Sunday 13 November 2022

Who's the W*nker Now?

During PMQ's last week Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister and Lord Chancellor, can be seen clearly mouthing 'wanker' at Keir Starmer and now we learn he throws his tomatoes around the office when upset. No wonder senior staff at the MoJ are likely to require counselling facing as they do having to deal with morons like Dominic Raab. 

I guess he's too arrogant or just dim to understand that you insult and abuse senior staff at your peril. I seem to recall a previous incumbent, Chris Grayling, found this out the hard way when officials simply stopped 'watching his back' and let the hapless minister stumble into one elephant trap after another. This from the Guardian:-  

MoJ staff offered ‘route out’ amid concerns over Dominic Raab behaviour

Senior civil servants at the Ministry of Justice were offered “respite or a route out” of the department when Dominic Raab was reappointed last month, amid concerns that some were still traumatised by his behaviour during a previous stint there.

Several sources told the Guardian that about 15 members of staff from the justice secretary’s private office were taken into a room where departmental officials acknowledged they may be anxious about his behaviour and gave them the option of moving roles. Some of the civil servants were said to have been in tears during the meeting and several subsequently decided to move to other positions in the department, with one thought to be considering leaving entirely, although sources suggested a couple of staff had since returned.

It is also understood that Antonia Romeo, the MoJ permanent secretary, had to speak to Raab when he returned to the department to warn him that he must treat staff professionally and with respect amid unhappiness about his return. One source, who was not in the room at the time, claimed she had “read him the riot act”.

The Guardian has spoken to multiple sources in the MoJ who claimed that Raab, who first held the post between September 2021 and September 2022, when he was sacked by Liz Truss, had created a “culture of fear” in the department. They alleged that his behaviour when dealing with civil servants, including some in senior roles, was “demeaning rather than demanding”, that he was “very rude and aggressive” and that he “wasn’t just unprofessional, he was a bully”.

The claims once again put the spotlight on Rishi Sunak, who made Raab his deputy prime minister and justice secretary just over two weeks ago, with some Conservative MPs already questioning the prime minister’s judgment over some of his cabinet appointments. In his first speech outside No 10 last month, Sunak promised that his government, in contrast to that of his two immediate predecessors, would have “integrity, professionalism and accountability at every level”. However, some Tory insiders felt his vow would prove a hostage to fortune if any ministers were viewed to have fallen short.

There has been a renewed focus on unprofessional behaviour in Whitehall this week after the Guardian reported allegations that Gavin Williamson told a senior civil servant to “slit your throat” and “jump out of the window” in what they felt was a sustained campaign of bullying while he was defence secretary. There is no suggestion that Raab made similarly extreme comments. Williamson was forced to quit the cabinet for the third time after the former Whitehall aide lodged a formal complaint to parliament’s independent complaints and grievance service and the senior Tory’s former deputy chief whip, Anne Milton, claimed he had also subjected MPs to “unethical and immoral behaviour”.

One former MoJ civil servant, who worked in the department during Raab’s first stint there, told the Guardian: “On more than one occasion I saw him blow up at civil servants – sometimes very senior ones – in meetings. While he was demanding, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, the way he spoke to people was uncomfortable to witness. He was very rude and aggressive.”

Another insider said: “His behaviour was demeaning rather than demanding. You get into bullying territory because it’s systemic and sustained and creates a culture of fear in the department. But even if you could somehow argue that what he’s doing isn’t bullying, it’s certainly not professional.” A third MoJ official added: “They will try to say he just drives the department very hard to get results. But he frequently belittled and undermined us. It wasn’t just that he was unprofessional, he was a bully. The atmosphere when he came back was terrible.”

The Guardian also spoke to officials who defended Raab’s approach, but even they said his behaviour could be interpreted by some colleagues as unprofessional, or even bullying. However, it is understood that no formal complaints have been made. One source close to the minister said: “Dominic makes no apologies for having high standards. He works hard, and expects a lot from his team as well as himself. He rates MoJ officials very highly, and he is always professional and clear with them.”

