Kamis, 15 April 2021

Greensill: No boundaries between civil service and private sector, watchdog warns - BBC News

The rules on ministers and top officials taking jobs with private firms need urgent reform, the government's adviser on them has said.

Lord Pickles said there did not appear to be "any boundaries at all" between civil servants and the private sector.

It comes after news a top civil servant worked for Greensill Capital while still on the government payroll.

Labour says things are becoming "murkier" and lobbyists have an "open door" to government.

Greensill Capital is at the centre of a row about access, influence and lobbying that has engulfed Westminster.

The government has announced a review of contacts between top officials and ministers, including former prime minister David Cameron, and the now failed finance firm.

It will be led by Nigel Boardman, a non-executive board member of the department for business.

Scandal

Speaking on a visit to Dartmouth College in Devon, Boris Johnson said he agreed with Lord Pickles that reform was needed.

The PM said: "I think the most important thing is for us to get to the bottom of it properly and I want all ministers and civil servants to be making the information that needs to be known known to Mr Boardman and let's see what he has to say.

"We need to understand what's gone on here."

On Wednesday, Mr Johnson ordered Conservative MPs to vote down Labour's call for a "full" MP-led inquiry into Greensill and lobbying more widely.

Tory peer Lord Pickles chairs the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments (Acoba) which advises former ministers and civil servants on outside employment.

He told the Commons public administration committee he had warned of a scandal but "this is not where I expected it to come from".

He added: "There is nothing wrong with lobbyists. What is wrong is with unregulated lobbying, secret lobbying - people getting an undue advantage.

"Our entire political careers have been built by lobbying of some sort. But where it becomes wrong is where it is not properly regulated and is transparent."

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Analysis

Whitehall sign
Getty Images

By political reporter Brian Wheeler

Former government ministers - and top civil servants - are never short of job offers, but what sort of work should they be allowed to do after leaving the corridors of power?

Lord Pickles' Acoba committee is meant to ensure that they don't use their insider knowledge and contacts to enrich themselves for two years after leaving the government.

The danger is that if they get too cosy with business it could lead to bias and corruption.

The Acoba committee has long been criticised for being toothless - and Eric Pickles appears to agree. As things stand, he is neither a watchdog nor a regulator, he says.

His committee is there to offer advice, which is not always sought.

He appears determined to change this, although he says there is no need for the "thermonuclear" option of fines and new laws.

Only that if you break the rules, there must be "consequences".

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On Tuesday it emerged that a former government procurement officer, Bill Crothers, joined Greensill as an adviser in 2015 while still working as a civil servant - after getting the go-ahead from the Cabinet Office.

Lord Pickles said that while it was not unusual for civil servants to have second jobs and to share their expertise, Mr Crothers' "excuse" when justifying his work with Greensill surprised him.

"It did seem, talking to other colleagues who had enjoyed being civil servants in the past, that they also shared my surprise - this seems to be a new thing, or a new excuse."

Bill Crothers
UK government

He said contractors and consultants to the government should have to sign a memorandum of understanding about the restrictions that would be placed on them after completing their public sector work.

"Simple steps could be taken now" he said to tighten things up including "looking carefully at contracts of employment" and changes could be put in place "well before the summer".

'Milk round'

He said the public was "entitled" to know the arrangements for second jobs.

"I mean, if Mr Crothers had decided he wanted to have a milk round or something, I don't think we would be terribly worried.

"But his particular position, in terms of running procurement and working for a commercial organisation, is something that does require a full and frank and transparent explanation," he added.

He expressed his frustration that Acoba had a "very limited and defined role," but added that most people do follow the rules and it is "only a tiny minority" who cause problems.

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What inquiries are being held?

