Leaked memo of HMRC plot against PCS

Labour and trade union movement news

Leaked memo of HMRC plot against PCS

From a PCS press release, 13 November 2014

Senior HMRC officials have ‘orchestrated plot’ to undermine union

Following HMRC unilaterally walking away from talks with the PCS aimed at resolving an ongoing dispute over job cuts and office closures, a leaked strategy paper written for HMRC’s executive committee outlines plans to try to isolate the PCS, the union that represents 50,000 HMRC staff.

The memo states HMRC’s senior management believes its “business interests” are best served by an approach that “reduces the influence of the unions”. It sets out a plan to “marginalise PCS” and says “further proactive measures targeted at key union activists” would be considered.

The PCS has accused the department’s most senior civil servants of acting politically to stifle opposition to cuts at a time when even the government’s own modest estimates acknowledge the amount the exchequer loses in uncollected tax is rising.

Recent research for the union by tax expert Richard Murphy suggests tax evasion alone could now cost our economy up to £80 billion a year. If nothing is done to arrest the rise, Murphy estimates it could top £100 billion by 2018.

The union is calling on HMRC to confirm it will abandon this strategy immediately and re-engage with PCS officials and representatives.

PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said:

“This orchestrated plot to undermine a union that represents three quarters of HMRC staff is further evidence of the creeping politicisation of the civil service.

“Collecting even a fraction of the tens of billions of pounds a year that is lost to our economy through tax evasion and avoidance would change the debate about public spending overnight and this is what HMRC should be focusing on.”