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Whitehall isn't working – here's how the PM can fix it

Whitehall isn't working – here's how the PM can fix it

Independent21-06-2025
It never rains but it pours for Keir Starmer. He is fighting to stop the Iran crisis wrecking his one success as prime minister – a solid performance on foreign affairs in which he somehow maintains a productive relationship with Donald Trump.
Insiders tell me Starmer's efforts are aimed at persuading Iran to enter meaningful talks on its nuclear programme and then convincing a highly sceptical US president that Iran is serious about negotiations.
But if Trump goes ahead with his threat to bomb Iran, Starmer's special relationship with him could conceivably be stretched to breaking point.
The prime minister can't escape his woes on domestic matters. His intense diplomacy was interrupted on Thursday by the unwelcome news that Vicky Foxcroft had resigned as a whip in protest at the government's cuts to disability benefits. She might not be the last to quit a government post before the crunch vote on £5bn of welfare cuts on 1 July, when Starmer faces the biggest Labour revolt of his premiership.
Some parliamentary aides to ministers are on resignation watch. The government's robotic response to Foxcroft's departure, which failed to acknowledge her respected work as shadow disabilities minister before last year's election, angered some Labour MPs.
Many will rebel with a heavy heart. They accept the need to reduce the ballooning welfare budget, but think the panicky cuts ahead of Rachel Reeves's spring statement symbolise how the government repeatedly reacts to events – in this case, living from hand to mouth to stick within the chancellor's fiscal rules – instead of having a long-term reform strategy.
For some Whitehall-watchers, Starmer will not improve matters unless he reforms the centre of government. Critics think the relationship between No 10 and the Cabinet Office isn't working, leaving the other side of the triangle, the Treasury, to call the shots. The result: the winter fuel allowance catastrophe and now the welfare rebellion.
Even some in Downing Street admit privately a shake-up is needed. Sam Freedman, a former special adviser and author of an excellent book, Failed State, suggests loosening the Treasury's grip by forming an Office of Budget Management, run jointly by the Treasury and Downing Street, which would oversee future spending reviews to ensure they reflect the PM's priorities.
Freedman believes Starmer should consider a change Tony Blair introduced in his second term, which improved public service delivery. To prevent the whole operation being sucked into reacting to events, three units focused on different timescales: a policy unit on day-to-day oversight of Whitehall departments; a delivery unit on a small number of the PM's priorities (in Starmer's case, that would be his five missions); and a strategy unit on difficult long-term challenges. This ensured a more strategic state.
One problem today is that the 'missions delivery unit' is based in the Cabinet Office rather than No 10. The Institute for Government (IFG) think tank has made a sensible proposal to abolish the Cabinet Office and set up an expanded 'Office of the Prime Minister', which would then take charge of the missions.
Do such structures really matter? Yes. They are even more important when a PM makes a virtue out of his pragmatism and lack of ideology, as Starmer does. Like many predecessors, Starmer complains the Whitehall machine is slow to crank into life when he demands action. Often fair – but civil servants also have a point when they grumble that this government does not give them clear enough marching orders.
For example, the government's own commitment to Starmer's missions – later relaunched as six milestones in his 'plan for change' – is now being questioned in Whitehall. Ministers promised the missions would be the 'guiding star' of the government-wide spending review unveiled by Reeves last week, and that cabinet ministers would collaborate on cross-departmental working and budgets. Only one problem: there was little money to go round. So the review again became a trial of strength between the Treasury and individual ministers trying to protect their departments.
Starmer's 'mission-driven government' was caught in the crossfire and some Whitehall officials think the idea suffered serious damage. The IFG calculates that two of the missions – on economic growth and clean energy – did well out of the spending review, but the other three – on health, safer streets and opportunity – look difficult to achieve.
Another reason why the missions matter is that this government doesn't have the option of pumping in extra cash to secure the improvements to public services voters want, as Blair and Gordon Brown enjoyed. Although Reeves won headlines for her big boost to building projects, her squeeze on day-to-day budgets is viewed in Whitehall as a 'standstill settlement'. So reform and efficiency savings will be needed to secure tangible improvements – not least in the NHS.
The missions can play a part in prioritising these goals. With many public services still struggling in the voters' eyes, standing still will not win Labour a second term.
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The Latest: National Guard troops arrive in Washington DC as Trump's federal takeover begins
The Latest: National Guard troops arrive in Washington DC as Trump's federal takeover begins

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The Latest: National Guard troops arrive in Washington DC as Trump's federal takeover begins

