Cabinet Office to Shed 2,100 Jobs as Government Shrinks Civil Service

Some 1,200 people will be made redundant and another 900 transferred to other departments under plans announced on Thursday.
Cabinet Office to Shed 2,100 Jobs as Government Shrinks Civil Service
The Cabinet Office in London in an undated file photo. Lauren Hurley/PA
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The Cabinet Office will lose almost a third of its staff as Labour seeks to shrink the Civil Service, the government has announced.

Around 1,200 people will be made redundant under plans unveiled to civil servants on Thursday, with another 900 being transferred to other departments.

The 2,100 job cuts represent just under a third of the 6,500 “core staff” at the Cabinet Office, the strategic centre of the British state.

A Cabinet Office source said: “Leading by example, we are creating a leaner and more focused Cabinet Office that will drive work to reshape the state and deliver our plan for change.

“This government will target resources at frontline services—with more teachers in classrooms, extra hospital appointments, and police back on the beat.”

Cat Little, permanent secretary at the Cabinet Office, told civil servants in an all-staff call on Thursday that the department would become more specialist and therefore better able to serve the public.

Around 540 voluntary redundancy applications have already been accepted after the launch of a scheme in January, but the department is understood to expect more voluntary departures as teams are restructured over the coming months.

Thursday’s announcement follows Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge to slash the cost of bureaucracy, reducing the size of the Civil Service and creating a more “agile” and productive state.

As well as abolishing quangos such as NHS England, ministers have committed to increasing the proportion of civil servants working in digital and data roles, creating a workforce “fit for the future.”

In last month’s spring statement, Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed plans to cut Civil Service running costs by 15 percent by the end of the decade.

Meanwhile, a poll published on Thursday by YouGov suggested 64 percent of MPs believed the Civil Service is too risk-averse and closed to new ideas, while 62 percent thought Whitehall worked too slowly.

Trade unions have warned against significant cuts to the Civil Service while the prime minister’s former chief of staff Baroness Sue Gray used her maiden speech in the House of Lords to urge caution on reducing the size of the Civil Service.

A former civil servant herself, Gray said her old colleagues were “central to the government’s and the nation’s mission to bring back growth into our economy and security to our society.”