Dominic Cummings, take note: even Thatcher had liberal civil servants
Committed to the common good, David Faulkner, who has died, embodied all that was right about the Civil Service
In a delicately weighted coda at the end of Middlemarch, George Eliot quietly celebrates the unheroic but life-enhancing example of the novel’s central character. Dorothea Brooke’s spirit may have “spent itself in channels which have no great name on the earth,” Eliot writes. “But the effect of her being on those around her was incalculably diffusive, for the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts.”
The effect of the Home Office civil servant David Faulkner, who died last week aged 86, was incalculably diffusive too. I didn’t know him terribly well, but I am definitely one of many journalists, researchers, academics and practitioners whom he influenced. In manner, Faulkner was always modest, fair, serious and unflashy. When I have mentioned him to others in the last few days, the first thing that people say is always – and rightly – how nice he was.
But Faulkner was also a tough thinker. He honed his policymaking talents in the 1980s, a turbulent time for British government. As a result, he always looked round political corners before charging on. He liked to say his job was to speak truth to power, but in a voice to which power would listen. In this way, unlike Dorothea Brooke, he managed to notch up some notably historic acts too. These included the setting up of the still invaluable independent prisons inspectorate. He also oversaw a long period in the 1980s in which government policy towards criminal justice, penal issues, policing and drugs took serious account of research and facts rather than following and chasing headlines. This may seem surprising, since these were the Margaret Thatcher years, but on these issues the Home Office was able to keep its distance from No 10.
Faulkner was a liberal in the best sense. In one of the books he wrote in retirement he defined this in an exemplary way – and with a neat thrust of the dagger at the end:
“The term ‘liberal’ has come to be used as one of abuse, often without much thought for what it means. I have always understood it to mean a commitment to the values of freedom, democracy, social justice, respect for the individual and protection from oppression by corporate interests or the state. Critics now associate it with weakness, complacency and social irresponsibility and by doing so diminish the fundamental values for which it stands. Politicians and others praise the liberal values for which the country fought two world wars, but rarely apply them to contemporary situations.”
He also embodied a form of civil service integrity that now seems increasingly remote. In Faulkner’s civil service generation, career paths took very different directions from today. He spent almost his whole career in one department, the Home Office, moving up through it and developing a commitment to the institution itself. Today that institutional mentality would be a cause for censure, not approval, and the lack of diversity that went with it would trigger justified alarm. But it gave room for senior civil servants to be involved in policy development in ways that are also rarer today, when so much of a department’s work is routinely outsourced (which was not yet the case in the Home Office in the 1980s) to consultancies and cronies as well as to more partisan pressure groups.
The upshot was that Faulkner’s thoughtfulness, preparedness and openness were mostly treated as a departmental asset, not a threat. It is hard to think of any career civil servant who was so genuinely interested for so long in solving hard public policy problems calmly, in listening to what others knew and thought before making a decision, or who was so willing to share his own thinking with colleagues and with others as he did so. He was the antithesis of the Yes Minister stereotype.
Probably Faulkner’s finest hour was when he was the head of what was then the Home Office prison department, before taking charge of criminal justice policy more generally until 1992. Faulkner didn’t achieve everything he wanted in either of these roles, not by a long chalk, and his heart wasn’t always in everything that he had to do. But he had an ethos and a strategy, and he was a pivotal figure in something that mattered a lot, helping to create a more liberal, rational and purposeful criminal justice world than had existed before that period of reform. It was the golden age of the much missed Home Office research unit.
But that was then, and this is now. References to the growing good of the world, as George Eliot put it, ring hollow in these post-liberal times. The fairness, transparency, fact-based policymaking and the openness to ameliorative ideas that marked Faulkner’s approach are despised in the Dominic Cummings era. Public confidence, expressed through mainstream media, and later social media, has been the great governmental god of the past quarter century, from New Labour to Boris Johnson.
Towards the end of his autobiographical 2014 Servant of the Crown, Faulkner reflected on whether his liberal principles were now an anachronism. “I have asked myself many times whether they belong to an era which has now passed,” he wrote. “But I cannot persuade myself that they are no longer relevant. To argue for them is not to try to return to the past, but to find a sense of direction for the future.”
Is this merely denial? Or is it possible that a new liberal approach to collective ethos and rational policymaking can in fact be forged again from the fractured pieces of the liberal past? Looking at Donald Trump’s defiance of America’s voters, at the insouciance with which Boris Johnson dismisses a possible EU trade deal, or the shamelessness of the current UK government’s partisan chumocracy, it is hard to be confident. Yet Faulkner’s instinct was right. The plain fact is that, for all the difficulties, there is no alternative.
Martin Kettle is a Guardian columnist
Really interesting debate. I describe myself as being an old fashioned liberal but am worried that liberalism today has strayed away from what David Faulkner described as "respect for the individual and protection from oppression by corporate interests or the state" to an illiberal intolerance of a diverse range of views. Cancel culture would be an example of that and I especially think about university student unions denying a platform to anyone with views that don't conform to their own. A liberal approach would be to let those people speak, to debate and argue with them and influence them or others to your own way of thinking but all the time defending their right to speak.
