LONDON — Nigel Farage’s new cost-cutting tsar has taken aim at “pathetic”
questioning about efforts to save money at one of Reform UK’s most high-profile
councils.
Richard Tice, who became head of the populist party’s Elon Musk-inspired DOGE
unit (Department of Local Government Efficiency) last month, declined to confirm
whether he has given up on seeking a stalled data-sharing agreement with Kent
County Council. He instead advised POLITICO to “grow up.”
Tice’s predecessor, Zia Yusuf, had hoped DOGE would use councils’ data to audit
their finances and root out “waste” after Reform won control of 10 English
authorities — including Kent — in May.
The victories put Farage’s populist party in control of public services for the
first time, and made councils a test bed for how Reform might run Britain if it
wins the 2029 general election.
However, DOGE’s attempts to access internal data — that is not already public or
available through freedom of information (FOI) requests — have not yet been
resolved. The national unit still has no data-sharing agreement with Kent, which
is using its own “DOLGE” unit at a local level.
Asked about this during a wider interview with POLITICO, Tice appeared to
suggest Reform had pivoted to other methods. He said a data-sharing agreement
was not “the biggest thing” and that “there’s other ways we can get data.” He
added: “Actually we just said, you know what, don’t waste your time. What you
guys [the media] forget is that time is money, and if someone’s going to waste
my time there, we’ll go around and we’ll find it in another way, right? And
we’re very good at this stuff.”
Tice then declined to answer a question seeking to “nail down” whether he has
now given up on a data-sharing agreement.
He replied: “It’s pathetic nailing on one point. It’s just pathetic. Grow up.
Seriously, seriously. Focus on the big issues. Every council is a flagship
council. Why are you guys obsessing about one little piece, or one council out
of 13?”
The Financial Times reported on Oct. 24 that DOGE had carried out no audit work
at any of Reform’s councils in England.
‘WE NEVER SAID IT WAS EASY’
Tice said he will present a six-month review of Reform’s cost-cutting efforts on
Nov. 17. “Put that date in your diary, you will not want to miss it. Blockbuster
stuff,” he said.
He also pointed to a press conference he gave on Sept. 1, in which he said
taxpayers were being “ripped off” by fees charged by managers in the Local
Government Pension Scheme, totaling “over a billion pounds of overpayment.”
Reform said in June that “software engineers, data analysts and forensic
auditors” would “audit local government spending” at every Reform-controlled
council.
Asked about data-sharing with Kent, Tice said: “In the nicest possible way, you
in the media obsess about an individual little point. You don’t focus on the big
picture. The whole point of DOGE is it’s about the philosophy of saving money.
Nigel Farage’s new cost-cutting tsar has taken aim at “pathetic” questioning
about efforts to save money at one of Reform UK’s most high-profile councils. |
Mark Kerrison/Getty Images
“Every Reform councilor, they are tasked with looking for ways where they can
spot savings — small, medium and large — and this philosophy of saving money
starts in the councils.
“In a sense the biggest thing is actually not how you extract data out of the
computer software and find out who’s spending what on where. Actually the bigger
piece is what contracts are being negotiated? What’s the duration of them? Where
are the break clauses? Who’s negotiated it? And re-looking at everything as they
come up for renewal.”
Yusuf told POLITICO in July that he believed there would be an “immune response
from the Blob” in resisting his requests.
Tice said: “Many people are being very helpful, and we’re very grateful, and
there are many people who are being a pain in the arse. And we will dig in, and
sometimes they will win and block us, and sometimes we will win.
“The great thing is we’re cutting our teeth, and we’re learning fast, but I am
very happy with progress. I’m an impatient guy.”
Asked if being in control of public services had been harder than Reform
thought, Tice said: “We never said it was easy. We always knew it would be hard,
because we always talked about the Blob.
“But I do think if you guys just obsess about ‘well you haven’t achieved that
over there in that little corner, and therefore you’ve failed’ — frankly, it’s
pathetic, and you guys have got to grow up.”
A Kent County Council spokesperson said: “Since June all work on local
government efficiency in Kent has been led and delivered by Kent County
Council’s DOLGE team, sitting within the Council’s Cabinet.
“Officers at KCC continue to work closely and positively with the new
administration to ensure that they achieve their policy aims and the priorities
of the Council’s new Strategic Framework.
“Subject to governance, legal compliance and need, the administration will
utilise support where deemed necessary and appropriate from the Reform UK DOGE
to make savings that benefit Kent residents. At this point in time, there is no
data sharing agreement, formal agreements, contracts, or memoranda of
understanding in place between KCC with the national DOGE team”.
Tag - Tech UK
LONDON — The U.K. government is readying a plan to slash the country’s crippling
industrial energy costs so British manufacturers can better compete with global
rivals.
Electricity prices for U.K. industry are 46 percent above the average for
members of the International Energy Agency group of developed countries and four
times higher than in the U.S, putting a big strain on British businesses
regarding competitiveness.
However, according to three people briefed on the government’s plans, cutting
high energy costs will be at the heart of a new industrial strategy expected
early next week.
Alongside the strategy, which will prioritize growth across more than 30
industrial sectors, ministers will launch a consultation on “the structure of
industrial electricity prices” to help cut running costs for factories and other
manufacturing businesses.
As part of the consultation, ministers are expected to consider recent proposals
from industry lobbyists to exempt manufacturers from environmental and other
taxes levied on electricity bills.
The Industrial Strategy will also set out a more immediate boost to government
financial support for the most energy-intensive manufacturing sectors, the three
people said.
Less than 400 businesses in sectors including steel, ceramics and chemicals
currently receive a 60 percent rebate on energy bills under the so-called
British Industry Supercharger.
According to one of the people briefed on the government’s plans, the number of
businesses that could be eligible may double or triple. At the same time, the
support available could increase to 80 to 90 percent.
“Government want to help people who run factories because they can see that
energy costs are a real competitive disadvantage,” said one industry figure
briefed on the plans, granted anonymity to share them. “Manufacturers are
competing to win orders from businesses in France and Germany, where industrial
energy prices are very low.”
In addition to expanding the type of sectors that can benefit, plans are in the
pipeline for around 40 industrial hubs around the U.K., where businesses will be
encouraged to “agglomerate,” said the second person briefed on the plans, who
was also granted anonymity.
Businesses based at these hubs may benefit from further support to lower energy
bills through backing from the government’s new public power company, GB Energy,
the person said.
That could come via the construction of on-site electricity generation or the
procurement of lower-priced power supplies sold by GB Energy. A government
official said this aspect of the plan has not yet been finalized.
The Department for Business and Trade declined to comment.
In a stern intervention, a judge at the High Court of England and Wales issued a
formal warning to legal professionals on Friday, declaring that lawyers who
submit fictitious cases generated by artificial intelligence could face criminal
charges.
The senior judge scolded lawyers in two cases who apparently used AI tools when
preparing written arguments that were presented in court.
“There are serious implications for the administration of justice and public
confidence in the justice system if artificial intelligence is misused,”
Victoria Sharp, president of the King’s Bench Division of the High Court, said
in the judgment delivered on Friday.
In the judgment, Sharp also referred to “concerns about the competence and
conduct of the individual lawyers who have been referred to this court,” and
concluded that all previous guidance seems to be “insufficient to address the
misuse of artificial intelligence.”
The lawyer denied using AI but admitted that she might have inadvertently done
so while researching on the internet in preparation for her case.
The ruling comes after so-called hallucinations — AI-generated fictions — have
cropped up at big law firms since AI programs such as ChatGPT have become widely
available.