Thursday 18 July 2019

Jon Thompson Is Leaving HMRC

Sir Jonathan Thompson to step down as HMRC Chief Executive in the Autumn

Announcement comes as HMRC’s Annual Report and Accounts shows HMRC in a strong position collecting record revenues due for public services.
Photograph of Sir Jonathan Thompson
Sir Jonathan Thompson has announced today that he is to leave HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in the Autumn after more than three years as Chief Executive and First Permanent Secretary to take on a new role as Chief Executive of the Financial Reporting Council (FRC).
Sir Jonathan joined HMRC in April 2016 and led the organisation through a period of change and significant performance improvements, including:
  • successive, record-breaking increases in the collection of tax revenues due and compliance revenues
  • a general downward trend in the tax gap – the gap between tax owed and tax paid
  • an overall recovery in customer service levels
  • the introduction of Making Tax Digital – online business tax accounts
  • opening HMRC’s first regional centre with two more due this year
  • preparing for the challenges and opportunities of Brexit
Sir Jonathan will, along with the other new members of the FRC leadership team, take the organisation through its transformation to the Audit, Reporting and Governance Authority.
This new enhanced regulator was announced by Business Secretary Greg Clark in response to the comprehensive Independent Review led by Sir John Kingman. The new regulator will have a new mandate and stronger powers set down in law.
Sir Jonathan will take up his new role in the Autumn.
Sir Jonathan said:
It’s been a tremendous privilege to lead HMRC for more than three years, so to leave now has not been an easy decision for me to make. However, to have the opportunity to lead the Financial Reporting Council, as it turns into the Audit, Governance and Reporting Authority, and to promote public trust in doing business in the UK, at a point when we’re about to forge new alliances across the world, is too exciting to turn down.
I’m immensely proud to have led HMRC as we delivered year-on-year increases in the collection of revenues due for public services; prepared for Brexit and the challenges it will bring; and oversaw a recovery in customer service levels making dealing with their tax affairs easier for everyone.
Sir Mark Sedwill, Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service, said:
I am grateful for the enormous contribution Sir Jonathan has made during his time at HMRC.
Jon has shown himself to be an exceptional leader as the Chief Executive and First Permanent Secretary at HM Revenue and Customs, as well as Head of the Government’s Operational Delivery Profession. During his tenure, we’ve seen year-on-year increases in the revenue collected, which critically goes into funding our public services.
Particular credit goes to Jon’s work to diversify the workforce: appointing a diverse and gender balanced executive committee, and opening HMRC’s first regional centre, with two more due this year.
I wish Jon all the best in his new role, and I am sure he will be an invaluable asset to the new Audit, Reporting and Governance Authority.
Sir Jonathan’s announcement comes on the day that HMRC publishes its Annual Report and Accounts showing a challenging but successful year across a range of areas. The highlights for the 2018 to 2019 report include:
  • Collecting more money than ever before to pay for the UK’s public services - a record £627.9 billion in total revenue, representing a 3.6% increase on last year.
  • Generating £34.1 billion than could have been lost by tackling avoidance, evasion and non-compliance, including more than £2.9 billion from tackling offshore tax initiatives – and we’ve kept the tax gap low.
  • Helping more customers than ever to pay their taxes quickly and easily online – 19 million people have signed up to Personal Tax Accounts and 93.5% of Self Assessment returns were completed online.
  • Taking a major step forward in Making Tax Digital for Business, launching our new mandated service for digital record keeping and for filing VAT returns online. More than 93,000 businesses signed up for the pilot – and this has grown to over 500,000 since the full launch on 1 April 2019.
  • Transforming and modernising the way we operate while also delivering the huge, complex task of preparing for the UK to leave the EU. Around 5,400 full-time equivalent employees are working on EU exit, building the customs, VAT and excise systems the UK will need and preparing our customers for leaving the EU, with or without a deal.
  • Taking further action to tackle bullying, harassment and discrimination at work wherever we find it, including a full review of our policies, processes and standards following an independent report into what it’s like to work at HMRC.
Sir Jonathan will take up this new role in the Autumn. The recruitment process will begin shortly and an announcement about a successor will be made in due course. Jim Harra, Deputy Chief Executive and Second Permanent Secretary at HMRC, continues to be the department’s lead for exiting the EU, as has been the case since he took over this role in January 2018.
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16 comments:

  1. Well he managed to keep his positivity bullsh*t going for 3 years. Never helped the average HMRC get a pay rise, continued with BOF, got his knight hood. Can now sail off to a lucrative little number leaving someone else to continue with this mess! He was every bit as bad as Lin Homer & that's saying something!

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    Replies
    1. After Dame Disaster.left he had the ideal opportunity to turn things round. But then he would not have got his knighthood would he?
      Wonder who will be next to make it a hat trick of arseholes leading two once well respected departments?