ReplyDeleteLive and let live seems to have been replaced by live and use social media to destroy their career, their livelihood and their freedom to express.
For Probation the irony is that the drive for diversity has led to a lack of diversity of thought. Probation leaders would no doubt describe themselves as being liberal too but again in seeking absolute conformity of values and approaches, they have become illiberal towards anyone who doesn't tow the official party line.
The Power of Jim Brown - you've scared off Cummings!!
ReplyDeleteAny particular thoughts you might wish to direct across the pond?
new cases: 27,301
testing: yesterday was 319,000 out of 519,000 capacity
deaths (28 day rule): 376
all other data still not up to date
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I trained as a social work-era PO funded by Home Office sponsorship via an annual grant, travel & susbsistence expenses plus two part-time jobs. The Home Office were, at that time, accessible - you could ring "Kensington 418" (or whatever the number might really have been) & speak with someone who knew answers to questions, who could discuss matters (academic or placement) & who might occasionally suggest a trip to The Smoke to sit in on a discussion, a forum or a Home Office meeting relevant to the query.
FranK.
Is this also Jim Brown's work - Trump acknowledging the concept of "loss" ??
DeleteTrump: "Now it is learned that the horrendous Dominion Voting System was used in Arizona (and big in Nevada). No wonder the result was a very close loss!"
Trump retweets (among many others): "BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: Analysis of Election Night Data from All States Shows MILLIONS OF VOTES Either Switched from President Trump to Biden or Were Lost -- Using Dominion and Other Systems"
DeleteSo the election *was* stolen from Biff Tannen Trump - the machines were rigged - everything was rigged - his own election officials have been replaced by clones - Biden used the DeLorean to steal the almanac...
"The villain in cult classic Back to the Future WAS based on Donald Trump, the film's writer has revealed.
In the second installment of the classic film, bully Biff Tannen can be seen as a billionaire businessman.
He owns a 27-story casino and has a huge influence in America politics.
The writer of Back to the Future, Bob Gale, revealed the character of Biff was based on Donald Trump, the new US President."
A very large, pouty, petulant child has just lied non-stop in an American rose garden; still no mic drop.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/www.theregister.com/AMP/2020/11/13/cgi_gets_90m_21month_moj/
ReplyDeleteThe UK’s Ministry of Justice has handed incumbent supplier CGI a new £90m contract without open competition in a seemingly desperate bid to keep its Cobol, Fortran, and Pascal applications up and running.
DeleteIn what might be seen as a skin-of-the-teeth procurement, the MoJ was set to see the contract with CGI expire on 30 November. It has now extended the agreement for 21 months until 31 August 2022, and will pay up to £90m if it takes an option to extend for a further period of up to 12 months.
When asked about outstanding probation pay issues a spokesrobot said: "Probation? Fuck 'em. What will they do? Start giving Napo £30 a month? In the hope of what?"
Britain's safety watchdog felt leaned on by the government to make factually incorrect statements about PPE suits bought for NHS staff earlier in the Covid-19 pandemic, the BBC has found.
ReplyDeleteEmails reveal how the Health and Safety Executive said protective suits, bought by the government in April, had not been tested to the correct standard.
But the emails describe "political" pressure to approve them for use.
The government said all PPE is "quality assured" and only sent out if safe. One of those providers was small pest control firm Crisp Websites Ltd, trading as PestFix, which secured a contract in April with the Department of Health and Social Care for a £32m batch of isolation suits.
Three months after it was signed, the suits from PestFix had still not been released for use in the NHS, despite the rush to get PPE into hospitals. Instead, they were being stored at an NHS supply chain warehouse, in Daventry, waiting for safety assessments.
In June, one email from a firm working alongside the HSE describes "political pressure" being applied to get the suits through the quality assurance process. By September, the legal wrangling was still going on, the emails show, even though the suits had, by then, been released to the NHS.
"We are being drawn into the legalities", one official wrote, saying they'd been asked to provide a statement that PestFix's products had had the right safety documents.
bbc news
Boris Johnson accused Dominic Cummings of briefing against him and Carrie Symonds, his fiancee, during a tense 45-minute showdown before the adviser’s departure, according to sources.
ReplyDeleteThe prime minister’s senior adviser left Downing Street with his belongings in a cardboard box on Friday evening. Lee Cain, Downing Street’s director of communications, was also told to leave.
Boris Johnson boots out top adviser Dominic Cummings
Read more
Johnson held a meeting with Cummings and Cain to discuss their “general behaviour” where he is understood to have accused his aides of briefing against him and his partner. The prime minister also accused the pair of destabilising the government in the midst of Brexit negotiations ahead of a crucial phase in talks in Brussels next week, the Financial Times reported.