  • Government-commissioned review to report by the end of June will include David Cameron's role and how senior civil servant Bill Crothers was given permission to work for Greensill while on the government payroll
  • The head of the civil service, Simon Case, has ordered all government departments to disclose senior staff with second jobs and outside interests by the end of the week
  • Treasury Select Committee announced investigation into Greensill Capital on Tuesday with details set out next week
  • Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee has just announced its own inquiry in to "topical issues arising around Greensill"
  • Committee on Standards in public life looking at the wider issues
  • Cabinet Office review of the Lobbying Act, launched before the Greensill row, will take it into account
  • Committee on Standards in Public Life
  • Commons public accounts committee is also looking into Greensill controversy
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It was possible to create a "robust system" without spending "enormous sums" of money and creating layers of bureaucracy, Lord Pickles told MPs.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said more and stronger lobbying rules are needed because the current system "is not working".

He said ministers were being lobbied for "massive" procurement contracts "involving millions sometimes billions of pounds".

He added: "Increasingly we're seeing a murkier and murkier picture whether it's the way contracts are handed out, the lack of due process or the lobbying which is not a revolving door, it's an open door now in to government".

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2021-04-15 13:30:54Z
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Prince Philip: Charles and Camilla visit tributes in first joint appearance since Duke of Edinburgh's death - Sky News

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall have made their first joint public appearance since the death of Prince Philip, reading cards left on floral tributes for the duke at Buckingham Palace and other royal residences.

Charles and Camilla visited Marlborough House in central London - home of the Commonwealth - where flowers left at the palace are taken each evening.

EMBARGOED TO 1100 THURSDAY APRIL 15 The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall visit the gardens of Marlborough House, London, to view the flowers and messages left by members of the public outside Buckingham Palace following the death of the Duke of Edinburgh on April 10. Picture date: Thursday April 15, 2021.
Image: It is the couple's first joint appearance since the Duke of Edinburgh passed away
Some of the tributes left outside Buckingham Palace
Image: Some of the tributes left outside Buckingham Palace

The couple were pictured stopping to look at some of the bouquets, many of which carried emotional comments.

Items left include a model of a Land Rover similar to the one that will bear the Duke of Edinburgh's coffin on Saturday, with "The Duke R.I.P" on the roof.

A model Land Rover left as a tribute to Prince Philip
EMBARGOED TO 1100 THURSDAY APRIL 15 The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall visit the gardens of Marlborough House, London, to view the flowers and messages left by members of the public outside Buckingham Palace following the death of the Duke of Edinburgh on April 10. Picture date: Thursday April 15, 2021.
Image: The couple visited the gardens of Marlborough House

Next to it, a card from "Marian & Marum" read: "Your memory will never fade. Rest in Peace."

Another said: "Words cannot even begin to express our sorrow. You are in our prayers."

A further one added: "HRH A True Gentleman. Thank you for your devoted service to our country. We shall miss you."

More from Duchess Of Cornwall

EMBARGOED TO 1100 THURSDAY APRIL 15 The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall visit the gardens of Marlborough House, London, to view the flowers and messages left by members of the public outside Buckingham Palace following the death of the Duke of Edinburgh on April 10. Picture date: Thursday April 15, 2021
EMBARGOED TO 1100 THURSDAY APRIL 15 The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall visit the gardens of Marlborough House, London, to view the flowers and messages left by members of the public outside Buckingham Palace following the death of the Duke of Edinburgh on April 10. Picture date: Thursday April 15, 2021
Image: Prince Charles has paid tribute to his 'dear Papa'

Some of the notes have been written directly to the Queen. One said: "Sending our love and condolences on the loss of your beloved Prince Philip, yours always, love Layla, Lis and Neil xxxx."

Another quoted Her Majesty's well-known comment about her husband, saying: "We are so sorry for your profound loss. Your Majesty's 'strength and stay' will endure in our hearts always."

The tributes have been taken a short distance to Marlborough House
Image: Many people have wanted to send their condolences
Watch and follow live coverage of Prince Philip's funeral service on Sky News from 12.30pm on Saturday.
Image: Watch and follow live coverage of Prince Philip's funeral service on Sky News from 12.30pm on Saturday.

