Article 6B4BA Tuesday briefing: How Dominic Raab set the agenda after a stinging report on bullying

Tuesday briefing: How Dominic Raab set the agenda after a stinging report on bullying

by
Archie Bland
from World news | The Guardian on (#6B4BA)

In today's newsletter: The ex-deputy PM has found ample support from some quarters after an investigation into bullying was released. Our political correspondents explain how Raab's anger drove the discourse

Good morning. You might have thought, when Dominic Raab resigned on Friday because an investigation into bullying claims found that he had been intimidating" and unreasonably and persistently aggressive", that his departure would represent a complete defeat. How else to interpret the conclusions from an independent KC that serious allegations against the deputy prime minister and justice secretary were true, and Rishi Sunak's affirmation that it was right for Raab to go?

But in the days since, Raab and his allies have managed to sow a very different narrative, about activist" and over-unionised" officials. Now, even as former UK civil service chief Lord Kerslake warns today that Sunak needs to speak out against the torrent of invective against the civil service", the chief conclusion from a finding that Raab intimidated civil servants appears likely to be: it's the civil servants' fault.

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