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  2. A disgraceful man who proved to me that he is dishonest - I was violently attacked by HMRC when working for them and this man lied to and misled my local MP about the HMRC cover up. Should have been sacked.

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  3. Mark Sedwell's glowing praise for Thompson in regard to him transforming the workplace appears to overlook the culture of bullying and cover up which continued under his watch. HMRC is not a safe place to work.

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  4. But he can't leave, he hasn't got us that generous pay rise he was talking about yet...

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  5. The fucker said he would engage in getting HMRC staff a fairer pay deal, while at the same time lining his pockets with another £20000 bonus and a knighthood, just shows this mans word was worth jack shit, not surprised in the least he is going, getting out before the whole clusterfuck blows up, just like his predecessors did, the whole shower of them were are selfish greedy useless self serving parasites.

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  6. Can't say anyone in HMRC is surprised. BOF complete shambles unable to provide incoming PM with assurances that HMRC is ready for Brexit. Getting out before that shit storm hits his fan and lands in his desk. EXCOM are a horrible pack of self serving treacherous trolls. But as long as everyone wishes him the best of luck and weeps on command at his departure all's well.

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  7. The bearings on that revolving door must be in a bad state by now!

    The matrix overlay for these top job walla's works well and consistently.

    Mind yourself on the way out, next!

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  8. I wonder if he'd be brave enough to open a blog on how the little people viewed his performance while at HMRC? A little bit of engagement Jon goes a long way.

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  9. Sir Jon...you were a useless bastard.....like the ones before you...sad thing for the staff is that there will be another useless clown in situ very soon.
    A curse on you Thompson....you will now be able to fatten up again after all that weight you have lost...wonder was that weight loss a consequence of the horrendous way you treated your staff.
    Close the door behind you,you cunt.

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  10. Sir Jonathan Thompson is a dishonest man lacking integrity. He should not be redeployed to another public sector role. If he was prepared to lie in a letter to an MP, I have no doubt he would lie to anyone. A liar and a friend to all bigots, bullies and abusers working at HMRC due to his willingness to be part of a cover up.

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  11. Bean counter who knew SFA abouttax administration returns to being a bean counterin charge of tedious outfit forming accounting policies only bean counters care about.

    The circle of life.

    Pity about the utter chaos in the middle

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  12. And he oversaw the shit show that was the investigation into this!

    https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/politics/2019/feb/01/senior-hmrc-official-sacked-after-sexual-misconduct-claims

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  13. Goodbye and good riddence.

    Let's have a little look at his track record. Failure to investigate Nellthorp, or as far as I can tell, notify the Police and seek prosecution. Oh no, that would warrent to much attention to HMRC and its internal goings on. Get rid of the culprits on the QT and brush it under the rug.

    Any thought for the traumatised victims or their families? No. Just the standard gobshites waxing lyrical on your 'achievements'.

    How about the Loan Charge and the damage that has caused? Any empathy when people threaten to commit suicide or what that would do to the families? No. Throw out a few platitudes as a PR exercise. Put a bit of spin on it that they are breaking the law or tax lost to the public. Have another team building exercise in a football stadium with your cronies.

    Have you had much luck when you put a few D List Celebrities in front of the silk? Nope, the judge ruled in their favour.

    I hope you enjoy your lump sum and pension.

    Give it a few months, then accept some do nothing consultancy job like Harnett. Where you get paid six figures to talk shit and give speechs about transformaton of a public service.

    Let's see what shitbag gets shoe horned in the job next. Very handy to draw a line under what's gone on previously if they get asked awkward questions at a PAC.

    Shite the lot.

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  14. Only potential upside is that the dangerous fools who condoned his behaviour and the excesses of HMRC management (Hammond and Stride) are history and hopefully Jesse Norman as well, whose hugely condescending and arrogant performance at the Lord's Committee last week shows he is committed to holding to their deeply flawed and utterly discredited policy line.

    Incoming ministerial team needs to discard all the bullshit Treasury and HMRC briefings and look to the work of the various committees who have been examining the train wreck that is the current HMRC operating model.

    MTD is a farce

    Loan Charge worst type of arse covering

    Brexit preparations aimed at showing only May's WA could possibly work

    Intent on grand but deeply flawed policies that consultstions have shown cannot possibly work

    Wading in to the Digital Service Tax me too fiasco at worst possible moment

    Paralysis in actually delivering what taxpayers and businesses need: clarity and certainty.

    Next head of HMRC must be somebody who actually knows how the domestic and international tax world works, not another careerist SCS Gong Hunter

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  15. Not likely to be anyone that shirks gongs, meaningless awards for doing bugger all and hides from ego boosting glory of toadies I'm afraid. They are manufacturing these leeches on an industrial scale. Before long it will be the only thing we do produce and none of them for export.

    ReplyDelete