The Chancellor of the Exchequer, , has appointed Tom Hayhoe as
Covid Counter-Fraud Commissioner.
Mr Hayhoe began his role on 3 December and will be in post for a
fixed-term of one-year.
Mr Hayhoe will work across government to draw on the expertise in
the Public Sector Fraud Authority, Government Commercial
Function, and Department of Health and Social Care to use every
means possible to recoup public money lost in pandemic-related
fraud and contracts that have not delivered.
With an initial focus on PPE procurement, Mr Hayhoe will be
empowered to scrutinise Covid spending and provide assurance that
everything possible has been done to recover public funds in
other Covid schemes including Furlough, Covid Grants, and Bounce
Back Loans.
Mr Hayhoe will be reporting into the Chancellor and supported by
a small team within the Treasury. At the end of his fixed term,
Mr Hayhoe will provide a report to be presented to Parliament.
This review will generate lessons and recommendations for
government procurement in the face of future crises.
Mr Hayhoe has significant experience in health, scrutiny,
procurement, and commercial negotiations. Previous roles include
Chair of West Middlesex University Hospital (2010 to 2015),
Investigating Committee Chair on the Nursing and Midwifery
Council's Fitness to Practise Panel (2012 to 2022), Chair of the
West London NHS Trust (2015 to 2023), and senior positions at WH
and McKinsey.
Mr Hayhoe is also currently serving as Chair of the Legal
Services Consumer Panel, as Chair of the Taxation Disciplinary
Board, as an External Assessor at the College of Policing, and as
a Disciplinary Committee Chair for the Association of Chartered
Certified Accountants.
Further information
About the appointment process:
Mr Hayhoe has been appointed following an open recruitment
process. As part of this process, HM Treasury recruited an
executive search agency. A panel comprising of Antonia (Director General of Public
Spending, HM Treasury), Mark Cheeseman (CEO, Public Sector Fraud
Authority) and Sir Ian Andrews (independent panel member)
interviewed a number of candidates and made recommendations to
the Chancellor, which informed her decision.