The constructive dismissal hearing for the
former Permanent Secretary at the Home Office looks like being a spectator
event not to be missed, if it actually goes ahead. I’m assuming that the grieved party has lots
of juicy evidence about the way the Home Secretary has behaved; the sort of
stuff which would embarrass any normal Prime Minister in ordinary times but
which, in this case, is likely only (in his own eyes at least) to confirm his
good judgement in appointing Patel to the role.
It’s a big ‘if’ though.
At the moment, he’s clearly very angry and
looking forward to his day in court but the intensity of anger fades over time,
and pragmatic considerations usually kick in eventually. It was reported that he’s already been in
negotiations over a payoff but that those negotiations have foundered –
apparently over the lack of an assurance from Johnson and Patel that they would
issue a supportive statement if he were to be the subject of further negative
briefings. Unless he can demonstrate
that the situation has arisen as a result of discrimination against him on the
grounds of one of the ‘protected characteristics’ (race, gender, etc), the
amount of money he could win at any tribunal is capped – and that cap is probably
significantly lower than any amount he’s already been offered, let alone any
new offer which may now be forthcoming. It
is a misconception that UK law protects people against unfair dismissal – it does
not. It allows any employer to sack
people at random, with only two provisos – that they avoid doing so on the
basis of the protected characteristics (when damages can be unlimited), and
that they are willing to open their cheque books and pay a sum significantly in
excess of what the sacked employee could ever win at a tribunal. Faced with the stress and uncertainty of a
tribunal in which the employee might not win, or at best win only a smaller uncertain sum
of money, the attraction of settling for the certainty of a larger sum usually proves too strong to resist.
I’m surprised that Johnson and Patel have
been unwilling to give him the assurance that he seeks. After all, giving cast-iron assurances is
almost a Johnson specialism – it’s keeping them, rather than giving them, which
always seems to cause him a problem. I’m
even more surprised that Rutnam has asked for such an assurance; on the basis
of his own personal experience he’d have to be out of his mind to trust one,
even if it were given. If negotiations
to arrive at a settlement fail as a result, and the case does indeed get to be
heard before a tribunal, there would be a delicious irony if that were to be
the direct result of the PM’s serial untrustworthiness. But it’s too early to break out the popcorn for this particular spectacle yet.
1 comment:
like watching a bloody circus except the circus animals have far more integrity and innocence than the "animals" in this particular show. Getting very tiresome and they've only been in post 2-3 months.
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