Reform UK civil service plan ‘would sack more planning officers than exist’
An analysis of Reform UK's civil service reduction plan, outlined in their "Storm and Sunshine" policy paper, suggests it proposes cutting more planning officers than currently exist. The plan aims to save over £5 billion annually by reducing the full-time equivalent civil service headcount by 13%.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAn analysis of Reform UK's civil service reduction plan, outlined in their "Storm and Sunshine" policy paper, suggests it proposes cutting more planning officers than currently exist. The plan aims to save over £5 billion annually by reducing the full-time equivalent civil service headcount by 13%. Specifically, it calls for a reduction of 450 planning roles, which exceeds the reported 445 planners in the civil service, though Reform UK states this figure includes planning inspectors. The analysis also indicates the plan would eliminate at least two-thirds of psychologists supporting prison staff, cutting 930 occupational psychology roles. Reform UK claims prisons will be safer and working conditions improved under their government.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedMike Wood states Reform UK's plan is 'not worth the paper it is written on' and they are 'not a serious party'.
Reform UK spokesperson states the total number of planning roles includes 440 planning inspectors.
Reform UK's 'Storm and Sunshine' report promises to save over £5bn a year by cutting civil service roles.
Reform UK plan to cut civil service by 13% would sack more planning officers than exist.
Reform UK plan to cut 930 occupational psychology roles, impacting prison staff welfare.