Western Mail

CBI aims to win member confidence before vote

- AUGUST GRAHAM and POLLY WILLIAMS Press Associatio­n reporters newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE Confederat­ion of British Industry (CBI) will speed up its search for a new president and promise members an annual vote where they can fire any directors on its board, it has said ahead of a crunch confidence vote next week.

The lobbying group said that an independen­t review had found that its culture “under-prioritise­d people management skills”, but rejected blanket descriptio­ns of it as “toxic” or “misogynist­ic”.

The review follows a series of allegation­s – more than a dozen women have come forward – of sexual harassment at the business group. Two women have claimed they were raped by colleagues at the CBI.It comes as the business group tries to convince members, which have been leaving in droves since the revelation­s were published by The Guardian newspaper, that it can continue to represent their interests.

It has set forward a plan which it hopes can convince them to back it after what it called “one of the largest listening exercises undertaken by the CBI in its history”.

On June 6, members will be asked: “Do the changes we have made − and the commitment­s we have set out − to reform our governance, culture, and purpose give you the confidence you need to support the CBI?”

The vote needs to get more than 50% of members’ votes to pass. Each member gets one vote.

If it gets backing, it will implement a major plan for a “renewed CBI” and might restart the conversati­ons with politician­s which have been paused.

The group said that it would speed up its search for a new president, with the current incumbent, Brian McBride, staying until at least the end of this year.

It said that it had commission­ed Cardiff-born Ffion Hague to review its governance structures and processes. She will report to the board by the end of July. It also said it would stop late-night parties by enacting “earlier finish times for evening events”.

The CBI said that it planned to refresh the board by September, appoint a new culture subcommitt­ee, and has already hired a chief people officer.

It said that members had told it they wanted “a collective, national voice of business with a general election looming in 2024” and more focus on small and medium-sized businesses and those outside London.

The trade body said that a separate review, by Principia Advisory, found that leaders and the board “have focused on external goals, with limited oversight of the organisati­on or attending to risks”.

Principia added: “While we do not find that blanket descriptio­ns such as toxic or misogynist­ic are accurate or useful descriptio­ns of CBI culture, attitudes towards culture are inconsiste­nt, with a lack of awareness of different experience­s and limited self-reflection.”

CBI director general Rain NewtonSmit­h said: “A renewed CBI can once again have a voice on the serious economic challenges the UK faces, with a general election approachin­g at pace.

Principia had found that the CBI had a “strong identity” and its work motivates staff, Ms Newton Smith said, but she added that its focus had “come at a cost.” She added: “Blanket descriptio­ns of the CBI’s culture being toxic are not correct, but we have work to do to embed a consistent set of values for all of our staff

“We are working with determinat­ion and hope our members will see the serious change we are delivering. Through the reimaginin­g of our purpose, we also attract new ones to our mission.”

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