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Sir Mark Sedwill says officials have become ‘fair game’ in post-Brexit politics
Boris Johnson and Mark Sedwill. Photo: Getty Images - Credit: Getty Images
Cabinet secretary Sir Mark Sedwill has warned that civil service officials have become 'fair game' in post-Brexit as he criticised anonymous briefings against him.
Sir Mark, the most powerful official in government, is set to step down as cabinet secretary and national security adviser (NSA) in September amid reports of clashes with the prime minister's chief adviser Dominic Cummings.
He told MPs and peers on the National Security Strategy Committee that it was 'never pleasant' to read off-the-record reports against civil servants in the media but said it had become a 'regrettable feature of modern politics'.
Before Sir Mark stood down, criticisms of his performance, particularly his handling of the coronavirus outbreak, appeared in the press.
'It is never pleasant to find oneself, particularly as an official, in the midst of stories of that kind,' he told the committee.
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'We appear to be in an era where some of us are fair game in the media and I'm afraid it goes with the territory now.
'I don't think it is ever pleasant in government, whether it is against ministers, between them and particularly against officials, when you have briefings to which you cannot really reply, particularly those that are off the record and sniping away.
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'But it is a regrettable feature of modern politics, I'm afraid.'
His comments came on the same day that the civil service started advertising for a replacement cabinet secretary, with an advertised salary of £200,000.
It was also revealed that Sir Mark will be paid £248,000, which is likely to come 'in the form of a pension contribution', after the prime minister agreed to compensate him for 'stepping down early'.
When asked why he resigned from his dual post, Sir Mark replied: 'I haven't resigned.
'The prime minister and I agreed I should step down - it was by agreement.
'That was essentially because we had concluded it was time to split the jobs again and have a separate security adviser and separate cabinet secretary.'
The former Home Office permanent secretary said 'I don't think personalities were an issue at all' during his time working in Downing Street and said he had a 'really good relationship' with Boris Johnson.
Sir Mark said the timing of his departure was 'at his initiative' but that it was 'entirely amicable'.
'It was never my intention to do that (cabinet secretary job) long term,' the former ambassador added.
David Frost, currently Johnson's Europe adviser, will take over as NSA in the autumn.
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