The Complete Yes Minister

The Complete Yes Minister Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Complete Yes Minister Read Online Free PDF
Author: Paul Hawthorne Nigel Eddington
Tags: antique
you may have earned yourself a place in the
Guinness Book of Records
,’ he replied. ‘I can see the headlines already – CABINET SPLIT ON U.S. TRADE. HACKER LEADS REVOLT AGAINST PRIME MINISTER! That’s what you wanted, is it?’
    And he walked away.
    Then Sir Arnold Robinson, the Cabinet Secretary, came out of the PM’s office. Sir Humphrey asked him what news there was.
    Sir Arnold said the same things, only in Whitehall language. ‘That speech is causing the Prime Minister some distress. Has it definitely been released to the press?’
    I explained that I gave express instructions for it to go out at twelve aoon. Sir Arnold seemed angry with Sir Humphrey. ‘I’m appalled at you,’ he said. I’ve never heard one civil servant express himself so strongly to another. ‘How could you allow your Minister to put himself in this position without going through the proper channels?’
    Humphrey turned to me for help. ‘The Minister and I,’ he began, ‘believe in Open Government. We want to throw open the windows and let in a bit of fresh air. Isn’t that right, Minister?’
    I nodded, but couldn’t speak. For the first time, Sir Arnold addressed me directly.
    ‘Well, Minister, it’s good party stuff but it places the PM in a very difficult position, personally.’ That, in Sir Arnold’s language, is about the most threatening thing that has ever been said to me.
    ‘But . . . what about our commitment to Open Government?’ I finally managed to ask.
    ‘This,’ replied Sir Arnold drily, ‘seems to be the closed season for Open Government.’
    Then Sir Humphrey voiced my worst fears by murmuring quietly: ‘Do you want to give thought to a draft letter of resignation? Just in case, of course.’
    I know that Humphrey was just trying to be helpful, but he really doesn’t give much moral support in a crisis.
    I could see that there was only one possibility left. ‘Can’t we hush it up?’ I said suddenly.
    Humphrey, to his credit, was completely baffled by this suggestion. He didn’t even seem to understand what I meant. These civil servants really are rather naïve.
    ‘Hush it up?’ he asked.
    ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Hush it up.’
    ‘You mean,’ Humphrey was apparently getting the idea at last, ‘suppress it?’
    I didn’t exactly care for the word ‘suppress’, but I had to agree that that was exactly what I did mean.
    Humphrey then said something like: ‘I see. What you’re suggesting is that, within the framework of the guidelines about Open Government which you have laid down, we should adopt a more flexible posture.’ Civil servants have an extraordinary genius for wrapping up a simple idea to make it sound extremely complicated.
    On second thoughts, this is a real talent which I should learn to cultivate. His phrasing might help me look as though I am not changing my posture at all.
    However, we were saved by the bell as the US Cavalry galloped over the horizon in the shape of Bernard Woolley hurrying into the ante-room.
    ‘About the press release,’ he began breathlessly. ‘There appears to have been a development which could precipitate a reappraisal of our position.’
    At first I didn’t quite grasp what that meant. But he then went on to say that the Department had failed to rescind the interdepartmental clearance procedure, which meant that the supplementary stop-order came into effect, which meant that it was all
all right
!
    In other words, my speech didn’t go out to the press after all. By an amazing stroke of good luck, it had
only
been sent to the Prime Minister’s Private Office. The Duty Office at the DDA had never received instructions to send it out
before
it was cleared with the PM and the FCO. Because of the American reference.
    This wonderfully fortunate oversight seems to have saved my bacon. Of course, I didn’t let Humphrey see my great sense of relief. In fact, he apologised.
    ‘The fault is entirely mine, Minister,’ he said. ‘This procedure for holding up
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