Has civil service impartiality had its day?

Published: May 23, 2023, 3:10 p.m.

b"Recent events in government, including the circumstances following Dominic Raab\\u2019s resignation as justice secretary, have at least on the surface deepened a divide between ministers and officials \\u2013 and civil service morale has dropped as the strained relationship between ministers and officials deteriorates.\\n\\nWith Raab complaining of \\u201cincreasingly activist civil servants\\u201d and warning that it had become \\u201calmost impossible for ministers to deliver for the British people\\u201d, there have been increasing calls to give more powers to ministers to bring their political allies into Whitehall.\\n\\nSo has civil service impartiality had its day? Is it time to allow more political appointments into civil service roles? What would this mean for the civil service\\u2019s ability to give good advice and effectively implement government policy? What other changes would help the civil service recruit people with the skills and specialisms that ministers want and the public need? And what else can be done to restore the fractured relationship between ministers and officials?\\n\\nTo explore these questions, the IfG bought together an expert panel including:\\n\\nGeorge Eustice, Conservative MP and former Environment Secretary\\nAyesha Hazarika, Times Radio presenter and a former civil servant and special adviser\\nLord O\\u2019Donnell, former Cabinet Secretary\\nRachel Wolf, Founding Partner at Public First, a former adviser at 10 Downing Street and co-author of the Conservative Party's 2019 election manifesto\\n\\nThis event was chaired by Alex Thomas, Programme Director at the Institute for Government."