Starmer sends 'chill' through civil service, union boss says
✨ AI Summary
🔊 جاري الاستماع
Starmer sends 'chill' through civil service, union boss saysJust nowShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleChris MasonPolitical editorReutersThe Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, is being accused of sending a "real chill throughout the civil service" after his decision to sack the lead civil servant in the Foreign Office over the Lord Peter Mandelson vetting fiasco.Sir Olly Robbins, who gave evidence to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee of MPs on Tuesday, was fired as the permanent under secretary at the Foreign Office last week.Dave Penman, general secretary of the FDA trade union, told BBC Newsnight: "I think the prime minister is losing the ability to work with the civil service." "Who in the civil service would now think they would be immune from when it is politically expedient to be dismissed?" he asked."That's not a place any government wants to be because it doesn't deliver for the people of the country," Penman added.On Monday, Sir Keir sought to play down any sense of a rift with the civil service when he told MPs: "We have thousands of civil servants who act with integrity and professionalism every day."The row between Downing Street and the union representing senior civil servants is the latest fault line to emerge as a consequence of the most recent revelations relating to the appointment of Lord Mandelson as the UK's ambassador in Washington last year.Supporters of the prime minister have sought to portray the testimony of Sir Olly as vindication that Sir Keir didn't know about the vetting details or, crucially, conclusions Sir Olly had been briefed about.Sir Olly told MPs he was right not to share this in order to protect the integrity of the vetting system.In a boost to Downing Street's position, Dame Emily Thornberry, the Labour MP who chairs the select committee, said after the hearing that she had also concluded that it was right that Sir Olly had lost his job.But...



