On Labour's absurd Civil Service intern rules

Labour's new rules insisting that only the children of people in "Working class" occupations can be recruited to civil service professions would still have been an attack on diversity and fairness, not a way of promoting them, even if their definition of who is "working class" made any sense.

It doesn't. Look at how arbitrary this is.

If you are a nurse or a clerical worker, Labour doesn't want your kids to be civil servants and will ban them from becoming interns. But if you're a foreman, that's OK, they get the go-ahead.

If your parent was a taxi driver when you were 14, you’re not working class and can't become an intern. But if your parent was a train driver, you can.

If your parent was a roofer, you’re not working class and can't become an intern. If your parent was a bricklayer, you can.

If your parent was an IT engineer, you’re not working class and can't become an intern. If your parent was an electrician, you can.

If your parent was a driving instructor  you’re not working class and can't become an intern. If your parent was a traffic warden, you can.

Here is the guidance they are apparently going to use to decide who can become an intern based on where their parents were on the classifications below when they were 14:





















This is insanity and Kemi Badenoch was absolutely right to promise to scrap it.

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