The Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee
has published its report on the role and status of the Prime
Minister’s Office.
Conclusions and recommendations
The Office of the Prime
Minister
1.The lack of a statutory definition of the roles of the Prime
Minister or the Cabinet in the UK has been reflected in the
evolution of the Office of the Prime Minister and the Cabinet
Office. As Prime Ministers have sought to increase their
strategic leadership and policy role, the Office of the Prime
Minister (Number 10) has expanded and adapted to reflect that.
They have also drawn on the supposedly collective resource of the
Cabinet Office in the process. (Paragraph 35)
2.There should be a clearer delineation between those resources
provided to support the Prime Minister and the support for
collective government and cross-government activity more
generally. (Paragraph 36)
Accountability
3.The Office of the Prime Minister is nominally
a business unit of the Cabinet Office. However, it
currently it appears to operate with even less
transparency than other Cabinet Office business units. The
Cabinet Office Annual Report and Accounts do not
include a narrative report on the Office of the
Prime Minister as they do for its other business
units. And governments have declined to respond to
Parliamentary Questions about its organisation. This
is not acceptable. (Paragraph 41)
4.We do not consider the status of the Office
of Prime Minister as a business unit to be an
accurate reflection of the role that it plays. Yet
it currently operates with even less transparency
that this status suggests. For so long as the
Government maintains that it is a business unit of
the Cabinet Office, the Government should report on
its activities in the Annual Report and Accounts as
it does for its other business units. And in its
response to Parliamentary Questions, it
should provide information as it does for its other
business units. (Paragraph 42)
5.In its Single Departmental Plan, the objectives
of supporting the Prime Minister should be
disaggregated from the support provided to the
Cabinet or the Government more
generally. (Paragraph 43)
6.We have heard little evidence to support the
creation of a separate Department for the Prime
Minister. The current Office of the Prime Minister
is too small and much of its workforce too
transient to be sensibly treated as a distinct
department. The creation of a larger department,
bringing together Number 10, the Cabinet Office and
perhaps parts of HM Treasury has its supporters.
However, the detail of this and how it might work
are beyond the remit of this inquiry. Moreover, at
least some of the benefits could be achieved
through better collective working and a clearer
specification of the respective roles of Number 10
and the Cabinet Office. (Paragraph 49)
7.Whilst the creation of a separate
department would help to resolve some of the
accountability issues that have concerned us in
this inquiry, these could be resolved more easily
through greater transparency within the existing
arrangements. (Paragraph 50)
8.Increasing the direct accountability of the most senior
Spads in Number 10 in this way would reflect the
quasi-executive role that some have assumed. However, to
do so would be to accept this quasi-executive role.
The principle that “advisers advise, ministers
decide” should remain the practice and Ministers,
including the Prime Minister, should remain accountable to
Parliament for the conduct of their advisers. To
this end, much greater clarity around the roles
that Spads can play and their relationship with
officials may be needed. The Committee will be
undertaking a dedicated inquiry into Special Advisers later
in the Parliament when we will consider this in
more detail. (Paragraph 56)
9.The role of Special Advisers in Number 10 has
evolved to such a degree that some have played a
quasi-executive role. This is wrong. It undermines
both ministerial accountability to Parliament and
collective responsibility on the part of Cabinet.
Ministers, including the Prime Minister, should remain
fully accountable for the actions of the Special
Advisers. It is the responsibility of Prime
Ministers to ensure that their Special Advisers
work within the proper parameters of their role
and of senior officials as well as of other Cabinet
members, to reinforce this. (Paragraph
57)
Full report