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Sir Edward Osmotherly obituary: civil servant who defined role of committees
Sir Edward Osmotherly obituary: civil servant who defined role of committees

Times

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Times

Sir Edward Osmotherly obituary: civil servant who defined role of committees

The present system of having a cross-party 'select' committee of backbench MPs to scrutinise the work of each government department was introduced in 1980, during Margaret Thatcher's first term as prime minister. The committees were empowered to summon and cross-examine ministers, but their powers regarding civil servants were less clear-cut. To what extent could officials be held accountable, and how much could they be expected to reveal? After all, their job was to advise ministers and implement government policy — not to decide it. To resolve that question Edward Osmotherly, a courteous, well-respected, old-school civil servant in the Machinery of Government Division of the Cabinet Office was asked to develop a set of guidelines which became known as the 'Osmotherly Rules' and have largely survived to this day. They stipulate that civil servants are not directly accountable to parliament and cannot be summoned by select committees; if their appearance is disputed, their minister should attend instead. The rules also cover other potentially problematic situations. Can a select committee summon a retired civil servant? Do civil servants enjoy parliamentary privilege? At what point does the cost of them supplying information become excessive? Are they covered by sub judice laws? Can they withhold and redact evidence on national security and public interest grounds? Osmotherly believed the select committee system was an essential component of a parliamentary democracy, and his rules struck a balance between the rights of the committees and those of civil servants. He was rewarded for that, and for a lifetime of public service, with a knighthood in 2002, and by having a rodent-catching cat named after him by the Cabinet Office in 2016. Edward Benjamin Crofton Osmotherly was born in Down Hatherley in Gloucestershire in 1942, the second child and only son of Crofton and Elsie Osmotherly, both teachers. He was raised in East Ham, east London, and attended the local grammar school where his academic talent secured him a place at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. After graduating with a degree in history and anthropology in 1963, he joined the Ministry of Housing and Local Government, and within three years was serving as a ministerial private secretary. One of his ministers, Bob Mellish, liked to relax in a sauna at the end of the week and expected Osmotherly to accompany him with his box of official papers. In 1970 he married Valerie Mustill, his boss's daughter. They settled in north London where they had a daughter, Zoe, who works as an administrator at a barristers' chambers, and a son, John, a technician at University College London. In 1972 Osmotherly won a year-long Harkness fellowship which took him to the Brookings Institution in Washington and — after a road trip across the US — to the University of California at Berkeley. On his return he joined the Department of the Environment, spent a year on secondment to the board of British Railways, and in 1980 joined the Cabinet Office where he was given the task of developing what a journalist dubbed the 'Osmotherly Rules'. In 1982 he joined the Department of Transport where he occupied several senior roles over the following decade and was closely involved in the privatisation of British Railways during John Major's premiership. In 1993 he left the civil service after 30 years, but remained a public servant. He spent eight years as a local government ombudsman, investigating complaints against local councils. He also chaired a review of ways to improve the government's business statistics. His report was published in 1996, and led to the creation of the independent Office for National Statistics through a merger of the Central Statistical Office and the Office of Population Censuses and Surveys. Finding himself bored after leaving the ombudsman's job, he became an adviser to the European scrutiny committee of the House of Commons — one of the committees to which the Osmotherly Rules applied. He finally retired in 2010, and indulged his love of reading. A few years later he was diagnosed with a rare form of dementia called posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) which affected his sight and spatial awareness but not, at least to begin with, his memory and cognitive abilities. In 2018 he participated in a research project at University College London where he was asked to perform tasks such as painting lines on a canvas with motion sensors attached to his body. There he was interviewed by Fergus Walsh, the BBC's medical correspondent. The project was 'much more fun than a drug trial', he joked before issuing a heartfelt plea to the public: 'Please talk to people with dementia as if they were human beings. Don't be frightened of them.' Sir Edward Osmotherly, civil servant, was born on August 1, 1942. He died of PCA dementia on February 18, 2025, aged 82

Sir Edward Osmotherly, civil servant behind the Osmotherly Rules on select committees and Whitehall
Sir Edward Osmotherly, civil servant behind the Osmotherly Rules on select committees and Whitehall

