We are in Court today and tomorrow on a difficult case about an important principle: that the Government mustn't fill public jobs from amongst its friends.
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'By definition, when decision-makers conduct closed recruitments, they are only able to choose between candidates with whom they are already connected.' Our co-claimant: @Halima_Begum@RunnymedeTrust
Judge: I do regard question of whether there was a provision criterion or practice and whether it was particular disadvantage to groups with protected characteristics that we cite as being one of central questions in this case.
Government claims it would have taken 3 months to run an open recruitment process for Test and Trace appointments. But this is not compelling... the process can normally be completed in a few weeks ⬇️
Jason Coppell QC: Harding was already known to Hancock - she was a Tory peer, head of NHS Improvement. The suggestion that she met all the criteria could not have been made without any pre-existing knowledge of her
One email shows a Cabinet Office official describing the recruitment process for the head of Test and Trace as 'ludicrous'.
We agree. Appointing such an important role at such breakneck speed with so little information was seemingly ludicrous
Government claims they were justified in not having a proper recruitment process for Dido Harding as Head of Test and Trace because it was a 'temporary appointment' - but the letter of her appointment has no term in it 👀
The practice seems to be that direct public appointments (of those linked to the Conservative Party) are seldom remunerated - e.g. Dido Harding, Lord Feldman, George Pascoe-Watson, Gina Coladangelo's first role..."
When recruitment processes are closed, the only applicants who can be considered are those in Ministers’ phone books. The Government’s failure to offer remuneration for many of these high level full-time roles shuts out those who don’t have family wealth
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💥 NEW: A disabled children’s charity handed over 43% of its grants to rightwing think-tanks and pressure groups based at Tufton Street and beyond over the last five years. 🧵
🔎Read our latest investigation with @MC_00_ here ⬇️
During this period, the Street Foundation, a charity set up to support “individuals and organisations involved with children/young people with a disability/special needs”, has given rightwing groups £749,000.
The Institute of Economic Affairs is one of the recipients of these grants, despite its calls for disability benefits to be privatised.
And the New Culture Forum, which has called for the Equality Act to be scrapped, has also been funded by the foundation.
THREAD: With Labour’s manifesto pledge to appoint a covid corruption commissioner to recoup the billions the government wasted on dodgy PPE deals during the pandemic, here’s a potted history of our work to expose the industrial scale of the scandal…
Covid-19 gripped the UK just four months after the 2019 election, and the pandemic has been the defining issue of this Parliament. Unluckily for our country, these extraordinary times brought out our ministers’ most egregious impulses – as shown in Partygate and the PPE scandal.
At the start of the pandemic, it became immediately clear that the NHS was left woefully underprepared after years of political neglect.
🧵THREAD: In the lead up to the shocking revelations around Frank Hester's vile racist comments published by @guardiannews, we were keeping a close eye on the money flowing between him, his company and the Government... 🔎 🧵
💷Back in September, we revealed how Frank Hester's healthtech company, The Phoenix Partnership, had bagged £137m worth of hidden Government contracts⬇️
🚁We followed up by drawing attention to how The Phoenix Partnership shelled out £16,000 to give Rishi Sunak a helicopter ride to one of his political visits ⬇️
With Keir Starmer pledging "a total crackdown on cronyism" if Labour wins power in his speech today, here’s a rundown of just a small portion of the dodgy PPE deals which Good Law Project has helped to expose 🧵
In summer 2020, with @EveryDoctorUK, we challenged three Government PPE contracts set up with a pest controller, a confectioner, and a hedge fund.
The PPE delivered through these deals was either untested or had already been found to be unusable.
We also worked with cross-party MPs @laylamoran, @carolinelucas and @debbie_abrahams to launch a legal challenge against the Government over its failure to publish PPE contracts worth billions of pounds.
In the continued fallout of Michelle Mone's disastrous interview, here’s a potted history of Good Law Project’s fight to expose the PPE scandal as we prepare to release more stories in our new series, #TheVIPFiles...🧵
At the start of the pandemic, when NHS workers were betrayed by acute PPE shortages, we called for an independent public inquiry.
It wasn’t until a year later that the Government committed to one.
Thérèse Coffey’s resigned as environment minister. In her resignation letter, she said “I am proud to have delivered for people, the planet and prosperity [...] Turning ambition into action and delivery has been the hallmark of my service.”
So what did she deliver
Having been a minister responsible for water quality between 2016 and 2019, Coffey would have been well aware of the sewage scandal when she took over the department last October. The deadline was looming to respond to our legal action over sewage dumping: goodlaw.social/6t9
This came as the number of swimmers falling ill from UK waters had doubled in the space of a year 🤢 cieh.org/ehn/public-hea…