logo
What a surprise! Seven in ten civil servants say working from home has a ‘positive impact' on Whitehall

What a surprise! Seven in ten civil servants say working from home has a ‘positive impact' on Whitehall

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Most civil servants think working from home has had a positive impact, new polling has revealed.
Officials claim remote working has even improved public sector productivity as well as their own job satisfaction.
And many believe they should be allowed to WFH as much as they like, with not one of those questioned by YouGov thinking they should be forced back to their desks full-time.
Their insistence on the benefits of working from home comes despite both Tory and Labour ministers demanding that all civil servants come back to the office at least three days a week for the sake of team-building and mentoring new recruits.
John O'Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance, said: 'It will come as no surprise how much civil servants love the work from home culture that has spread across Whitehall.
'But these attitudes are completely at odds with the views of British taxpayers, who are absolutely fed up with the shockingly poor productivity levels of the UK's bureaucracy.
'Senior mandarins should care more about the users and consumers of public services - taxpayers - than the comfort of pen-pushers. That means getting them back to the office.'
YouGov questioned 101 civil servants in middle-management or senior roles and found that three-quarters (75 per cent) believe remote working has been good for their own departments, and almost as many (70 per cent) say the same about Whitehall in general.
Almost four in five (78 per cent) think wfh has boosted productivity while even more (85 per cent) say it had improved employee satisfaction.
At least half say the culture that took hold during the pandemic has had a positive impact on public service delivery (58 per cent), policy development (50) and communication (50).
However only one in four (28 per cent) think wfh has been good for performance management with almost as many (25) saying the opposite.
Half (50 per cent) of those quizzed said that 'mandating one or two days in the office a week made the most sense' with only one in five backing the existing policy of requiring staff to be present three or more days a week.
In addition, 'none supported demanding everyone turn up every day' while three in ten 'feel the most appropriate policy is to allow all civil servants to work from home as much as they want', YouGov said.
Overall six in ten (59 per cent) civil servants questioned feel the Whitehall machine is performing well, with only one in three (33 per cent) say it is working badly.
By comparison, when pollsters asked MPs the same question only four in ten (40 per cent) had a positive view of the civil service.
It comes after Sir Keir Starmer .
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Where are the best places in Scotland to retire?
Where are the best places in Scotland to retire?

STV News

time6 minutes ago

  • STV News

Where are the best places in Scotland to retire?

Mid Dunbartonshire has been ranked the best place to retire in Scotland, according to a new nationwide index published by Legal & General. The constituency topped the Scottish list in the financial services firm's UK-wide Retirement Readiness Index. It scored areas across a range of factors that contribute to a happier later life, including access to healthcare, opportunities to build social connections, access to nature, local amenities and financial security. The index was compiled by scoring areas against six 'pillars' – housing, health, social and community, financial, nature, and amenities. Mid Dunbartonshire scored highest in Scotland due to strong performance in health, access to green space, and overall wellbeing among its over-65 population. Stirling and Strathallan, East Renfrewshire, and West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine also ranked highly, with the Western Isles (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) rounding out the top five. Other high-scoring areas included Perth and Kinross, Caithness, and Dumfries and Galloway. Across the UK, Chesham and Amersham in Buckinghamshire was named the overall best place to retire. Areas in Surrey, West Sussex, and Oxfordshire also featured prominently in the top 20. In Scotland, urban and rural areas performed well across different measures. Edinburgh North and Leith and Edinburgh West were noted for their high level of access to healthcare and local services, while areas like Argyll and Bute scored strongly on environmental and community factors. Lorna Shah, managing director of Retail Retirement at L&G, said the findings show retirement wellbeing is shaped by a combination of factors. 'Financial security is a key enabler, but it's the combination of health, social connection, the surrounding environment and access to local services that makes the biggest difference. The data suggests growing regional variation in retirement readiness, with Scotland, Wales, and parts of the South West of England offering strong overall conditions for older residents. The study comes amid ongoing national debates about retirement planning, housing provision for older adults, and the importance of community services in an ageing population. 1. Mid Dunbartonshire 2. Stirling and Strathallan 3. East Renfrewshire 4 West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine 5. Na h-Eileanan an Iar 6. Argyll, Bute and South Lochaber 7. Perth and Kinross-shire 8. Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross 9. Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk 10. Dumfries and Galloway 11. Inverness, Skye and West Ross-shire 12, Edinburgh North and Leith 13. Edinburgh West 14. Gordon and Buchan 15. Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale 16. Angus and Perthshire Glens 17. Arbroath and Broughty Ferry 18. Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock 19. North East Fife 20. Aberdeenshire North and Moray East Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Hedge fund tycoon Hosking says rival Telegraph bid "ready to go"
Hedge fund tycoon Hosking says rival Telegraph bid "ready to go"

Sky News

time44 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Hedge fund tycoon Hosking says rival Telegraph bid "ready to go"

