User:TreasuryTag/Content
TreasuryTag/Content is currently, or is going to be, away from Wikipedia, between July 16 and August 13, 2008, and may not be able to respond immediately to queries. He may, however, edit a little unless he's using the splendid Wikibreak enforcer. |
The Cabinet Office is a department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for supporting the Prime Minister and Cabinet of the United Kingdom.[1] The department was formed in December 1916 from the secretariat of the Committee of Imperial Defence[2] under Sir Maurice Hankey, the first Cabinet Secretary. Since then it has developed various units to support Cabinet committees and to co-ordinate the delivery of government objectives via other departments. It currently has just over 1,000 staff, most of whom work in Whitehall.
Objectives
[edit]As of 2007, the stated objectives of the Cabinet Office are:
- Support the Prime Minister - to define and deliver government objectives.
- Support the Cabinet - to co-ordinate the coherence, quality and delivery of operations and policy.
- Strengthen the Civil Service - to ensure it is organised effectively and has the capability to deliver the government’s objectives.
History
[edit]Historically, the most important part of the Cabinet Office's role was facilitating collective decision-making by the Cabinet, through running and supporting Cabinet-level committees. This is still the primary role, but since the absorption of some of the functions of the Civil Service Department in 1981 the Cabinet Office has also helped to ensure that various Ministerial priorities are taken forward across Whitehall. Recently these have included:
- Ensuring delivery of the public service targets that the Government has set itself in the priority areas of education, health, transport and crime and asylum. This is carried out by the Prime Minister's Delivery Unit, set up by the Labour Government in 1997.
- e-Government – giving citizens better access to public information and services through better IT (through the e-Government Unit) - see also Transformational Government
- Promoting better forms of regulation, which are less burdensome for business (through the Better Regulation Executive)
- Management of civil service staffing (in relation to issues not delegated to departments) and reform of the civil service.
The units that administer these areas migrate in and out of the Cabinet Office as government priorities - and governments - change.
Current Ministers
[edit]The Cabinet Office is intended to support the Prime Minister, who is also Minister for the Civil Service and First Lord of the Treasury. The department is currently headed by the Minister for the Cabinet Office (& Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster). This post has been taken by Ed Milliband since the 28 June 2007 when he replaced Hilary Armstrong, who left the government.
Other Ministers located in the Cabinet Office:
- Minister for the Olympics, Minister for London and Paymaster General : 28 June 2007 - Tessa Jowell MP
- Parliamentary Secretary : 29 June 2007 - Phil Hope MP
- Parliamentary Secretary and Minister for the East Midlands : 29 June 2007 - Gillian Merron MP
Staff Structure
[edit]- The Central Office of Information co-ordinate government publications, and also produce public information films.
The Cabinet Office includes three permanent secretaries. The Cabinet Secretary is the head of the home Civil Service and is also responsible for the organisation of the Cabinet Office. The incumbent is Sir Gus O'Donnell, who took over from Sir Andrew Turnbull in September 2005.
- Sir Richard Mottram, permanent secretary, Intelligence & Resilience, is "Security and Intelligence co-ordinator" across government and chairs the Joint Intelligence Committee.
- Howell James is Permanent Secretary, Government Communication.
On 12 June 2007 the Cabinet Secretary announced that Jeremy Heywood, presently managing director and co–head of the UK Investment Banking Division at Morgan Stanley, will become head of Domestic Policy and Strategy; Jon Cunliffe, previously Second Permanent Secretary, Macroeconomic Policy and International Finance at HM Treasury, will become head of International Economic Affairs and Europe; and Simon McDonald, who is Director, Iraq at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, will become head of Foreign and Defence Policy. According to the announcement they will "lead new structures in the Cabinet Office designed to strengthen policy, strategy and co–ordination at the centre of Government". They will have the role and title of the Prime Minister's senior advisers on domestic policy, international economic issues and Europe, and foreign and defence issues respectively and will report directly to the Cabinet Secretary, Sir Gus O'Donnell.
Buildings
[edit]The main building of the Cabinet Office is at 70 Whitehall, adjacent to Downing Street and was built in 1847. Remains of Henry VIII's tennis courts from the Palace of Whitehall can be seen within the building.
