Emergency contracting rules - given concerns about widespread cronyism, just how long will UK’s public bodies go on awarding government contracts without tender?

Answer: the Cabinet Office isn't saying.
THREAD
In March 2020, as the UK went into lockdown, the gov issued a “guidance notice” (PPN 01/20) on how public bodies could procure goods and services without tendering them, due to the emergency situation.
gov.uk/government/pub…
This encouraged various public bodies to issue ‘direct awards’ to suppliers without tendering them, invoking Regulation 32(2)(c) under the Public Contract Regulations (PCR) 2015.
In July 2020, @allthecitizens emailed the Cabinet Office, asking “what rules or policies govern how long this PPN will be in force, or whether these emergency procurement rules will continue to be in force until the government decides that they should end?”
Their reply was that “The PPN did not introduce a new policy; it simply raised awareness of the existing Regulation 32(2)(c). The PPN will therefore not 'time out' while the PCR 2015 remain in use.”
Then,, on 20 Feb, we submitted an FoI request, asking:
A) who has responsibility for deciding when it is no longer necessary to use emergency tendering processes;
B) how will it be decided that the situation no longer requires the use of emergency reg's?
whatdotheyknow.com/request/how_lo…
On April 7, the Cabinet Office replied saying that “it is for individual authorities to make their own determinations on when to use these procedures” and they can continue to do so as long as they can demonstrate that…
whatdotheyknow.com/request/how_lo…
.@allthecitizens are now seeing many contracts awarded under emergency direct awards which are unconnected to the pandemic, citing “extreme urgency following COVID-19 pressures”.
The pandemic has certainly had a knock on effect on many NHS services, but does this justify the continued use of tender processes which reduce transparency and accountability in contracting… and given the scandals of producerement, we have to ask for how long?
The Cabinet Office is saying that as long as the DHSC and the minister in charge, Matt Hancock, want to continue to bypass normal tendering procedures, they can do so, and it is entirely up to them to decide. Once again, the government is getting to mark its own homework.
We've asked the Cabinet Office to say whether it has any plans to publish further guidance on the use of emergency contracting rules, and whether they still believe there are unforeseen or emergency circumstances over a year into the pandemic. Like many others, we want to know...

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More from @allthecitizens

14 Apr
It's great to see Labour pushing for a probe into lobbying at the heart of government.

We at @allthecitizens and others like ourselves have been concerned about Tory "sleaze and corruption" for quite some time:
bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politi…
What of the Conservative donors who won high-value contracts just days after donating to the party?
Or the total £1bn in public funds issued to Tory donors during its pandemic response so far, with a further £2bn given away to associates, ex-politicians, and aides with roles in award-winning companies?
Read 5 tweets
13 Apr
𝐁𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐊𝐈𝐍𝐆:

The Chair of UK Government Senior Salaries Review Body, Martin Read, is Chairman of a company awarded a £15m Lateral Flow Device distribution contract.

He was previously on the Cabinet Office Efficiency and Reform Board.

THREAD
Major UK transport & logistics company Wincanton Plc won the £15m contract from DHSC, published on 18th March, to store and distribute Lateral Flow Device test kits in the fight against Coronavirus.

…te.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/041788…

contractsfinder.service.gov.uk/notice/90fd4f4…
The non-executive Chair of Wincanton, Martin Read, appointed in 2018, also works as a government advisor, sitting on the chair of the Senior Salaries Review Body.
gov.uk/government/peo…
Read 12 tweets
12 Apr
Open Source Toolkit by @allthecitizens

Believing investigative journalism is healthy for democracy, we're posting a series of toolkit links we think are vital for investigating corruption.

Please RT.

#1/50 is @ICIJ’s Offshore Leaks database

offshoreleaks.icij.org Image
#2/50 of our daily #OpenSourceToolkit is @wikileaks. Please RT!

The notorious publisher of Hilary Clinton’s emails and US military cover-ups still regularly releases datasets of restricted official materials for the scrutiny of citizens everywhere: wikileaks.org Image
#3/50 of our daily #OpenSourceToolkit is @DDoSecret

DDoSecrets publishes info in the public interest, like foreign investments in Myanmar linked to the displacement and genocide of the Rohingya, and social media sites linked to the attempted US coup. Image
Read 5 tweets
31 Mar
On Monday, with @BylineTimes, we reported on 15 Tory donors of 15 companies linked to almost £1bn in awards.

But there's also 15 advisors, ex- or current-Tory politicians, Lords and former employees with links to companies that won a further £2bn. THREAD:
bylinetimes.com/2021/03/31/map…
We have found 31 contracts worth some £2,064,966,708 that have been awarded to 14 firms with non-financial ties to the Conservative Party.

87% of these new agreements were published after the 30 day legal limit, and 53% were awarded using emergency procurement procedures.
Our new findings bring the combined total of Tory-linked firms, either through donations or associations to the party, to over £3bn.

11.35% of the £26.5bn in published contracts so far.
Read 4 tweets
29 Mar
The Billion Pound Pandemic Gold-Rush:

A year after the anniversary of the 1st UK lockdown, @allthecitizens @BylineTimes have uncovered almost £1bn in COVID-19 contracts awarded to 15 companies, all linked to Conservative party donors. THREAD:
bylinetimes.com/2021/03/29/map…
In Feb we reported on ‘The Crony Ratio’ (8 donors who gave £8.2m to the Tories, awarded £881m in deals)

Our investigation today adds 7 more to the mix

57 contracts worth £943,688,375 going to companies linked to directors who’ve given the Tories £12m+
1/3rd of the contracts were awarded under emergency procurement rules.

77% weren't published within the 30 day legal time frame.

Of the £26.5bn total spent in response to Covid19, these 15 donors and their associated companies account for 3.6% of all contracts published to-date
Read 4 tweets
29 Mar
🚨OUR NEW LEGAL CHALLENGE to the British government 🚨

We teamed up with @cori_crider @Foxglovelegal to stop ministers from using self-destructing messages to conduct government business.

bit.ly/39mYId5
Director of the campaigning law group Foxglove @Cori Crider: “It’s not appropriate to conduct government business on disappearing-message platforms".
It's privacy vs public transparency
Read 6 tweets

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