Post Office chief executive subject of 80-page HR investigation, ex-chairman claims

Business

The ousted Post Office chairman has insisted it was the company’s chief executive who was the subject of an internal investigation, not him.

Former chair Henry Staunton was dismissed last month by business secretary Kemi Badenoch who said bullying accusations had been made against him.

But on Tuesday, Mr Staunton told MPs on the Business and Trade Committee that it was the CEO Nick Read who was being investigated.

Politics latest: Ex-chair stuns MP with CEO claim

Mr Staunton said the Post Office boss “fell out” with the business’s [human resources] HR director and said that his own behaviour was only referenced once in an 80-page document about Mr Read.

The ex-chairman said there was one paragraph in the report on alleged politically incorrect remarks made by him and he “strenuously denied” the claim.

“This was a big investigation into Nick. And I didn’t realise you weren’t aware of that,” he told the MPs.

More on Post Office Scandal

Asked if he was informed his behaviour was under investigation in November last year, Mr Staunton said: “What there is, actually, is Mr Read fell out with his HR director and she produced a ‘speak up’ document which was 80 pages thick.

“Within that, was one paragraph… about comments that I allegedly made. So this is an investigation, not into me, this is an investigation made into the chief executive Nick Read.

“That one paragraph you could say was about politically incorrect comments attributed to me which I strenuously deny.”

Nick Read, the Post Office chief
Image:
Post Office chief executive Nick Read

Mr Staunton reiterated claims he made in an interview with the Sunday Times that he was told by a senior civil servant, Sarah Munby, to go slow in processing sub-postmaster compensation claims over the Horizon IT scandal in the run-up to the general election.

In response to the note Ms Munby produced of the meeting, Mr Staunton said it wasn’t contemporaneous and that his email record, sent to Mr Read at the time and subsequently sent to journalists, was true.

“It is written a year and a month after my file note. So it’s not a contemporary file note by any means. It’s written with the purpose of answering this point.”

Read more:
Who is Henry Staunton, the City grandee who took on Kemi Badenoch?
‘Dead duck’ Post Office should be sold to Amazon for £1, says campaigner Alan Bates
Post Office scandal: Bill to compensate victims will be more than £1bn – as no financial talks with Fujitsu under way

He also refuted claims made earlier in the hearing that he was disrupting an investigation and did not cooperate.

The focus of attention should be on justice for sub-postmasters, he added.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Kemi Badenoch was asked in January – why sack Post Office chair after a year?

Mr Staunton said: “This should all be about the postmasters and their families and how their lives have been wrecked.

“That’s what all of this should be about and nothing else. The rest is just flimflam.”

The Horizon scandal saw more than 700 subpostmasters prosecuted by the Post Office and handed criminal convictions between 1999 and 2015 as Fujitsu’s faulty Horizon system made it look as though money was missing from their branches.

Hundreds of subpostmasters are still awaiting compensation despite the government announcing that those who have had convictions quashed are eligible for £600,000 payouts.

Earlier in the day, a senior official at the Department of Business and Trade, Carl Creswell, said he had been told that other Post Office board members would resign should Mr Staunton not be removed. “I was told that explicitly,” he said.

He said there were two main allegations that influenced Mr Staunton’s removal, first that he had tried to stop a whistleblowing investigation into his conduct and the second that he was “trying to stop” the process to recruit a new board member.

Articles You May Like

Full Moon in November 2024: Beaver Moon is the Last Supermoon of the Year
Leap in unemployment rate raises question of Labour own goal
A crushed car and trouser scraps: The fan club president who joined the band
Trump committed to NATO and is right to push Europe on increased funding, UK defence secretary says
Post Office faces backlash over job cuts – with 115 branches at risk of closure