you talked of maybe a new beveridge report, a sort of royal commission. constitutional historian peter hennessy told us that if anybody should chair that, it would be you. would you like to do it? i would love to. what would you do if somebody said, we are going to do again what the post war government did which is one individual to look right across the spectrum, the five great wants, as he talked about, what would you do? i wonder if it is obvious, we are not in a post or situation. and we do have an nhs and we do have a free education system. it is not like the giants that where there are there now but we do have in my mind, ifeel there are, evils is my only word for describing it but i think the damage they do to society is a bit more than the individual.
sufficiently, the economy, everything. and i think that my worry is that political parties, all of them, need to see that somehow, just taking some of the economic, social pressure out of these families is worth it.- social pressure out of these families is worth it. you talked of ma be a families is worth it. you talked of may be a new families is worth it. you talked of may be a new beveridge - families is worth it. you talked of may be a new beveridge report, | families is worth it. you talked of. may be a new beveridge report, sort of royal commission. constitutional historian peter hennessy told us that if anybody should check that, it would be you. would you like to do it? i it would be you. would you like to do it? ., ., ., it would be you. would you like to do it? what - it would be you. would you like to | do it? what would do it? i would love to. what would ou do if do it? i would love to. what would you do if somebody do it? i would love to. what would you do if somebo
Most prime ministers fall out with the civil service at some point. David Cameron attacked the ‘enemies of enterprise’; Tony Blair spoke of ‘the scars on my back’ from battling the public sector. But the premiership of Boris Johnson brought relations to a new low, with prorogation and partygate fuelling paranoia on both sides. Under
Senior civil servants and military top brass move seamlessly into lucrative jobs in companies they were previously responsible for regulating, writes Richard Norton-Taylor.
By Richard Norton-Taylor
Declassified UK
The behaviour of cabinet ministers, notably the former justice and foreign s