Speaking at the weekend, Prince Charles paid tribute to his "dear Papa", who he said was a "very special person".

The Earl of Wessex, meanwhile, has thanked those involved in the Duke of Edinburgh's Award for sharing their memories of his father and experiences of the scheme.

"He may have departed this world, but his spirit and ethos lives on through his award, through each and every life touched, transformed, inspired - then, now and in the future," Edward said.

Marlborough House, just off The Mall, is a fitting place for the flowers to be taken, given that Philip undertook more than 220 solo visits to Commonwealth countries between 1949 and 2016, and many more alongside the Queen.

Earlier, it emerged that members of the Royal Family will break with tradition and not wear military uniform at the duke's funeral this weekend.

Prince Harry faced being one of the only close relatives not in uniform - despite serving with the Army in Afghanistan - because he lost his honorary titles when he quit royal duties.

It is understood the Queen approved the move, which means Prince Charles, Prince William and Prince Andrew will wear suits to Saturday's ceremony.

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2021-04-15 12:14:49Z
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Prince Philip funeral guest list: Who will attend? - The Independent

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  1. Prince Philip funeral guest list: Who will attend?  The Independent
  2. We can mourn Prince Philip, but not the monarchy  The Guardian
  3. Queen Returns to Royal Duties Days After Duke of Edinburgh's Death  The Royal Family Channel
  4. Prince Harry 'worried' about Meghan Markle in the US – 'FaceTiming every day to check in'  Express
  5. Royals to forgo military gear at Philip’s funeral ‘to avoid embarrassing Harry’  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-04-15 10:28:58Z
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Rabu, 14 April 2021

Prince Philip: Royal Family releases Kate's photo of Queen and duke with seven great-grandchildren - Sky News

The Royal Family has released new photographs of the Duke of Edinburgh following his death at the age of 99.

They include an image taken by the Duchess of Cambridge of the Queen and Prince Philip surrounded by seven of their great-grandchildren at Balmoral Castle in 2018.

The previously unseen photo shows Prince Louis cradled in the arms of the Queen, a rare image of the monarch holding one of her 10 great-grandchildren.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's other children Prince George and Princess Charlotte are on either side of the monarch.

Peter Phillips' daughters, Savannah and Isla, are close to their great-grandfather and at the other end of the sofa are Zara and Mike Tindall's children Lena - held by her cousin Isla - and Mia.

An image, in a tweet from the account of the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, shows Philip and a young Charles on horseback playing polo.

In another photo, posted on the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's Twitter account, William and Kate are seen with Prince George, Princess Charlotte, Philip, and Her Majesty at Balmoral in 2015.

More from Duke Of Edinburgh

William is holding George's hand, while Kate is holding baby Charlotte.

A message on the KensingtonRoyal Twitter account read: "Today we share, along with members of the @RoyalFamily, photographs of The Duke of Edinburgh, remembering him as a father, grandfather and great-grandfather."

Today we share, along with Members of The Royal Family photographs of The Duke of Edinburgh, remembering him as a father, grandfather and great-grandfather.

This picture was taken at Balmoral in 2015.
Image: The Queen with Prince Philip, Prince William, the Duchess of Cambridge, Prince George and Princess Charlotte at Balmoral in 2015. Pic: KensingtonRoyal

On Tuesday, the Queen returned to her royal duties - just four days after her husband's death on Friday.

On Wednesday, Princess Eugenie posted a tribute to her grandfather on Instagram, saying the duke would be "so touched by all the tributes that have been shared with me the past few days".

Posting a picture of her and elder sister Beatrice with the duke, she said her memories of her grandfather included learning "how to cook, how to paint, what to read" as well as his sense of humour.

The duke's daughter, Princess Anne, shared her memories of her father's love of yachting while visiting the Isle of Wight.

