Privatising Spin
The appointment of Howell James as the first ever Permanent Secretary for government information is a strong indication of the shape of things to come in government spin. His post is the most powerful civil service propaganda job since the second world war.
James is the former Director of Corporate Affairs for both TVAM and the BBC, overseeing the latter's commercialisation. Latterly, this 'close friend' of Peter Mandelson ran his own PR firm, briefly advising the
Hinduja brothers in the donations for passports row which
led to Mandelson's second resignation from the cabinet. In
his role as partner of PR firm Brown Lloyd James, he also
sat on the Phillis committee which recommended the creation
of his new post. Phillis abolished the half century old
Government Information and Communication Service in
February, which had inhibited the progress of spin, leaving
its incumbent director Mike Granatt, jobless. This was the
culmination of the New Labour reforms of spin set in train
by Mandelson and Campbell in May 1997.
The
Guardian thought there was a 'whiff of cronyism' about
the appointment, but this is to see only the surface
personal links in the tight knit New Labour milieu. [1] In fact the problem goes much
deeper. James’ appointment is an indication of the profound
changes set in train by Phillis which are most notably about
opening the way for £ hundreds of millions of public money
to be spent on private sector PR consultants. The future of
government information is not the much heralded end of spin.
Instead, we will have the wholesale adoption of private
sector PR techniques, the defining characteristics of which
are cynical manipulation and lying dressed up as openness,
consultation and 'partnership'. Their job will be to use the
latest techniques for manipulating or bypassing public
opinion thus undermining democracy by further insulating
government from the people.
James appointment sets a
further record as the most senior propagandist ever to be
appointed to a civil service job from the private sector.
But typically the network of connections and revolving door
links goes much further. James himself was a special
advisor to Lord Young at the self styled ‘Department for
Enterprise’ in the 1980s and later political secretary to
John Major. He oversaw the Tories 1997 election campaign.[2] He sat on the Phillis committee along
with a brace of other PR consultants. All have direct
interests in prising open the £ multimillion PR budgets for
the private sector.
For example Chime Communications was
represented on the inquiry by Rupert Howell and by David
Hill of its subsidiary, Good Relations . Good Relations,
along with other Chime owned companies Bell Pottinger PR and
the Quentin Bell Organisation already had government PR
contracts including with the COI, Dept for Education and
Science, Dept of Transport Local Government and the Regions,
Royal Mail, Royal Mint, NHS National Programme for
Information Technology, Meat and Livestock Commission and
the Crown Estates.[3] In a further
indication of the speed with which key personnel revolve in
the power nexus, David Hill left the committee before it
reported to take up the post of Director of Communications
at 10 Downing Street.
It was only under Labour that a
roster of PR consultancies for government work was set up.
The full roster is a secret but at least some of the PR
consultants on it have been associated with public scandal
and alleged wrongdoing.[4] To highlight
only those represented on the Phillis committee gives the
general picture. Colin Browne is a partner in the Maitland
Consultancy which was implicated in 'dirty tricks' for
British Gas[5] . Sir Tim Bell of Chime
Communications is well known to have criminal convictions
and to have involvement in, at best questionable public
relations activities.[6]
The
appointment of James is not the only indication of the
process underway. The first indication came within weeks of
the report of the Phillis committee. The Scottish Executive
advertised on its procurement site a contract to cover advertising, web design and
PR for itself, ten agencies, 23 health bodies, 35 quangos
and several government bodies. These include the PR
activities of the Scottish parliament - an obvious
structural conflict of interest. [7]
In April, the Department of Health followed the trend by
appointing James Herbert as Director of Communications of
the NHS National Programme for IT. Herbert used to be head
of global media relations for Shell, itself well known for
its dishonest PR tactics. While Herbert was in charge Shell
worked closely with the International Chamber of Commerce to
undermine the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg, ensuring that no binding agreements were
signed up to.
In his new post, Herbert reports to James
Granger. Along with the NHS IT programmes PR consultant
(Good Relations again) Granger has been involved in dubious
PR practice by accusing ‘respected IT journalist Tony
Collins’ of Computer Weekly of ‘breaching a confidence by
reporting doubts about the IT programme expressed by
delegates at a conference, which was later demonstrated to
be a public event’.[8] This is typical
of the deceptive approach taken in the private sector. But
a further development is the importation into the public
sector of manipulative techniques of consultation and
‘partnership’ pioneered by corporations aiming to evade
democratic pressures for regulation. On taking up his post
Herbert claimed that ‘the style of communication we adopt is
critical to our success and it will be characterised by
dialogue and trust’.[9] It would be
wrong to dismiss this as PR spin, designed simply to
mislead. In fact this is just the kind of corporate spin
technique used so successfully by Shell and other Trans
National corporations to avoid democratic control as in the
example of the Johannesburg summit. The wholesale adoption
of techniques of manipulation and deception pioneered in the
corporate world is the trajectory in view for government PR.