Raab case shows need for reform of bullying
claims handling, union rep says
Exclusive: Senior staff said to want Sunak to set up
independent body to assess complaints against ministers
Rajeev Syal
Fri 21 Apr
2023 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/apr/21/dominic-raab-case-bullying-claims-handling-reform
Rishi Sunak
is being urged to set up a new body to assess future bullying claims against
ministers after civil servants were left disillusioned over the Dominic Raab
investigation.
Senior
Whitehall staff want the prime minister to allow an independent organisation to
assess claims of wrongdoing against ministers, a Ministry of Justice union rep
said.
The calls
follow repeated disappointments in the grievance procedures against ministers
in government workplaces.
The prime
minister alone will decide whether his deputy and justice secretary broke the
ministerial code, after multiple complaints about Raab were made across three
ministerial departments.
Under the
bullying inquiry’s terms and conditions, the independent investigator Adam
Tolley KC will only “establish the specific facts” surrounding the claims,
which Sunak will then rule on.
The former
home secretary Priti Patel was allowed to keep her job by Boris Johnson despite
a formal inquiry finding evidence she had bullied her staff.
Jawad Raza,
an FDA national officer who represents senior civil servants in the MoJ and
parliament, said a new, fully independent process must be established if trust
is to be rebuilt across Whitehall.
“At
present, the prime minister has to give permission for an investigation into a
minister to commence and then pass judgment on the facts.
“Can he
really be a fully independent arbiter, especially when it is someone who has
political value to him?
“In this
case, the PM is being asked to pass judgment on a close political ally. It
needs to be changed,” he said.
Raza said
the process should be overhauled, and pointed to the establishment in
parliament of an independent grievance scheme in 2018, after allegations of
harassment and bullying against MPs.
“Our
members want to have confidence in the mechanism, have the ability to raise a
concern and know that they can have confidence in that process and for that
process to be looked at independently.
“In the
House of Commons, MPs once sat in judgment over one another, but we now have an
independent complaints and grievance scheme.
“If there
is an investigation in parliament and a case to answer then the independent
expert panel would look at that.
“Ultimately,
that has stopped MPs being able to mark their own homework.
There needs
to be a similar option for civil servants complaining against ministers,” he
said.
Raab was
sacked as justice secretary and deputy prime minister by former PM Liz Truss
when she took power in September.
But the
Esher and Walton MP, who ran Sunak’s failed leadership campaign over the
summer, was reappointed to both roles by Sunak following his election as
Conservative leader by the party’s MPs.
The
complaints about his past behaviour first emerged in the Guardian. Multiple
sources claimed Raab had created a “culture of fear” at the Ministry of
Justice.
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