead of the budget-setting meetings, to explain the background and answer questions, though not of course to talk about the administra­tion’s proposals. And that brings out that contact with the politician­s is closer and more immediate than in Whitehall: they don’t on the whole have private offices as gatekeeper­s, so when we wanted to talk to them, we just rang them up, and they did the same. That can be great for both sides where the relationsh­ip works well. It can be career-changing if it doesn’t, in a way that is not unknown in Whitehall, but happens much less often.

Understand­ing of local government has improved in the civil service: at one point, if you said you were going to County Hall, some people would assume that was somewhere near County Mayo on the left hand side! But it’s important to be sensitive, this May, to the fact that working life for some colleagues in councils up and down the country has become very different, overnight, thanks to local democracy.

“Contact with the politician­s is closer and more immediate than in Whitehall: they don’t on the whole have private offices, so when we wanted to talk to them, we just rang them up”

Andrew Hudson is a former chief executive of the Valuation Office Agency and director general of public services at HM Treasury. He currently chairs the Centre for Homelessne­ss Impact

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