UK

Dominic Raab ‘left junior staff scared to enter his office’, says official

Staff working for Dominic Raab were “scared” to enter his office a former top civil servant has said, as Rishi Sunak called on anyone with concerns about bullying by the deputy prime minister to report them.

Lord McDonald described Mr Raab as “abrasive and controlling” and said that he had raised his behaviour within government at the time.

With questions growing over the prime minister’s decision to appoint Mr Raab to his cabinet, Mr Sunak said it was “hard” for allegations to be investigated unless people came forward.

Meanwhile, The Independent can reveal that the Foreign Office unlawfully tried to withhold information on Mr Raab’s complaints record the first time he worked for the department.

And Mr Raab, nicknamed “The Incinerator” for how he “burns” through employees, is recruiting new staff to run his private office.

The PM has repeatedly said that he does not recognise descriptions of Mr Raab as a bully.

But Lord McDonald, the Foreign Office’s permanent secretary when Mr Raab was foreign secretary between 2019 and 2021, said staff “felt demeaned”.

“Colleagues did not complain to me formally, it was kind of their professional pride to cope, but many were scared to go into his office,” the crossbench peer told Times Radio.

“His sort of defence was that he treated everybody in the building in the same way. He was as abrasive and controlling with junior ministers and senior officials as he was with his private secretaries.”

During that time Lord McDonald confirmed he raised the minister’s behaviour with the Cabinet Office’s proprietary and ethics team.

“It was language, it was tone, he could be very curt with people and he did this in front of a lot of other people. I think people felt demeaned,” the former official said.

“And I tried to have that conversation with him, I had several conversations with him. But it wouldn’t surprise me today if he said, ‘I don’t recognise that’ because I felt at the time that my message wasn’t landing.”

He urged Mr Sunak to “have another look” at bullying complaints procedures.

The Independent can also reveal that the Foreign Office was eventually forced to release data on Mr Raab’s complaints record the first time he worked for the department by the Information Commissioner’s Office.

Officials had tried to stonewall questions over whether any complaints had been made to human resources while Mr Raab was at the Foreign Office between 2000 and 2006, and if so how many.

In 2020, after the ICO’s decision, the department responded that it did “not hold any information whatsoever” on the questions.

Mr Raab’s spokesperson declined to comment on the ICO decision.

Speaking in Bali, Mr Sunak said: “I’m not and have not been aware of any formal complaint about Dominic’s behaviour.”

He added: “Of course, there are established processes in place for people to raise concerns in all workplaces – private, public [sector].

Xural.com

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