It is crying foul over the decision by the head
of the UK Civil Service, Sir
Jeremy Heywood, to ban his workers from providing support to the Ministers
seeking the country’s UK withdrawal.
There
have been howls of anger from the United Kingdom Independence Party, with a European
Parliament Member, Nathan Gill, saying it was a “stitch-up”, denying senior Eurosceptic
figures the “significant bodies of work” that Civil Servants must already have
done on the impact of a Brexit victory in the referendum.
Sir
Jeremy is completely right in his decision. Keeping Britain in the European
Union on the terms negotiated by Prime Minister David Cameron in Brussels is
official Government policy and Civil Servants work for the Government — end of
story.
Mr
Cameron is perfectly entitled to rely on the resources of the Civil Service to
promote his policies as he would in any other Government campaign, for example
to warn of the dangers of smoking.
The
Brexit campaign is simply a lobby group putting a contrary view. Like any other
lobby group it must employ its own experts, researchers and propagandists to
deliver its message.
What
makes this a little different is that some Ministers in Mr Cameron’s Government
have been given leave to campaign against his policy and promote Brexit. This is
unprecedented and a huge concession on the part of the Prime Minister.
Ordinarily
Ministers would have been forced to resign their office and campaign as
ordinary Members of Parliament. They might even have faced the withdrawal of
the whip in the House of Commons — in effect suspension from the party.
The
fact that Mr Cameron has not taken this course is partly pragmatic — he does
not want to split the Conservative Party — but also because he understands the
deeply held conviction of some Ministers and MPs that the UK has no place in
the European experiment. He has been extraordinarily generous.
But
of course the Brexit lobby group wants more — and will continue to shout
discrimination through the campaign in order to promote the fiction that it is
the gallant, patriotic underdog fighting against the dead hand of the Brussels
and Whitehall bureaucracies.
It
balks at a frontal attack on Mr Cameron. Instead it savages Sir Jeremy, a thoroughly
decent but defenceless Civil Servant, for doing his job.
Sadly
a preview of what is almost certain to come.
No comments:
Post a Comment