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Sir Edward Osmotherly, civil servant behind the Osmotherly Rules on select committees and Whitehall

Sir Edward Osmotherly, who has died aged 82, became the stuff of Whitehall legend by formulating in 1980 the rules governing how much information departments and senior civil servants need provide to Parliament's select committees. To this day the 'Osmotherly Rules' – revised in 2014 by Francis Maude – govern that relationship. In 2016 one of the Cabinet Office's two new rescue cats was named 'Ossie' in his memory; its mother was christened Evie after Dame Evelyn Sharp, Whitehall's first female Permanent Secretary. Osmotherly had a varied career in public service, including three years at the Department of Transport responsible for British Rail and eight as a tenacious local government ombudsman. But his early work during a few months heading the Civil Service Department's machinery-of-government section would prove his legacy. The Osmotherly Rules were drawn up as the Commons, with Norman St John Stevas to the fore, set up a set of select committees to shadow and monitor each Whitehall department; previously the panels had been organised by theme, with considerable gaps. Working to his political masters Paul Channon and Barney Hayhoe, Osmotherly produced a set of internal guidelines determining Whitehall's relationship to select committees of both Houses. And although they have 'no formal parliamentary standing or approval, nor claim to have', the Osmotherly Rules stuck. A similar document had been circulating during the 1970s, but Osmotherly codified the rules. 'Prepared entirely for use within Government', they were formally issued in May 1980. They start from the principle that civil servants are not directly accountable to Parliament, as are ministers and PPSs. Rather, they are carrying out actions under ministerial authority, so are protected by the same rule that prevents MPs being summoned. If there is a dispute about an official appearing, the relevant minister should attend instead as a courtesy. Osmotherly set out the limitations of Select Committees' powers to 'send for persons, papers and records'; the procedures on committees summoning retired officials; the impact of parliamentary privilege; the point at which the cost of supplying information is reckoned excessive; the rules of sub judice with respect to current, likely and pending litigation; and when evidence can be withheld or redacted on grounds of national security and public interest. During the Westland affair of 1985-86, ministers became concerned that MPs might question officials too closely about the conduct of individuals; they were reassured that the Osmotherly Rules were tightly drawn. Edward Benjamin Crofton Osmotherly was born on August 1 1942, to Crofton and Elsie Osmotherly, and educated at East Ham Grammar School and Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. Graduating in 1963, he joined the Ministry of Housing and Local Government, serving from 1966 as a private secretary to ministers. He spent 1972-73 as a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington and at Berkeley in California. Osmotherly returned to what had become the Department of the Environment as an assistant secretary, then in 1979 was briefly seconded to the British Railways Board before joining the Civil Service Department and drawing up his Rules. Soon after he had finished Margaret Thatcher abolished the CSD, and he moved to the DoT as Under Secretary (Railways), just as the Serpell Report suggesting drastic cuts in the network was published then hastily shelved. In 1985 Osmotherly was given charge of the personnel, management and training departments of the DoE and DoT. From 1989 to 1992 he headed the DoT's public transport and research department, before briefly serving as its establishment and finance officer. He left Whitehall in 1993 to be Local Government Ombudsman, then from 2003 to 2010 was clerk adviser to the Commons European Scrutiny Committee. Osmotherly also chaired the Commission for Local Administration in England, and in 1996 a review of Government business statistics. He was appointed CB in 1992, and knighted in 2002. Osmotherly developed a rare dementia called posterior cortical atrophy (PCA), which affected his spatial awareness, but left his memory largely intact. Aged 76 he took part in a study at University College London investigating the balance problems caused by PCA, in which he was fitted with motion sensors and asked to paint lines of yellow paint on a canvas. He told the BBC's Fergus Walsh that he had enjoyed the experience ('much more fun than a drug trial') and he appealed to the public: 'Please talk to people with dementia as if they were human beings. Don't be frightened of them.' Edward Osmotherly married Valerie Mustill in 1970. They had a son and a daughter. Edward Osmotherly, born August 1 1942, died February 18 2025 Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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