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Lower rates would give a boost to investment prices and to the economy by making it cheaper for U.S. households and businesses to borrow to buy houses, cars or equipment. President Trump has angrily been calling for cuts to help the economy, often insulting the Fed's chair personally while doing so. ▶ Read more about the financial markets Trump backs Burt Jones in Republican race for Georgia governor in 2026 It's a boost to the incumbent lieutenant governor's effort to set himself up as the 2026 frontrunner for the GOP nomination. Trump announced the nod Monday, noting Jones was among the first Georgia Republicans to endorse Trump's first bid for the White House in 2016 and saying Jones 'worked tirelessly to help us win' in all three of Trump's bids. 'He has been with us from the very beginning,' Trump wrote on social media. 'I know his family well and have seen Burt tested at the most difficult levels and times.' Republicans including Attorney General Chris Carr are vying with Jones to be their party's nominee to succeed Gov. Brian Kemp, who can't run again because of term limits. Other Republican candidates who could enter the race include Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. ▶ Read more about the race for Georgia governor Guard troops start streaming in National Guard troops are beginning to arrive at the Washington, D.C., armory. They were seen arriving this morning at the Guard's headquarters in the city. Trump said Monday that in hopes of reducing crime, he would be taking over Washington's police department and activating 800 members of the National Guard. The crime Trump talked about is the same crime that city officials stress is already falling noticeably. Trump says recipients of Kennedy Center Honors will be revealed on Wednesday The Republican president, who had himself installed as chairman of the Kennedy Center's board, said in a social media post that the to-be-named nominees are 'GREAT.' 'GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS,' Trump wrote in a social media post. 'They will be announced Wednesday. 'Tremendous work is being done, and money being spent, on bringing it back to the absolute TOP LEVEL of luxury, glamour, and entertainment,' he said, without offering details. The Kennedy Center Honors program typically tapes in December for broadcast later in the month on CBS. Trump spurned the performing arts center in his first term after some honorees refused to attend a traditional White House event recognizing their achievements to protest Trump's policies, including those toward the arts. He did not attend the taping of the awards program during those four years in office. Trump's Tuesday schedule There is nothing on the president's public schedule today. However, press secretary Karoline Leavitt will hold a briefing at 1 p.m. ET. Trump's moves toward taking over Washington are unprecedented. Here's what the law says Trump took command of the police department and deployed the National Guard under laws and Constitutional powers that give the federal government more sway over the nation's capital than other cities. The measure still leaves significant power to the president and Congress, though no president has exercised the police powers before. Here's a look at what the law says about Trump's actions: 1. Trump activated the National Guard. The president can still call up the National Guard in Washington. His authority is less clear in Los Angeles, where a legal battle continues over his recent deployment of the National Guard despite the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom. 2. Trump took over the local police. Section 740 of the Home Rule Act allows for the president to take over Washington's Metropolitan Police Department for 48 hours, with possible extensions to 30 days, during times of emergencies. No president has done so before. 3. Trump didn't specify how long the takeover would last. Congress still has power over things like the budget and laws passed by the city council, but would have to repeal the Home Rule Act to expand federal power in the district.

UK businesses are making foreign trade work
UK businesses are making foreign trade work