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'Prince Philip enjoyed coming down here'

Prince Philip's funeral will take place on Saturday in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, and members of the military have been rehearsing for the funeral at Pirbright Barracks in Surrey.

Before the pandemic, plans had been for about 800 attendees but coronavirus measures mean only 30 people will be allowed to attend.

It has not been confirmed who will be there, but Prince Harry will be among them after flying in from America and immediately going into quarantine.

His wife, the Duchess of Sussex, has been advised not to travel as she is heavily pregnant.

Under the funeral plans, the duke's coffin will be carried to the chapel on a specially-modified Land Rover, which he helped to design.

Watch and follow live coverage of Prince Philip's funeral service on Sky News from 12:30pm on Saturday.

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2021-04-14 19:07:15Z
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Covid-19: London surge testing extended over variant cases - BBC News

Surge testing will take place in two more London boroughs after cases of the Covid-19 South African variant were found in both areas.

Residents in "targeted areas" within the SE16 postcode in Southwark and N3 postcode in Barnet are being urged to get tested.

All identified cases are isolating or have completed their isolation.

Testing has begun in the Rotherhithe ward of Southwark and Covid-19 tests are being delivered to properties in the immediate area.

Residents can also collect and drop off a Home Testing kit from Canada Water Library Theatre between 09:00 and 17:00 BST every day.

A temporary testing site is being opened at Deal Porter Square, next to the library.

Testing will begin at Finchley Central Underground Station car park on Thursday after one confirmed case was identified in N3.

Dr Tamara Djuretic, Barnet's Director of Public Health, said: "There is no evidence at present that they have passed the infection further."

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Find out how the pandemic has affected your area and how it compares with the national average:

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Case totals for some local authorities in England fell on Friday due to a change in the way the government reports the results of lateral flow tests.

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On Wednesday, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: "Additional testing will be taking place in a targeted areas within SE16 in Southwark after a confirmed case of the Covid-19 variant first discovered in South Africa was found."

He said it was "vital" that those being asked to take a test in the area do so.

"This testing is essential to help monitor and suppress the spread of the virus, so I urge everyone contacted in this area and all those living and working in Wandsworth and in Lambeth to book their tests as soon as possible," the mayor added.

People take coronavirus tests on Clapham Common in London
Reuters

Meanwhile, some people have taken to Twitter to complain about long queues at test sites in Lambeth on Wednesday.

Isobel Knight said: "I waited in line for over an hour this morning for the Lambeth surge testing.... If I didn't have Covid before, I probably do now."

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Beth Eyre said: "I queued for two hours this morning and still no test as had to leave the queue to go to work."

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

A Lambeth Council spokesperson said it has increased capacity to ensure queues are manageable.

"We have eight testing sites available for Lambeth residents with more mobile testing units being added, as well as sites open in neighbouring Wandsworth they can use," the spokesperson said.

"These will remain open for a fortnight. Tests are also available by post."

From Thursday 15 April, additional testing sites will be available in Wandsworth, including Putney Leisure Centre and 23 pharmacies.

People take Covid-19 tests at a mobile coronavirus surge testing centre in Brockwell Park in south London, on April 13, 2021
Victoria Jones

Surge testing was previously carried out in three postcode areas of Lambeth in February after a case of the South African variant was discovered.

In March, intensive testing was put in place in three areas of Wandsworth borough following a small number of cases.

