Former universities minister Jo Johnson contacted Toby Young about applying for the board of English higher educationâs new regulator, says a that details the high level of political interference in its appointments process.
In a report by Peter Riddell, the commissioner for public appointments, published on 28 February, the watchdog found there was a âclear disparityâ in the treatment of different candidates and parts of the process âhad serious shortcomings in terms of the fairness and transparency aspectsâ under the code governing public appointments.
The commissioner also found that Justine Greening, who was education secretary at the time, queried the proposed choice of Mr Young to the Office for Students board, but was sent a letter by Department for Education officials detailing his ârecord on education reformâ.
The letter, however, did not refer to any due diligence checks on Mr Youngâs social media activity. The Spectator columnist later apologised for his âsophomoric and sillyâ remarks, but resigned a week into the job after more than 220,000 people signed a petition for his removal over his previous controversial statements.
Âé¶č
In his report, Mr Riddell explains that âMr Johnson asked officials to inform Mr Young about the advert for the campaignâ to recruit OfS board members. After Mr Young was deemed appointable following what the panel described as a âvery good interviewâ, his social media history was not checked, the report says.
However, while the Department for Education claimed it would have been âneither proportionate nor normal to trawl through potentially large mounds of past social media activityâ for Mr Young, these checks were carried out for those applying for the board seat reserved for a student experience representative.
Âé¶č
Thanks to the effort of what email records mention as âNo 10 Googlersâ, the âsocial media history of one candidate was brought to the attention of the minister", says Mr Riddell.
âNotably no such exploration or research was made on other possible appointees, including Mr Young,â he adds.
Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College union, said Mr Youngâs appointment âlooked like nepotism at the time and this damning report confirms that the minister encouraged him to applyâ.
âAlthough not checking Youngâs chequered past, efforts were made to find evidence to bar a student representative from a position on the board,â added Ms Hunt.
Âé¶č
The report adds that the decision on whether or not to appoint one candidate in particular was âheavily influenced, not by the panel, but by special advisers, notably from 10 Downing Street.â
One candidate for the student experience role who was suggested by Jo Johnson, and found appointable by the panel, was ârejected on the basis of public statements and student union activityâ, in particular in relation to critical comments about the governmentâs anti-extremism Prevent agenda.
âSubmissions and email records show that there had been a desire among ministers and special advisers not to appoint someone with close links to student unions,â says the report, which adds that âthis was not made clear in the advertised candidate informationâ.
âPolitical factors completely unrelated to the remit of the OfS were cited by the special adviser in objecting to the preferred candidate,â says the report, which adds that the boardâs âindependence is put at risk by taking too partisan an approach to candidatesâ views.â
Âé¶č
Ministers later concluded that ânone of the [student] candidates were right for the roleâ and appointed their own choice, Ruth Carlson, a University of Surrey engineering student, on an interim basis.
However, the announcement of Ms Carlsonâs appointment on 1 January âdid not make clearâ that she was an interim member, says the report, which adds that the explanation that a âfuller announcementâ would make the position clear later in the week was âinadequate and unconvincing.â
Âé¶č
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?






