Freddie Feltham

470 posts

Freddie Feltham

Freddie Feltham

@freddiefeltm

1/2 @wtf_is_left Digital content ex: @uklabour @thenewsmovement, words: @guardian @DJMag

Katılım Nisan 2012
1K Takip Edilen483 Takipçiler
Aaron Bastani
Aaron Bastani@AaronBastani·
They’re now making Ashura edits that look like Giedi Prime in Dune.
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Andrew Lownie
Andrew Lownie@andrewlownie·
I had a great conversation this week with @freddiefeltm on his and @JOwusuNepaul’s ‘What’s Left’ podcast. We discussed multiple intelligence services’ links to Epstein and why Andrew is a flight risk who might try and flee to the Middle East. youtube.com/watch?v=QeGNm-…
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Obadiah Mbatang
Obadiah Mbatang@residentadviser·
Can I hate Jim Radcliffe, think recent levels of immigration have been unprecedented and unsustainable AND also think that false stats about the population and use of the term “colonisation” is just idiotic, borderline race-baiting drivel?
Despotic Inroad@DespoticInroad

Can I hate Jim Radcliffe/tax exiles generally, AND think recent levels of migration have been historically unprecedented, unsustainable, and have added pressures to public services & housing/labour markets?

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Dan Neidle
Dan Neidle@DanNeidle·
Did a fun interview with the What’s Left podcast. Mostly me talking about Mandelson. Sometimes me trying to avoid talking about politics. youtu.be/9UblUvJ931E
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George Parker
George Parker@GeorgeWParker·
Breaking news from the Forbidden City: President Xi Jinping talks football with Keir Starmer and says he supports Man Utd but also takes an interest in three other teams: Arsenal, Man City and Crystal Palace. In fact he calls them “Palace”. Starmer gobsmacked. @CPFC
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Henry de Zoete
Henry de Zoete@HZoete·
Ministers and advisers often complain about how hard it is to make government work. They pull a lever and nothing happens. I've been lucky enough to work in govt in several guises. Here are 14 lessons on how to get things done that I learnt the hard way. (Please note I’m not giving a view on how govt should work or if it should be reformed. But rather how best to make things happen within the confines of the current system.) 1. KNOW WHAT YOU WANT AND SET A DIRECTION. Sounds obvious but it is surprisingly common for Ministers to not ask for anything. The civil service flooded their time with advice and questions, and the Minister responded. But the Minister never put a fresh demand on the system. They never invented something new or decided to go in a new direction, said it had to happen, and forced the civil service to reorganise itself to deliver. This isn’t just about being ‘demanding’; plenty of Ministers know how to fuss about small items of business. They splash around on the surface while the river carries on its usual course. What’s hard, and rare, is for Secretaries of State to redirect the river. That is a lot of work. The first reaction of the civil service will be fatigue - they are already busy. But deep down, all officials know that Secretaries of State with clear demands make for happier departments. The civil service craves that direction. Without it, they float in the wind, buffeted by external events, the media and whims. 2. BE WILLING TO UPSET PEOPLE. If you redirect the river this will mean new winners and new losers. The civil service - incentivised to be risk averse - will raise this as a reason to take no action. This fear of “new losers” is one of the common reasons for Government inertia. You have to look past these concerns, make the trade-off, tell people you accept the downside and that there will be costs but we have to get to a new position. You have to provide the political cover for unhappiness. 3. MAKING IT HAPPEN IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY. It’s a myth that an adviser spends their whole time practicing “dark arts”, wooing MPs or conspiring with the media. A good adviser spends 90%+ of their time project managing priorities. What does that mean? It’s basic stuff. Meet the team responsible on Monday afternoon. Then Thursday. Then Monday again. Repeat until it's done. If you aren't willing to do this then don't complain if nothing happens. 4. PEOPLE, PEOPLE, PEOPLE. Steve Jobs once said “the most important job of someone like myself is recruiting”. A good startup CEO spends 80%+ of their time recruiting. I guarantee you that the Prime Minister, Ministers and advisers all spend <10% on recruitment. This is madness. Go find the best talent. Identify the best civil servants in the system and persuade them to work in your department. Recruit from outside. 5. ONLY EVER WRITE “GOOD” ON A MINISTERIAL SUBMISSION. Ministers receive a red box of memos at the end of each day. These memos - submissions - have a covering page in which advisers can pass their commentary on the material within (‘the box note’). The only thing an adviser should write is: "I've worked with the team on this. I am happy and agree with their approach and recommendation." Anything else and you haven't done your job properly. That doesn’t mean you are going easy on the civil service. On the contrary: it means that you have been up in their business for weeks getting the advice to the right place. You asked them to take you through the model, the options disregarded, the assumptions made, the assumptions rejected. Now, you’re able to give your endorsement to the place they’ve reached. This is how you build mutual respect and trust. Advisers who use that little comment box to slag off the advice aren’t helping their Minister. They’re signalling that they think the role of an adviser is to pass comment, not to help get things done. The Minister has a role here in not indulging this mindset. They should ask advisers who are disappointed with a submission: “what have you done to make it better?” There will be legitimate occasions for advice to differ. In that case openly present two conflicting opinions for a decision. But these should be rare. Box notes rubbishing advice tend to represent a failure of the SPADs to get upstream and work with the civil service team. 6. DO AS LITTLE AS POSSIBLE CROSS GOVERNMENT. Getting stuff done in your own department is hard enough. Requiring other departments to do what you want is 200% harder. Focus on what you can control. 7. NEVER DO A 'WRITE-ROUND”. A write round is when one dept asks all the other depts to give their view on their policy and veto it. It’s obviously ludicrous for education to ask transport if it is ok to change A-levels. All it does is lead to cross Whitehall negotiations slowing things down. Officials will always suggest one because of “protocol”. But ask to see the written rules about this. They don’t exist. Get No10/HMT backing and crack on. 8. LEGISLATION IS A LAST RESORT. It takes forever. And once every MP and Lord has had their say it will be compromised into oblivion. Use other levers to get what you want done. Statutory instruments, guidance or whatever is appropriate. Find a way. 9. FIND A FORCING FUNCTION. Govt moves slowly. Summits, speeches, deadlines. Nothing concentrates the mind like a public event. Create your own moments to force the system to act. The Bletchley Park AI Summit led to the AI Security Institute, the Bristol Isambard data centre, AI tools for teachers to cut their admin & the Bletchley declaration signed by 30 countries inc the US & China. No summit = none of that. Or taken years longer. 10. NO MACHINERY OF GOVERNMENT CHANGES. Reorgs stop everything for 6-9 months. Avoid unless absolutely necessary. 11. DO NOT OVER CLAIM. Never say "The PM or Secretary of State wants X" if it isn't true. You will be found out and lose all credibility. Conversely, it can help an adviser early on in their tenure if their principal makes it clear that the adviser speaks for and on the Minister’s behalf. The civil service will look for and want these signals. Equally a SoS should never undermine their adviser in front of officials. Even if they disagree they must wait until behind closed doors. An adviser that officials suspect doesn’t speak for their principal loses their ability to get things done. 12. CONTROL YOUR DIARY. Seems obvious but it’s shocking how many people complain about their diary. Private office will fill it up. That's their job. I have no sympathy for any cries of how full your diary is. It’s your job to clear it for your priorities. 13. IT’S ALWAYS COCK UP NOT CONSPIRACY. Government is huge. Leaks and failures happen. Don't immediately jump to conclusions or assume malice. Overreacting will make things worse. 14. STAY UPBEAT. Government is slow and painful. It gets you down. You need to bring optimism, agency and energy to push through. Yes, it is hard. But there is no other place in the world where you can affect so much positive change. FINAL THOUGHT: A lot of these lessons apply in any large organisation. The real divide in performance is not Public vs Private. It's Small vs Large. As orgs grow, they slow. Become more bureaucratic. That isn’t unique to the public sector. So while I wrote this as advice for advisers in government, I hope a lot of it applies more broadly than that. Being an adviser is a privilege. I’m lucky to have done it in a few different guises. I hope these lessons are helpful. And look forward to any critiques. This is an abridged version of a piece I wrote for @Samfr's great substack. You can read the full version at the link in the next tweet.
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The New Statesman
The New Statesman@NewStatesman·
Rachel Reeves must escape the vice-grip of the OBR Britain cannot be hemmed in by fiscal architecture built in the aftermath of a single crisis 🖊️ @JOwusuNepaul #Echobox=1764084301" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">newstatesman.com/politics/uk-po…
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Ebere
Ebere@EbereEze10·
I swear imma make It and when I do, they're gunna show this tweet lol
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Freddie Feltham
Freddie Feltham@freddiefeltm·
Mike Graham is doing a victim tour because he got outed for saying something racist 😂 state of it. I don’t get this stuff. RW guys love machismo and then say shit like this. Embarrassing.
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Freddie Feltham
Freddie Feltham@freddiefeltm·
It’s an inherently unstable coalition though. One side is religious about their social conservatism. The other is religious about their social liberalism. Each would slaughter the other’s sacred cow.
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno