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

UK businesses are making foreign trade work

Doing business overseas has never been more important or difficult. The British economy is increasingly reliant upon companies trading abroad, but it is a rapidly changing environment – not least due to the imposition of new tariffs by Donald Trump – and is ferociously competitive. The launch of the E2Exchange or E2E, International Track 100 for 2025 was a mark of how firms can battle and win. In association with The Independent, E2E, the leading business networking and mentoring organisation, has published the definitive index of the 100 fastest-growing internationally focused private businesses in the UK, based on their profits over the past three years. It's the second in a series of Track 100s to be produced this year. Others will cover different categories, including tech, job creation, dynamic and profits. E2E has tens of thousands of members and rising, with their Track 100s designed to showcase the best private British companies that are exhibiting consistent growth and using disruptive strategies to impact not just their own sector, but also on a nationwide – and in some cases, a global – scale. Shalini Khemka, founder of E2E, assembled a panel of corporate UK stars to herald the unveiling: James Harrison of Cycle Pharmaceuticals supplying treatments for those with rare neurological, mostly genetic, conditions; Ian Cummings from global brand experience agency Nteractive; Richard Gold of SkinnyDip, the lifestyle fashion house; and Sarah Baumann of Christopher Ward luxury watches. They were joined in discussion, before a large online audience, by yours truly and Dhaval Patel from Universal Partners, the foreign currency payments provider that is partnering the Track 100s. We jumped in at the deep end, with the US and Donald Trump. Harrison said for now it was 'business as usual' but the future remained unclear. Gold described recent months as having created a 'really difficult landscape and one that is ever-changing'. About 70 per cent of his custom comes from the Far East and dealing with China and exporting to the US has become trickier. As he put it, it is 'like coping with Covid again'. His company has had to think about manufacturing more locally in the US, 'but those things take time.' He's learned, though and advises, 'not to be trigger happy', to not panic and over-react. Cummings said tariffs was only one shift. Another that is affecting the events industry is the ability of people to work temporarily in the US. The old system operated well but recently people have been refused entry or an event has been visited by ICE officers and foreign workers barred. Patel said volatility in currency rates was also an issue. Even with all this going on, companies still face the usual challenges operating abroad. Harrison described the biggest ongoing hurdle as finding the right people to work 'in country'. Despite new technology in communications, being able to trust them was built on spending time with them, on travelling to meet them regularly – nothing can replace that. It comes down to 'old fashioned relationship building, leaving a lasting impression when you get on the plane home,' he said. Christopher Ward is forging a trail in the world of designer watches and is up against the combined might of the long-established Swiss giants, determined to undercut them on cost. 'We're very big on humility and not taking our growth for granted,' said Baumann. Brands do ask how the firm manages it, as an 'indy from England', he said. 'We love it when we get that reaction, when people are astonished that we can do what we do, at that price.' The panel was agreed that it was no use waiting for government to assist. 'In 13 years, we've not been helped one jot. You have to do it all yourself. You must have the backbone, the mentors, the people who can pick you up to put you right,' said Harrison. Cummings said remaining positive was vital. 'There will be bumps along the way, always, but the future looks very bright,' he said. Baumann concurred. 'Part of being an entrepreneur or working in a start-up and scaling up is optimism, so focus on your customers, the energy within the business and the community. There is plenty of good stuff happening as well,' she noted. After an hour, the session drew to a close. It was uplifting, hearing these British success stories talking about taking on the rest of the world. It is easy to let the problems crowd in but that strong domestic spirt is very much alive and thriving.

Car Deal of the Day: a cut-price Mazda MX-5 to soak up the summer sun in
Car Deal of the Day: a cut-price Mazda MX-5 to soak up the summer sun in

Auto Express

time18 minutes ago

  • Auto Express

Car Deal of the Day: a cut-price Mazda MX-5 to soak up the summer sun in

Arguably the best sports car money can buy Engaging handling; old-fashioned thrills Just £296.57 a month The UK is currently basking in its fourth heatwave of the year, so what better way to enjoy this than with a drop-top? The Mazda MX-5 is more than just a drop-top, though, because it's the best-value sports car on sale in Britain, and a multiple Auto Express New Car Awards winner. You can bag the keys to one of the automotive world's greats for less than £300 right now – but you'd better hurry because deals like this won't hang around for long. Advertisement - Article continues below Carwow Leasey is offering the terrific MX-5 Roadster for just £296.57 a month right now. This four-year deal requires a £3,853.84 initial payment, while you can enjoy 6,000 miles of top-down motoring a year. This deal is for the entry-level 1.5-litre Prime-Lime – but, remember, Mazda doesn't make a bad MX-5, and to many enthusiasts the basic package is the best. It still comes with 16-inch black-painted alloys, cruise control and sat-nav, along with Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Because this is the soft-top Roadster and not the hard-top RF (Retractable Fastback), the switch from top-up to top-down motoring requires just a flick of your wrist. Then you can hear the rorty exhaust note from that fizzy little 1.5-litre four-cylinder engine. With 130bhp and just a 1,106kg kerbweight to lug around, performance is brisk, with 0-62mph taking 8.3 seconds. But the MX-5 isn't really about speed – it's a wonderfully involving driving experience, with a rifle-bolt-sharp six-speed direct-action gearbox, and light, engaging steering. We can't think of many cheaper ways to get good old-fashioned summer thrills for such a low price. The Car Deal of the Day selections we make are taken from our own Auto Express Buy A Car deals service, which includes the best current offers from car dealers and leasing companies around the UK. Terms and conditions apply, while prices and offers are subject to change and limited availability. If this deal expires, you can find more top Mazda MX-5 leasing offers from leading providers on our Mazda MX-5 page. Check out the Mazda MX-5 deal or take a look at our previous Car Deal of the Day selection here…

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