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The chair of the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee finds the Donmar’s new musical Committee a fair and compelling portrayal of the hearing on the collapse of Kids Company
Civil service chief exec says he and colleagues are "very conscious" of the 1% cap on pay rises, and suggests officials could see a more regionalised and role-related approach to increases
Sir Amyas Morse goes public with concerns over government's 'uncoordinated' response to leaving the European Union
Prime minister applauds Grenfell Tower and terror responses, but calls on Whitehall staff to “be bold” in facing future challenges
National Audit Office report says late-running programme was “overly ambitious” with an “unachievable” timescale
GOV.UK revamp will group information by theme, rather than organisation
Open-spaces campaign group says just-launched database falls short of Conservative Party’s 2015 manifesto pledge
George Bridges reflects on the life of his uncle, who was son of Second World War-era cabinet secretary Edward Bridges
National Audit Office says pioneer areas require ongoing support and scrutiny, while regeneration role may expand
Geoffrey Lyons reviews Nick Spencer’s The Mighty and the Almighty: How Political Leaders do God – a collection of essays on how current and former heads of state engage with faith and religion
Commission urges focus on investment away from London and the South East, but warns of “dilution” of know-how witnessed by civil service departments
New appointments in the civil service, UK politics, and public affairs, via our colleagues at Dods People
The outgoing permanent secretary of the Department for International Trade breaks bread with Jess Bowie
David Gauke tells MPs fewer than 100 of the planned 750 Jobcentre redundancies will be frontline roles
Controversial element of so-called ‘Project Fear’ assumed no policy response to a leave vote, says NAO
Education secretary appoints former lawyer to helm of new higher education regulator
Former No. 10 policy adviser Daniel Korski tells Sam Trendall about his plans to create an armada of UK tech players to compete with the best California has to offer – and why he needed to leave Whitehall to do so
Some closure-threatened Jobcentres win reprieve in estates reorganisation, but new sites are earmarked to shut
Study finds Whitehall is the world’s most effective civil service for generating policy, but falls down ranking in areas like financial management and digital services
Rupert McNeil said professions will play a key role in ensuring the civil service can offer pay packages that attract and retain talented people
New group will help “put in place the foundations” for recovery, says communities secretary
Proportion of BAME staff in top grades has fallen since 2016, though number of women in these posts is rising
PCS union reiterates call for return to national bargaining across the entire civil service
Public appointments watchdog flags likelihood that Brexit will lead to a rise in public appointments and cautions government is already struggling to attract high quality, diverse candidates