The hedge fund founder enlisted to back a bid for The Daily Telegraph says the offer is "ready to go" if a takeover of the broadsheet title involving sovereign Gulf money runs into further regulatory problems. Sky News has learnt that Jeremy Hosking, the prominent City figure who co-founded Marathon Asset Management, is pledging to inject £100m of his own money into the newspaper group if the self-styled 'British bid' of which he is part is successful. Mr Hosking, who now runs Hosking Partners, has been working with Dovid Efune, the owner of the New York Sun, in an effort to gain control of the Telegraph for several months. They have been thwarted, though, by an agreement reached with RedBird Capital Partners, the US-based investment firm, to buy the titles for £500m following a two-year battle which has plunged the Telegraph into a protracted state of limbo. RedBird's bid includes tens of millions of pounds of funding from IMI, a state-backed Abu Dhabi vehicle, which cleared a key hurdle last week when the House of Lords voted against a 'fatal motion' which would have blocked the sovereign investment. The outcome of the vote was not without fierce debate, with 155 peers supporting the ban. IMI is controlled by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the vice-president of the United Arab Emirates and ultimate owner of Manchester City Football Club. Speaking through Mr Efune, Mr Hosking said in a statement on Wednesday morning: "We have been following the latest developments closely and with the best outcome for all Telegraph stakeholders front of mind. "We understand from the Lords debate last week that there is now a legal requirement for the government to formally investigate all the foreign government ties that may result in influence over the current preferred buyer. "Should the buyer be deemed unsuitable, our "British Bid" is ready to go. "We believe our current capitalization is more than adequate to replace the controlling shareholder's portion of the deal. "My own personal commitment is £100m in equity capital." Further details of the financing lined up by Mr Efune's consortium remain unclear, including the level of debt attached to his prospective offer. The RedBird-led acquisition of the Telegraph remains subject to investigations by both Ofcom and the Competition and Markets Authority, which are likely to delay completion of the deal into next year. Sky News previously revealed that Sir Leonard Blavatnik, owner of the DAZN sports streaming platform, and Daily Mail proprietor Lord Rothermere were preparing to buy minority stakes as part of the RedBird transaction. Gerry Cardinale, the RedBird executive, who has spearheaded the latest iteration of its acquisition, has described the firm as "the right owner at the right time". RedBird said in May that it was "in discussions with select UK-based minority investors with print media expertise and strong commitment to upholding the editorial values of the Telegraph". The Telegraph titles' parent company was forced into insolvency proceedings in 2023 by Lloyds Banking Group, which ran out of patience with the Barclay family, their long-standing owner. RedBird IMI, a joint venture between the two firms, paid £600m several months later to acquire a call option that was intended to convert into ownership of the Telegraph newspapers and The Spectator magazine. That objective was thwarted by a change in media ownership laws - which banned any form of foreign state ownership. Some peers argued last week that a 15% threshold was too high and that the legislation to permit it was dangerously ambiguous because it could allow for more than one state investor to aggregate their holdings in British newspapers. A further statutory instrument will need to be approved in order to address this issue. The Spectator, which had also been part of the same group, was sold last year for £100m to Sir Paul Marshall, the hedge fund billionaire, who has installed Lord Gove, the former cabinet minister, as its editor.

Jon Burrows: UUP's newest MLA carries on tradition of men in uniform
Jon Burrows: UUP's newest MLA carries on tradition of men in uniform

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Jon Burrows: UUP's newest MLA carries on tradition of men in uniform

Jon Burrows is the newest Stormont MLA for the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), but he is not the only former police officer the party has tried to attract News NI understands the party approached Jim Gamble, the former head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Command Centre in the United Kingdom, to be its North Down candidate in the Westminster election in July immediately turned down the Gamble declined to comment when approached by the BBC. Instead, the party went for the former Army officer Colonel Tim Collins, who failed to win the notoriously told the BBC at the election count that the people of North Down "don't want someone who doesn't live in Northern Ireland"."They're interested in local politics," he added."They're not interested in cutting VAT, they're not interested in international affairs. "They're interested in potholes and hedges."He had already complained during the campaign that he could insure his Rolls Royce in England, where he lived, for what it costs to insure a Ford Fiesta in north the recruitment of Jon Burrows to replace Colin Crawford, who lasted less than a year in the North Antrim Stormont seat, carries on a tradition within the UUP of seeking to attract oven-ready high(ish) profile representatives who are no strangers to of the past four leaders of the UUP have been:Steve Aiken, a former Royal Navy submarine commanderDoug Beattie, a former Royal Irish Regiment officer well known for his service in Iraq and AfghanistanMike Nesbitt, a former TV news presenterIn addition, one of its nine current assembly members, Andy Allen, was seriously injured while serving in the Army in leader Robbie Butler is a former firefighter. The policy of bringing in high profile people from other walks of life is not entirely unique to the example, Sinn Féin now has an MP, Pat Cullen, better known for her role as boss of a UK-wide nursing trade the UUP unarguably is way out in front for bringing in candidates already well known in other fields. So why?"There is something that attracts seniority to the UUP," says former party staffer Michael Shilliday. "In the old days that was just "big house unionism". "Maybe it's still that."But really it is what the 'decent people' shtick from 2005 was all about."That's why these people see themselves reflected in the UUP."That is a reference to a disastrous 2005 general election campaign slogan: "Decent People Vote Ulster Unionist". I remember being in the BBC office in Stormont one morning when the party press officer walked in introducing a man he said was a former Royal Navy submarine what seemed like no time at all, Steve Aiken, to use the hackneyed line, went from the command of one sinking ship to he stepped down, he was replaced by Doug Beattie who promised a "union of people", before things the latest changes is Mike Nesbitt, another man who had no grounding in elected politics when he swapped his news anchor role at UTV for an even hotter seat at quitting the leadership the first time, following a disappointing assembly election, he is because there was no other obvious candidate and partly because he represented the best chance of salvation for a party which is rapidly using up its quota of last to former UUP director of communications Alex Kane "it's a hangover from the 1920s when the Ulster Unionists saw themselves as the party of service". "They still do," he adds."Service to the people, service to the country and for them that is represented by a uniform."In a way, Mike Nesbitt is the same. "He was seen in people's living rooms on television each night and that is a form of service too. "The problem is times have changed."But it also reflects a lack of candidates from those already within the ranks who have the track record necessary to win elections and that, long-term, is a problem for the once mighty party of unionism.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store