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2021-04-14 15:22:04Z
CBMiM2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy91ay1lbmdsYW5kLWxvbmRvbi01NjczNzU4MNIBN2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy91ay1lbmdsYW5kLWxvbmRvbi01NjczNzU4MC5hbXA

Come clean over outside work, civil servants told as second inquiry into Greensill lobbying scandal announced - The Independent

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  1. Come clean over outside work, civil servants told as second inquiry into Greensill lobbying scandal announced  The Independent
  2. Sir Keir Starmer: 'Greensill scandal tip of the iceberg'  Sky News
  3. Greensill: Tories reject Labour plan for MP-led lobbying probe  BBC News
  4. Boris Johnson had no answers on Greensill – no wonder Keir Starmer looked so cheerful | John Rentoul  The Independent
  5. Greensill exposes UK’s lobbying problem  Financial Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2021-04-14 19:43:13Z
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Greensill: Labour's call to widen lobbying probe rejected by No 10 - BBC News

David Cameron
Getty Images

The government has rejected Labour's call for a full parliamentary inquiry into lobbying and the contacts between government and Greensill Capital.

Boris Johnson has launched a review by a government lawyer into the finance firm's links to David Cameron and top civil servants in his administration.

Labour wants a broader inquiry into lobbying by a cross-party panel of MPs.

The government says its review is the "right thing to do" and will order Tory MPs to vote against Labour's plan.

Labour says the government "cannot be trusted to mark their own homework on this" and accused the prime minister of "whipping his MPs to vote to cover up Conservative cronyism".

Instead it wants a new Parliamentary committee to investigate lobbying, with the power to question witnesses, such as Mr Cameron, in public.

The party will attempt to set up such a committee by forcing a Commons vote on Wednesday afternoon, but the government says it will vote against the motion, making it unlikely to pass.

Calls to examine lobbying have intensified in the past week as more details emerge of ex-prime minister David Cameron's efforts on behalf of the now-collapsed finance firm Greensill Capital.

In a new development on Tuesday, a lobbying watchdog revealed that a top civil servant had joined the company as part-time adviser while still working for the government.

The Office of the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments said the Cabinet Office had "agreed" to Bill Crothers taking on the role but its chairman Lord Pickles complained of a "lack of transparency" over the situation.

Mr Crothers insisted the process had been "transparent".

'Truly extraordinary'

Labour's shadow Cabinet Office minister Rachel Reeves said: "It is truly extraordinary that a serving civil servant could at the same time be paid to work for a private sector firm that has a clear interest in government business,"

"So if this was allowed under government rules the current rules need to be change and if there was a breaking of the rules then we need to get to the bottom of this.

"We need a proper inquiry to get to the bottom of this, not the half-hearted part-inquiry that the government have announced so far."

But ex-Conservative minister Tobias Ellwood dismissed Labour's call as "political opportunism".

He urged MPs not to "jump on this bandwagon" but instead wait for the government-ordered review to be completed.

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Analysis box by Laura Kuenssberg, political editor

The widespread unease about this story is growing rather than fading away.

For people critical of the way these things are handled, the news about Bill Crothers is another piece of damning evidence that the rules aren't tight enough.

The tentacles of this mess are pulling in more and more political characters - and there's a hunt for other senior officials who had similar arrangements.

Labour see this as real ammunition in a broader political attack on the Conservatives that they are trying to build - whether that is PPE contacts that went to people with links to the Tory Party; contacts between Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick and a property developer and even who paid the bills for Boris Johnson's wallpaper.

It is something that can be very toxic for the government, and that is why senior Conservatives will privately tell you that they are worried.

There is also a wider consensus that the systems meant to guard against all of this are not strong enough.

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Concerns over lobbying have grown following the news that Mr Cameron - who had a financial interest in Greensill - tried unsuccessfully to persuade the government to increase the firm's access to government-backed loans.

Mr Cameron has insisted he did not break any codes of conduct or rules on lobbying, although he has acknowledged in a statement he should have communicated with the government "through only the most formal of channels".

He said he welcomed the government's inquiry, to be run by lawyer Nigel Boardman.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Mr Boardman would be given the "maximum possible access" to establish the facts and a Cabinet Office spokesman said the review would be "wide-ranging".

It has now been expanded beyond its initial remit to consider the new details about Mr Crothers's work for Greensill.

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2021-04-14 08:25:35Z
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