Here's a big worry about the 'Your Party' debacles: That it's opening up a divide between the left and Muslim communities. This would be tragic, for many reasons, and there appears to be little care or anxiety among some of those involved in YP about this.

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Collingwood 🇬🇧
Collingwood 🇬🇧@admcollingwood·
Extremely impressive. If this can scale up to work on anti ship missiles (and quick enough on super-and hypersonics), then we have solved the economic rate of exchange problem with present ship defences.
Ministry of Defence 🇬🇧@DefenceHQ

DragonFire is a laser directed energy weapon designed and built entirely in the UK. It can hit a target the size of a £1 coin from a kilometre away, costs only £10 a shot, and just successfully took down a high-speed drone during testing. Read more ➡️ ow.ly/RyGh50XuCmY

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Freddie Feltham
Freddie Feltham@freddiefeltm·
@edcmpbl I think that explains the trend at its core. As I said ‘exacerbated’ - know a few people who left decent well paying jobs to invest savings into their own biz.
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Ed Campbell
Ed Campbell@edcmpbl·
@freddiefeltm meh... More women than men go to university so they're more likely to benefit from the graduate dividend?
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Freddie Feltham
Freddie Feltham@freddiefeltm·
Wonder whether part of this shift is from male finance influencers being anti-salary + pro-entrepreneur. ‘Escape the matrix’, Simon squibb pilled etc. focus is on ownership + control
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Freddie Feltham
Freddie Feltham@freddiefeltm·
UK's top terror lawyer, @terrorwatchdog spoke to @JOwusuNepaul and I about the proscription of Palestine Action and policing of Tommy Robinson's 'Unite the Kingdom' marches. It's a belter.
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