Labour Government’s IT Record Faces Fresh Criticism

The man now in charge of Whitehall’s efficiency drive has issued a damming assessment of the Labour’s government’s IT track record.

Civil servant Ian Watmore was formerly Tony Blair’s CIO chief, and is now permanent secretary at the Cabinet Office, in charge of the Coalition Government’s efficiency drive, and heads up its Efficiency and Reform Group.

Watmore hit out at the previous Labour government, which he accused of creating huge IT projects simply to make policies “sound sexy”. He gave the hard hitting assessment while giving evidence to the ‘Good Governance: the Effective Use of IT’ public select committee.

Make It Sexy

“People think that they need to have a piece of technology to make their policy or their project sound sexy, so you either have technology not thought about or technology thought about in the wrong way right at the beginning,” he said.

According to the BBC, Watmore also told the public administration committee that Labour’s procurement had been over-ambitious and badly-managed.

However this is not the first time that the previous Labour government has been accused of gross incompetence regarding IT projects.

In January 2010 an investigation by the Independent newspaper exposed the shocking cost of the Labour party’s botched IT projects during its period in power. That investigation found that British taxpayers had been left with a bill of more than £26 billion for computer systems that either suffered severe delays or ran over budget, or that were cancelled altogether.

The coalition government meanwhile has already halted many large IT projects to save cash and earlier this week revealed its new ICT strategy aims to save the government millions by moving to “smaller more manageable projects” that cost no more than £100m.

Watmore was previously the managing director of IT services giant Accenture, before being appointed as head of Tony Blair’s e-Government Unit in 2004. Watmore then headed up the then Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit. He then left government briefly before Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude brought him back into government last year.

According to the BBC, Watmore told the select committee that the “so-called IT disasters” of recent years were not down to technical problems but “over-ambitious projects” that were expected to deliver complex changes at a national level on a single day, “the so-called ‘Big Bang’ implementation”.

Open Source And Apple

And Watmore made clear that he wanted to to end the UK government’s reliance on Microsoft products, which are apparently used by about 90 percent of civil servants.

Watmore reportedly said that the coalition government was committed to using more “open source” software to save cash – but had to balance this with concerns about how easily it could be “hacked”.

And then Watmore went on to endorse the use of Apple products within government.

According the BBC, Watmore said that his “personal” view was that Apple products, which he said he used at home, should also be used more in government.

“I personally would like to see people move off Microsoft products onto open source or use Apple technology,” he said. “I use Apple at home. I know it’s not very open but I use it. I love it, it works and I think it is great – I’m Steve Jobs’ best customer,” he said.

“I think we, in government, have an opportunity to change that game quite dramatically, particularly on desktop technology, by getting greater use of open products.”

Cost Cutting

The coalition government meanwhile has made progress to scale back government spending.

It has already renegotiated IT contracts with large vendors by signing ‘memorandums of understanding‘ in an effort to cut costs. HP, Oracle, Microsoft, Atos Origin and Capgemini have all signed, as well as several other big name IT services firms.

Francis Maude also revealed last July that the government would scrap hundreds of unnecessary and expensive government websites and slash the cost of the remaining sites to save millions of pounds.

Tom Jowitt

Tom Jowitt is a leading British tech freelancer and long standing contributor to Silicon UK. He is also a bit of a Lord of the Rings nut...

View Comments

  • Whaaaaattt???

    This guy is criticising the Labour Government's IT strategy, which he actually RAN from 2004?

    And then he says things should be more open... and everybody should use Apple products?

    This isn't "fresh criticism" of the Labour government's policies, it's an utter demolition of the current government's lack of clue.

    Dave

  • Firstly, I watched this video and was shocked by the raw naivety of the chair (Bernard Jenkin) talking about IT projects as if they were as complex as installing a piece of software from a CD. Mate, you need to get some knowledge around these subjects before you launch into tirades about them.... you came out of it looking like a total ignoramus. The reason IT projects fail (and I've been doing them for 14 years) is because the customer, yes the government customers, are normally totally inept at defining what they actually want and then as the project nears delivery, want to change everything free of charge. This puts suppliers into tail spins, causes delay and creates IT systems that are a bucket of spanners. Get a grip on reality guys.... if you said to a builder, please can you build me a house but didn't tell him how many rooms you wanted or whether you wanted 1,2 or 3 bathrooms until he'd finished building it, and then asked him to retrofit all the changes free of charge he would first laugh directly in your face and then explode when he realised you were actually serious! When will government realise that they are also responsible for the successful delivery of projects, that they (nobody else) need to have very clear views of the outcomes and business benefits backed up by detailed requirements that suppliers can build from.
    I'm frankly sick of people talking about the UK's IT sector as if we're a bunch of crooks... it's a slap in the face. If you want a bloody house, tell us what it needs to look like before we start building it !!!!

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