Angela Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, said: 

“These deeply troubling accusations of bullying and intimidation raise yet more questions about Rishi Sunak’s judgment. The prime minister must come clean on what he knew about these allegations when he reappointed Dominic Raab as deputy prime minister as well as justice secretary, and they must be investigated urgently and independently. With each new scandal and grubby deal, it becomes more obvious that he is a weak leader, who puts party management before the national interest. He claimed zero tolerance for bullying, promised a government of integrity and pledged to urgently appoint an ethics adviser, yet is falling far short on every promise. Rishi Sunak is already showing he’s not just failing to stop the rot but letting it fester.”

Raab’s reappointment in October was criticised by opponents who claimed he had failed to resolve barrister strikes and presided over growing court backlogs. He has already said that his highly controversial plans for a British bill of rights, which were shelved by Truss, will be revived. An MoJ spokesperson said: “There is zero tolerance for bullying across the civil service. The deputy prime minister leads a professional department, driving forward major reforms, where civil servants are valued and the level of ambition is high.”

19 comments:

  1. They're unravelling, slowly but surely. Unfortunately the spiteful legacy of damage left in their wake - financial, moral & structural - is substantial.

    Has there ever been a UK government of such gross incompetence & selfishness posing as powerful, plundering the public purse & not giving a damn?

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  2. Well Raab’s behaviour is not much different from many of our probation senior managers and regional directors.

    Remember this about Command and Control from a “Head of PDU”. I bet they all laughed about it at SLT while the culprit that unplugging the phones was tarred and feathered.

    http://probationmatters.blogspot.com/2022/03/command-and-control.html?m=1

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  3. Rabb was also the foreign secretary who went on holiday whilst Afghanistan was being evacuated, and returned applications for evacuation on the basis he didn't like the grammar or the presentation format on the application form.
    Rabb is a nasty piece of work, but he's hardly on his own in a government that's so broken, fractious and ideologically motivated.
    Our politics is broken, and it's hard to see how it can be fixed.
    Although it's not had much media coverage, I find it interesting to see that Gina Miller intends to stand against Chris Grayling as a potential member of parliament in the next general election.
    Her party, True and Fair, purports to stand on a platform of right and wrong as opposed to right and left.
    I find it an interesting concept, I just wonder if the nation has had enough of what we've got now to buy into it, and if so what might the implications be for our existing mainstream political parties?

    https://www.trueandfairparty.uk/

    'Getafix

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    1. Who were the applications from ?

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  4. Left and right is an outdated concept which has meant that we rarely have a had a genuinely representative government, both main parties are pushing the specific agendas of their paymasters as evidenced by how they are looked after when they lose power......

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    1. I will and do support alternative voting systems, eg PR. But while we can wring our hands about outdated concepts, we have a facsist government and the thing is to remove them.

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    2. Remove them, and replace them with ?

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  5. Wrong privatised health by national health doctors who work privately in Nuffield and charge NHS a staggering amount to reduce their cases. Surgeon who use their salary as a secondary income by exorbitant rates 8n the private sector charged to poor us NHS.
    Wrong nurses putting in overtime at the Nuffield doing 2 jobs to earn enough.
    Wrong utilities privatised.
    Wrong rail private
    Wrong Tory thieves
    Right get election
    Right get back in Europe
    Right Corbyn agenda

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    1. A Corbyn agenda isn't happening under Sir Keir.

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  6. Can anyone assist?

    "The prison population has risen by 70% in the last 30 years—and it is currently projected to rise even further".

    In considering the severity of Raab's attitude towards others, I was wondering if the numbers of 'evil' people in the UK was a factor? PRT report that "Scotland and England and Wales have the highest imprisonment rates in western Europe" so it must surely be weighing upon & taxing his fragile mind?

    And it led me to thinking, how many of the +/- 80,000 persons in UK jails were serving custodial sentences for killing someone - intentionally or otherwise - & how many more are still serving their custodial sentence for killing someone while on licence in the community? And how many, if any, others are serving a community penalty for killing someone?

