How Rishi Sunak caused chaos at the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s office by blocking a smooth transition to Rob Behren’s successor

Nick Hardwick pic credit: Wikipedia

Today’s scoop in the Financial Times by the paper’s Whitehall Editor, Lucy Fisher, has finally revealed why it has taken nearly three months for the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s board not to be able to appoint a permanent successor to Rob Behrens, the outgoing Ombudsman, who has just retired.

It appeared Nick Hardwick, was the Parliamentary Ombudsman Board’s choice. Hardwick is a former chair of the Parole Board who resigned after judges overturned a board decision to give parole to John Worboys, a notorious convicted rapist who attacked 12 women while working as a taxi driver. The proposal to release Worboys on parole was a cause celebre for the tabloids at the time. Rishi Sunak, who has to approve the appointment, appeared to have blocked it by sitting on a decision for nearly three months.

William Wragg MP

William Wragg, the chair of the Commons Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee, (PACAC)blew the whistle in Parliament on Monday night when he said, without naming Nick Hardwick, that his appointment had “seemingly been declined by Number 10.”

He also criticised the government for ” somewhat irregular behaviour ” during the appointment process. This is not surprising as William Wragg was on the panel who approved Nick Hardwick’s appointment.

This week PACAC released papers that appeared to give all the details of the recruitment process and a letter from Sir Alex Allan, Boris Johnson’s former independent adviser on ministerial interests, who resigned his job after Johnson refused to sack Priti Patel, then home secretary, after he found she had been bullying and swearing at her senior civil servants. He is now a senior non executive member of the Parliamentary Ombudsman board.

The papers do show that Rishi Sunak took a great interest in the appointment. In an earlier letter to William Wragg approving a salary of between £171,500 and £189,900 for the new Ombudsman plus a choice of a civil service or judicial pension, he wrote: “I would be grateful if the House could continue to work closely with the Government as the campaign to appoint the new PHSO progresses.”

The recruitment process does appear to have attracted a wide range of people. It shows that initially 52 people applied for the job. There were 31 male applicants, 20 female, and one who preferred not to say. Some 30 were white British, 5 Indian, 4 white non British,2 African, 2 Other mixed,1 Asian and White,1 Black African and White,1 Caribbean,1 Irish,1 Pakistani and 1 Ukrainian. Three preferred not to say.

Some 44 were heterosexual and two were gay and six preferred not to say or didn’t answer. Four people were disabled.

This was whittled down to 12 people – 7 males, 4 females and a person who preferred not to disclose a sex. Ten of the last 12 were White British and 1 white non British and one who preferred not to say. Nine of the people were heterosexual and one was gay and others preferred not to say.

The panel who interviewed them was chaired by Philippa Helme, a 63 year old independent panelist and a former principal clerk at the table office in the House of Commons. The other members are Shona Dunn (Second Permanent Secretary, Department of Health and Social Care) to cover the Ombudsman’s NHS role; Colleen Harris(independent panellist and appointed by the King to the King Charles III Charitable Foundation; Peter Tyndall (formerly President of the International Ombudsman Institute) and William Wragg MP.

Philippa Helme -pic credit: Houses of Parliament

All went smoothly and on January 8 Nick Hardwick, aged 66, who is now Professor of Criminal Justice at Royal Holloway College was chosen. Then the problems began when the appointment arrived on Rishi Sunak’s desk. There was silence. What is missing from public disclosure is a desperate letter written by Sir Alex Allan on January 29 which revealed that the whole process was in jeopardy and they might have to appoint an ” interim Ombudsman ” or else the PHSO could not function ( see my blog here ) . It was then that Rebecca Hilsenrath, a recently appointed chief executive at PHSO, came into the frame. The moment the PHSO and the committee knew I had seen the letter on the PACAC website and was going to publish, it mysteriously disappeared from public view. I was told it had been ” prematurely published.”. Now I know this wasn’t true because the letter has not resurfaced in the documents released this week.

As time went on and by March there was no endorsement from Rishi Sunak, things got more and more desperate. So Sir Alex Allan and William Wragg hatched a plan to appoint Rebecca Hilsenrath as an ” acting Ombudsman” so the office could continue to function near normally. This involved getting King Charles III to present a motion to Parliament proposing her appointment so MPs could approve it on the nod. This happened on Monday.

Rebecca Hilsenrath

Now there is glowing description of Rebecca Hilsenrath’s qualities and experience in the papers released this week.

But once again there are some remarkable omissions about her career which have been swept under the carpet. When she was chief executive of the Equality and Human rights Commission, she carried out a campaign to sack black and disabled employees who happened to be strong trade unionists – a remarkable feat for a body that should champion diversity.

Her country cottage in north Wales

Also she was exposed in Times newspaper for a gross breach of the lockdown rules at the height of the pandemic when she drove from north London to north Wales to spend Christmas with her family of five children. She tried to say her holiday cottage was her main home – staying there for months. She was unmasked by a diligent local councillor who noted that unlike Michael Fabricant MP and Andy Street, the West Midlands Tory mayor, who never set foot in their nearby country cottages, was flagrantly breaching the lockdown.

