Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Eleni Courea and Jessica Elgot

Attacks on UK cabinet secretary ‘stink of political cowardice’, union leader says

Chris Wormald arriving in Downing Street in a jacket and open-necked shirt
Chris Wormald was chosen to lead the civil service in December, but Keir Starmer’s aides have raised concerns about his performance. Photograph: PA Images/Alamy

Attacks on the UK’s cabinet secretary “stink of political cowardice”, the head of the senior civil servants’ union has said as concerns mount inside the government about his performance.

The general secretary of the FDA, Dave Penman, said anonymous criticism of Chris Wormald was “hugely damaging” to the government and its prospects of recruiting talented officials to top jobs.

Keir Starmer chose Wormald from a shortlist of four in December to lead the civil service, but within months people inside the prime minister’s circle began raising concerns about his performance.

The Guardian reported in July that No 10 had “buyer’s remorse” about the appointment, with Starmer’s aides viewing Wormald as “insipid” and entrenched in the status quo. The Times reported this week that he was unlikely to survive in the job beyond January.

“Chris Wormald ​is the civil servant’s civil servant​. That is apparently what ​Starmer wanted, someone who won’t be making headlines​,” Penman said.

“Even if he was failing to deliver what he is supposed to deliver​, this isn’t the way to deal with it. It stinks of political ​cowardice. It’s hugely damaging because what does it say about the ​political leadership?

“What does it say ​to who​ever is going to replace him and candidates who would want to come after him? They will​ wonder if they will find themselves out of favour​ after six months.”

Other senior civil service figures questioned what Starmer’s expectations had been when making the appointment. One said criticism of Wormald felt unfair and that it had been “a deliberate choice to go low-energy”.

Another Whitehall insider said Wormald’s attitude was one of “make things work for your minister”, and pointed out he was the permanent secretary who helped Michael Gove drive through his changes at the Department for Education between 2012 and 2014. Gove “was a minister who had a clear agenda”, they said.

Downing Street said on Wednesday that Wormald continued to have the support of the prime minister and that the pair were “working closely together to deliver on the priorities of the British public”.

But asked whether he was satisfied with the pace of delivery under his government, the spokesperson said Starmer’s “general position” was that “he would like things to move further and faster”.

Several cabinet ministers are understood to have concerns about Wormald. “Olly Robbins [the permanent secretary at the Foreign Office] would have been a much better appointment,” one said.

Former colleagues of Wormald at the Department of Health said they were unsurprised he had turned out to be unfit for the role. “Morale was absolutely decimated in the DHSC, and under his watch we had no preparation for pandemics and the mishandling of infected blood,” one said.

Another added: “He was such an uninspired choice, and that’s before you even consider the mission of rewiring the state.”

A government adviser said: “It was the opposite of what we needed. The PM should not have been press-ganged into the four candidates that were presented to him and when it was clear none were suitable for that moment in time, we should have cast the net wider.”

Starmer chose Wormald from a shortlist that included Robbins, Antonia Romeo, now the permanent secretary at the Home Office, and Tamara Finkelstein, who until June was the permanent secretary at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

One Labour MP said it had been clear from the start that Wormald was not the right person for the job. “At some point they have to start questioning why they keep hiring shit people,” they said.

Ousting him would raise questions about Starmer’s political judgment after the departures of a string of other senior figures. “Everyone knows how it looks. But worse would be to carry on and just attempt to find a way to sideline him,” said another Labour source.

• This article was amended on 23 October 2025. An earlier version said that Tamara Finkelstein was the permanent secretary at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. She left this role in June.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.