    I have looked at several sources of information but none seem to have this data.

    https://prisonreformtrust.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Prison-the-facts-2022.pdf

    https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/offender-management-statistics-quarterly-april-to-june-2022/offender-management-statistics-quarterly-april-to-june-2022

    "The prison population stood at 81,309 on 30 September 2022.

    The sentenced prison population stood at 66,102 (81% of the total); the remand prison population stood at 14,507 (18%) and the non-criminal prison population stood at 700 (1%)."

    "Population and Offence group

    While sexual offences is one of the largest groups amongst prisoners serving immediate custodial sentences, the population had been falling since it peaked in mid-2018. However, over the past year, the number has risen gradually again, with a 6% increase (to 12,536) in the 12 months to 30 September 2022."

    That's just shy of 20% of the sentenced population.

    "Three in every ten (31%) inmates serving an immediate custodial sentence have been convicted of a Violence Against the Person (VATP) offence. This proportion has increased from the ‘one in four’ (25%) level seen in recent years."

    31% of the sentenced population is approx. 20,500, but this is for the generic "VATP".

    This suggests that around 33,000 - half of the sentenced population - are in jail convicted of sexual & violent offences. I had hoped that if we could find more specific data we might be able to soothe the fractious Justice Secretary's mood & reassure him that all is not lost; maybe even get him to chillax, like his old buddy Matt Handjob.

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    1. A fascinating figure: "the non-criminal prison population stood at 700"

      "Non-criminal – Those held for civil offences or under the immigration act. A civil
      non-criminal prisoner is someone who is in prison because of a non-criminal matter,
      for example, non-payment of council tax or contempt of court. The non-criminal
      population also includes immigration detainees that have finished serving their
      sentence and are being kept in prison by immigration authorities or those detained in
      NOMS operated Immigration Removal Centres (IRCs)"

      https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/562956/Guide_to_Offender_Management_Statistics.pdf

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    2. seems no-one can assist. Oh well...

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    3. Document published 2016 and 44 pages of pretty impenetrable text and diagrams.

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    4. Apologies to all if I wasn't being very clear. The 14/11 @07:59 question about 2022 data was what I was referring to:

      "how many of the +/- 80,000 persons in UK jails were serving custodial sentences for killing someone - intentionally or otherwise - & how many more are still serving their custodial sentence for killing someone while on licence in the community? And how many, if any, others are serving a community penalty for killing someone?"

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  7. I have just watched the clips of him mouthing at the Leader of the Opposition, and of him previously winking at Angela Rayner. Its a measure of how low politics is sinking that this is tolerated without censure. It is also a measure of how crass and infantile the man is. He demeans himself and government and diminishes his own authority. How can we argue for people in prisons and on probation to be treated with dignity when the Justice Minister appears to be unfamiliar with the concept? That he is the head of our criminal justice system is really disturbing. And the crass cruelty and bullying is now embedded in our organisation at every level.

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  8. A few years ago Raabs diary secretary was exposed as prostituting herself to rich men. In the press follow up certain features of his routine were revealed - always had the same sandwich for lunch and always had a one hour slot for judo each day. This latter was sacrosanct. We now learn that he refuses to accept red boxes after Thursday and becomes very angry if paperes are presented to him in a different format to the one he wants. He is also unable to adapt if circumstances change, so he fixed up his Summer break last year and felt no need to get off his sunbed whilst Kabul collapsed, the greatest British diplomatic failure of modern times. This catalogue of rigid thinking and emotional blindness suggests that Raabs brain is wired differently from most peoples. And with our increasing understanding of neurological diversity it may be that he is somewhere on the autistic spectrum.

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    1. Ridiculous and an overworked attempt to explain why raab is more than just wan** himself he is just a complete **** readers will figure it out my apologies for extreme obtuseness but my frustrations are shared and widespread. His habits are not any explanation for his callous behaviour .

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    2. Flash raab investigation . He can throw teddy out the pram now.

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  9. The tories being dreadful isn't a revelation, and we should rightly criticize them. The silence regarding nasty remarks made about Jeremy Corbyn the other day by a fellow labour mp is deafening however.

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