The building was originally the Cockpit, used for cock fighting in the Tudor period. It was then converted into a private residence by Charles II for Princess Anne, the future Queen Anne, when she married in 1683. In 1689, both Anne and her closest friend (and later most influential adviser), Sarah, Lady Churchill were imprisoned here by James II after he lost support to Prince William of Orange in the period just before the Glorious Revolution. After Anne's accession in 1702, she gave the Cockpit to Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough and her husband, John Churchill, the first Duke of Marlborough. They were the last private residents before it became the Treasury, and was being used as a Cabinet office by 1719.
The department also occupies other buildings in Whitehall and the surrounding area, as well as sites in other parts of the country.
Talk (new post) |
Contributions | Edit Count (Edit Sum.) (WikiChecker) |
Logs | Subpages (talk) |
TreasuryTag/Content's userpage
I was born, and live, in Wimbledon – near the tennis. I mainly deal with vandalism and edit Doctor Who articles (though I'm also Jewish, and a part-time teacher of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, so I sometimes edit in that area too). I'm not going to tell you my name for privacy reasons.
NB:– I previously had the usernames Rambutan and Porcupine, and for a (very) short while, edited as Circuit Judge. Just for the record!
Barnstars and particular achievements
[edit]The Special Barnstar | ||
TreasuryTag,
Thank you very much for your work on Youknowbest. It was an hour before sundown at the start of Shemini Atzeres and I made the decision to check Wikipedia "one last time" before I had to go to shul, when I ran into some edits that sorely needed attention. I did as much as I could in the little time I had, and I worried about how far he'd be able to go before I could get back to Wikipedia 2 days later. How relieved I was when I turned the computer back on 48 hours later to see you were on top of the issue. Shirulashem (talk) 00:39, 23 October 2008 (UTC) |
The Barnstar of Integrity | ||
In thanks for your withdrawal at AFD - a commendable example of efficiency and forbearance. Since we have shot your fox, please accept this barnstar in recompense. Colonel Warden (talk) 18:13, 25 March 2009 (UTC) |
The Copyright Cleanup Barnstar | ||
Congratulations on your work finding image copyright violations and NFCC breaches on Wikipedia. Stifle (talk) 09:05, 24 May 2010 (UTC) |
The Outlaw Halo Award | ||
Awarded to TreasuryTag for his exceptional good humour and ability to take the p*** at The Village Pump, and making me laugh till it hurt! BarkingFish 23:01, 27 October 2010 (UTC) |
The Peace Barnstar | ||
I hereby award this barnstar to TreasuryTag for helping to save important articles on international relations from destruction at AfD. All who care about world peace and international collaboration are in your debt! FeydHuxtable (talk) 14:21, 29 November 2010 (UTC) |
- Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack
- Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack – Series 3
- Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack – Series 4
- Music in psychological operations
- Osmotherly Rules
- Ministerial Code
- Municipal year
- Yaheh Hallegua
- Oklahoma primary electoral system
- Geoffrey Bindman
- Possibly the height of my Wiki-career was having my talkpage nominated for deletion because I am "shameful"
- ...although being compared to Richard Nixon was an unexpected honour!
- I received the honour of my first dedicated subpage on the admins' noticeboard in October 2010.
- My absolute favourite ever "keep" argument at AfD is this one – it wins for the sheer audacity of its paucity of sagacity, although this one is also pretty hard to beat.
- Badger Drink (talk · contribs) has warned me for "using improper humour" (!) on a page certainly appearing to contain none whatsoever!
- I'm the devil incarnate it would seem!
- TreasuryTag has received 907 hours' worth of blocks, plus two times ∞, though has only actually been blocked for 356 hours and 12 minutes [1]
Handy links
[edit]
No RfXs since 17:37, 25 December 2024 (UTC).—cyberbot ITalk to my owner:Online |
This is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user in whose space this page is located may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:TreasuryTag/Content. |
- ^ This should be distinguished from the Prime Minister's personal staff who form the Prime Minister's Office.
- ^ Note on development from National Archives: [2]