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The Battle Between Prime Minister and Civil Servant in 'Yes, Prime Minister'

Explore the hilarious and accurate portrayal of the power struggles between the Prime Minister and his top civil servant in the beloved BBC comedy series, 'Yes, Prime Minister'. Learn about the Civil Service, bureaucracy, Whitehall, and the influence of ministers in shaping policy. Discover the interdependency between civil servants and ministers and the factors that determine ministerial responsibility. Find out if the Civil Service truly holds more power than ministers in running the country.

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The Battle Between Prime Minister and Civil Servant in 'Yes, Prime Minister'

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  1. One of the best-loved BBC comedies ever made is the 1980s series ‘Yes, Prime Minister’ The comedy is based around the never-ending battle between the Prime Minister (Jim Hacker) and his top civil servant (the stuffy Cabinet Secretary, Sir Humphrey Appelby). Westminster and Whitehall insiders say the series is amazingly accurate. Margaret Thatcher apparently never missed an episode !

  2. Key terms • Bureaucracy - the administrative branch of government. • Whitehall – Whitehall is the street next to Parliament where most government departments are located. The name is synonymous with the civil service. • Whitehall red tape – lots of unnecessary paperwork ! • Mandarin- the top civil servants in Whitehall

  3. Some of the grandest properties in London.

  4. What is the Civil Service ?Some basic facts • Civil Servants are public servants. • There are about 500,000 in total working in government departments and agencies (food standards, vehicle licensing etc) • They are paid from public funds. • They serve whichever government wins the election. They outlast most governments. • They are not generally known to the general public nor are they elected. • They are not political and are supposed to be impartial.

  5. The Senior Civil Service • About 1% of the Civil Service are known as the Senior Civil Service. • Each government department has a Permanent Secretary – the top civil servant in that department in charge of all the others. • The most senior civil servant in the country is the Cabinet Secretary who works out of Downing St.

  6. What do they actually do ? • There are only a handful of Cabinet Ministers and junior ministers in a government department. • There are hundreds of civil servants who actually run the department and implement the policy set by the ministers. • Ministers do not usually stay in a department more than a couple of years. Civil servants often make life-long careers in their departments.

  7. Traditional view • Impartial - civil servants are non-political. Elected ministers make decisions and non-elected civil servants carry them out. • Neutral – civil servants carry out the policies of whichever political party is in power. • Anonymous – civil servants should not seek publicity, talk to the media or leak information outside the department.

  8. Monty Python poked fun at the traditional stuffy image of the bowler-hatted civil servant. John Clese in the ‘Ministry of Silly Walks’

  9. The modern day civil service Since the 1969 Fulton Report the civil service has been reformed : • More outside advisors brought in to aid ministers. • Ensure a wider recruitment of talents • Bring the civil service more in line with business management. • Bring in private companies to do some of the work of the civil service. (privatisation)

  10. Departments are organised on a functional basis though some are organised on an area basis. 20 departments including in the UK: • HM Treasury is the most powerful dept • Defence has the largest payroll • Health has the biggest budget • Foreign Office is a ‘prized’ posting • Territorial ministries – Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland Offices relate to the devolved administrations in each country • No Prime Minister’s Department but Cabinet Office offers effective support to the PM along with the Office of Deputy Prime Minister.

  11. What is the relationship between civil servants and ministers ? The ‘Yes, Prime Minister’ image of the Civil Service is that they have more power than ministers and ‘really run the country.’ How true is this image ?

  12. Civil Service power vs ministerial power • The traditional view of the Civil Service is that they are impartial and serve their political masters faithfully • The left-wing view is that the Civil Service is secretive, elitist and conservative. • The ‘thatcherite’ view was the Civil Service was inefficient and wasteful and needed to be trimmed.

  13. Interdependency rather than power-struggle ? • Rather than seeing the relationship as confrontational, Civil Servants and ministers need each other in order to implement policy. • The power-relationship depends very much on the people in the job at the time.

  14. Tasks • Why have higher civil servants often been criticised? Read 242-3 • What do the tables on p247 suggest about the relative powers of ministers and civil servants? • What factors determine whether a minister resigns or not after a serious blunder or misjudgement? • Write a comparison of who had the greatest impact on reforming the Civil Service – Thatcher or New Labour (252-255)

  15. Special Advisers • Ministers have tried to by-pass their civil servants by employing ‘special advisers’ from outside the department. • Their role is controversial due to their lack of accountability.

