Public Servants, Private Paydays
By Richard Brooks and Solomon Hughes
How ministers and mandarins make life after government pay.
Post-Brexit, it’s all change at the top. A bunch of ministers are out of a job and advisers and top offcials might find it’s time to move on, too. But fret not. A well-trodden path from the public to private sector ensures ministers and mandarins looking to profit from their time in government are all but guaranteed a job in business, usually in an area over which they have exerted great influence.
Download this Report here [ pdf ]
ONLY IN THE MAGAZINE
In This Issue
Trump sets out plan for first 100 minutes in office… Pearsongate: Is this the biggest threat to freedom of speech the world has ever known?… Turkeys vote resoundingly for Christmas… Democrats ‘failed to understand concerns of ordinary billionaires'… BIDEN TO START WW3 BEFORE TRUMP DOES… The Dail-Xi Beijingograph: Nothing bad happens… The Service of Holy Resignation of An Archbishop… Jamie Oliver's recipe for disaster… Nigel Slater's magic moments, as told to Craig Brown
Right up front
Kemi Badenoch's self-promotion at the Post Office inquiry
Leagues apart
MD on the NHS's sack race
Rays of sunshine
The Florida supremacy in Trump's US
Read these stories and much more - only in the magazine. Subscribe here to get delivery direct to your home and never miss an issue!
Right up front
Kemi Badenoch's self-promotion at the Post Office inquiry
Leagues apart
MD on the NHS's sack race
Rays of sunshine
The Florida supremacy in Trump's US
Read these stories and much more - only in the magazine. Subscribe here to get delivery direct to your home and never miss an issue!