By David Czarnetzki 28th May 2024

My previous blog, published on 4th May, exposed the fact the Government had fruitlessly spent £51,339 of taxpayers’ money on the recruitment process to appoint a successor to Rob Behrens, the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman, who retired at the end of March 2024.

However, the response to my Freedom of Information request left four of my questions, outlined on the blog, unanswered. Readers may be interested that, by following the advice to pursue the outstanding aspects of the Freedom of Information request with the Cabinet Office, I have now received the following response:

“Following the announcement of a general election, any decision- making activity regarding the appointment of a new Ombudsman will cease until after the election”.

Parliamentary purdah has kicked the appointment into to the long grass, despite the process to find the replacement having started in April 2023. To this we must also add the Government’s response, published on 23rd May, to the annual scrutiny of the Ombudsman by the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee (PACAC).

In their scrutiny report, PACAC recommended:

“We renew our call for legislative reform of PHSO… The PHSO have outlined to us some concrete issues that are being caused….by lack of reform. Reforms are long overdue and we do not agree with the Government that this is not an urgent issue: rather it has been neglected for too long and further delay is no longer tenable….All political parties should include a commitment to reforming the legislation relating to PHSO in their upcoming manifestos ahead of the General Election, coupled with a commitment to introducing such legislation early in the next Parliament”.

How, then, did the Government respond to this recommendation? Sadly, it was an exact cut and paste to similar calls from PACAC the previous year;

“The Government…considers our system is effective in the context in which it operates, ensuring that effective internal complaints processes address issues without the need to involve ombudsman and that complaints have recourse to the independent ombudsman where necessary”.

The response continues:

While the effective operation of the ombudsman system is an important matter, the Government is not convinced that fundamental reform is a priority at the current time, nor that legislation is the answer to many of the issues identified by the Committee”.

Really? Is this the same party who, in Government in December 2016, introduced a bill to Parliament championed by Chris Skidmore who was the Cabinet Office Minister, hailing it as introducing

“A People’s Ombudsman”

Is it the same party in Government who, when Michael Gove was at the Cabinet Office, told PACAC that no reform would take place before 2023-24?

I am afraid it is. Now the same party in Government can’t even be bothered to appoint a permanent Ombudsman but has wasted over £53,000 on the process so far.

Maybe the current Government will be returned to power on 4th July, maybe it will not. I can only conclude that, whoever takes the reins, they will need to be held accountable.