Labour's plan for a royal commission into the public service to address issues such as poor advice from officials, bullying of civil servants by ministers and the threat of "creeping corruption" has gained the backing of a former prime minister.
Labour's state services spokeswoman, Maryan Street, yesterday said Labour would initiate an inquiry because the public service had lost much of its protections against "creeping corruption" in recent years and had "lost the courage required of a neutral professional public service".
A royal commission was proposed by former Labour Prime Minister Sir Geoffrey Palmer this year.
"I think there's a great deal wrong with the public service," he told the Herald yesterday. "There really have been some developments that need to be looked at closely in a proper platform made for it."
That included the development dating back to the Helen Clark Government "of not getting full and frank advice from officials and officials not wanting to tell ministers anything except what they want to hear".