This caused her trouble at the EHRC but she was thrown a lifeline when she got a job at the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s Office then run by Rob Behrens. She has now achieved a remarkable promotion courtesy of Rishi Sunak’s apparent blocking of Nick Hardwick for the top job.

All in all this is a sorry tale but to my mind the main point is that Rishi Sunak has usurped his powers to try and control a Parliamentary body that should be totally independent of government. If Nick Hardwick is not appointed after what looks like a fair process I shall not trust the new Ombudsman to be really independent but just a creature of a failing and interfering Prime Minister who is deservedly unpopular with the electorate today.

One-Time
Monthly
Yearly

Make a one-time donation

Make a monthly donation

Make a yearly donation

Choose an amount

£5.00
£10.00
£20.00
£5.00
£15.00
£100.00
£5.00
£15.00
£100.00

Or enter a custom amount

£

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

DonateDonate monthlyDonate yearly


Please donate to Westminster Confidential

£10.00


9 thoughts on “How Rishi Sunak caused chaos at the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s office by blocking a smooth transition to Rob Behren’s successor

  1. “I shall not trust the new Ombudsman to be really independent but just a creature of a failing and interfering Prime Minister who is deservedly unpopular with the electorate today”, but this is exactly what he is, as are other senior figures in high places across the state, they are all part of the rigged system to protect one another . Even judges are not independent but are appointed on the advice of the PM. That is why court judgments are too often not about truth and justice but are perverse because they are political.

    Its open corruption. I found this out for myself. Nottingham County Court was a theatre of the absurd in which the leading actor, HHJ Nigel Godsmark, played somersaults to defend the indefensible & closed his eyes to the truth to protect the NHS. In attacking the truth, HHJ Godsmark made 2 +2 = 5: https://patientcomplaintdhcftdotcom.wordpress.com/

    Like

  2. The appointment of the new Ombudsman has been a farce. Originally the current Ombudsman agreed to extend his term for two additional years, partly to allow time to find a replacement. Yet two years later Parliament and the government are at loggerheads and there has been a last minute scramble to appoint an acting Ombudsman.

    But why has Rishi Sunak taken against Nick Hardwick? He has an excellent resume. Chair of the IPCC, Her Majesty’s Inspector of Prisons, Chair of the Parole Board. Does the PM think the Worboys affair taints Hardwick? Then wouldn’t the breach of lockdown also taint Hilsenrath? They were both forced to resign their positions. Could there be personal animosity involved? Or is it possible that Hardwick is considered likely to be too critical as an Ombudsman? The Ombudsman has no power to take any action but he can write critical reports. Is this what Sunak fears? It’s an extraordinary situation and it would be very interesting to know what is behind the stand-off.

    Like

  3. Too busy to read about English Tribual Feuds!!!!!0

    <

    div>

    Sent from my iPhone

    <

    div dir=”ltr”>

    <

    blockquote type=”cite”>

    Like

  4. What exactly does His Majesty’s loyal opposition have to say about all this? Written questions by parliamentarians about the Ombudsman to the Cabinet Office are routinely fobbed off with the response “The Ombudsman is independent of government”. This has now been blatantly exposed as a lie.

    David. What your brilliant article does not cover is the cost to the public purse of the whole process. How much were the recruitment agency paid to do the leg work only to find that the appointment appears blocked by the Prime Minister at the eleventh hour? Will the whole process start again? A very cavalier approach to the use of public funds of a country supposedly having to tighten its belt on public services.

    I am critical of the Ombudsman quango due to its lack of power to enforce decisions and accountability and have long advocated reform, particularly with regard to the plethora of organisations who investigate NHS issues.

    The Patients Association reported years ago that the Ombudsman service was not fit for purpose. It is now not fit for a leader. If Nick Hardwick were to be offered the job now, maybe he will tell Rishi Sunak where to stick it!

    Like

  5. oh dear…..I remember her getting caught out telling lies. Good job there are people who do their job properly. Don’t Tories understand they won’t have their corrupt ways for much longer? What with a gong in the brand new Easter Honours for Philip Davies, husband of Esther ‘McVile’ – co-presenters of the recently criticised GBNews programme which pretends to be ‘independent’ but actually peddling Tory policies.

    Like

  6. Pingback: Rob Behrens – exposed. – phsothetruestory

  7. As of today Hilsenrath is in virtually sole control of the PHSO’s office – the CEO has gone on honeymoon until 7 May…

    Like

  8. Pingback: And the new Ombudsman is … – phsothetruestory

  9. Pingback: The continuing saga of muddle, delay and lack of accountability over the appointment of a new Parliamentary Ombudsman | Westminster Confidential

Leave a reply to David Czarnetzki Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.