  16. Ministerial Responsibilities • In theory, ‘Individual Ministerial Responsibility‘ prevails- • Ministers are responsible for any administrative failure within their department, and for any injustice that it may cause. • Minister should resign if their departments perform badly. • The classic example of ‘individual ministerial responsibility’ is the Crichel Down Affair in 1954, which resulted in the resignation of the Minister for Agriculture (Sir Thomas Dugdale) and his civil servants censured.

  17. In practice, resignations rarely happen because of civil service mistakes. Most resignations are for personal reasons (often scandals). Why? • Ministers cannot possibly know everything about their department – maybe know about 1% of everything that go on at best. • Failure and criticism, as terms, are quite difficult to define – uncertainty about what constitutes a real civil service mistake/failure/disaster. • Ministers who should resign might be protected by Cabinet colleagues for political reasons. • However, at other times, some Ministers might be scapegoated. • Creation of Whitehall agencies means that it becomes more difficult to distinguish between the policy failures of Ministers and bureaucratic failures of agencies.

  18. Ministerial Resignations: Some Examples • Lord Carrington and the Falklands War (1982) – Foreign Secretary resigned after the invasion of the Falkland Islands by Argentina. • Leon Brittan and the Westland Affair – Resigned over a dispute between himself as Trade and Industry Secretary and Michael Heseltine, Defence Secretary. Brittan resigned over the impropriety of his actions when it emerged that he had allowed documents to be leaked that were unfavourable to Heseltine. • John Major’s government was plagued by resignations adding to an impression of sleaze.

  19. In recent times, the Prime Minister (Blair) has had an unfortunate record of losing ministers • Geoffrey Robinson (1998) – resigned over conduct while in office i.e. his business interests. • Ron Davies (1998) – resigned over his private life. • Peter Mandelson (1998) – resigned over conduct in taking an undeclared loan from colleague. Resigned again over Hinduja passport affair. • Stephen Byers (2002) – resigned over his Special Advisor’s assertion that “September 11th is a good day to bury bad news”. • Estelle Morris (2002) – resigned because she said – candidly – that she wasn’t up to the job.

  20. Jo Moore – “Today is a good day to bury bad news”

  21. A growing trend to appoint Special Advisors (with political sympathies) emerged in the 1960s, but their number and influence developed greatly under Blair. • Appointed for expertise on a subject & supplement the role of civil servants. They challenge the idea of a monopoly of advice to ministers, being a version of the concept of a ‘kitchen cabinet’ of unofficial but unduly influential individuals. • Special advisers: • write speeches • act as a link between the Minister & outside world • are not MPs • where the Minister goes, they go • in 2004, there were about 80 ‘special advisors’ at a cost of £4 million.

  22. The Jo Moore affair Secretary of State for Transport was forced to dismiss his special adviser Jo Moore in 2002. She was too controversial and disliked by the civil servants in his department. She had sent an e mail on September 11th 2001 suggesting this was “a good day to bury bad news.”

  23. Questions for Debate • What is the difference between a civil servant and a special adviser ? • What is the expected code of behaviour for civil servants ? Do they stick to it ? • Why do some ministers prefer to listen to their special advisers ?

  24. What are quangos ? • What is a quango ? • Why has there been an increase in the number of quangos in recent years ? • Are quangos a threat to democratic and open government ?

  25. Past exam questionsChoose one title • What should be the relationship between a minister and his or her civil servants? • “The Cabinet’s role in decision making has been marginalised in recent governments” Discuss • How accurate is the claim that “the Prime Minister, although under personal and political constraints, largely controls the cabinet” ? (2005) • ‘Permanent, politically neutral and anonymous.’ How far does the UK civil service still reflect these key features ? (2006) • Discuss the view that modern British prime Ministers are not too strong, but too weak. (2006) • ‘Neither “prime ministerial government” nor “cabinet government” accurately describes the distribution of power within the cabinet system.’ Discuss (2007)

  26. ‘Neither “prime ministerial government” nor “cabinet government” accurately describes the distribution of power within the cabinet system.’ Discuss (2007)

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