T he voice of business has spoken. The messaging, however, is mixed. After a period of turmoil and soul searching, during which most of its work was suspended, the Confederation of British Industry has outlined plans for an overhaul of its culture and governance. Its members will be asked to give their verdict in a confidence vote, for which polling has already opened. We will learn the results next week, soon after a gathering at the CBI’s Cannon Street offices in London.
Its director general, Rain Newton-Smith, brought in to steady the ship, made her pitch in a prospectus published on Wednesday.
More than 50 leading companies, from John Lewis to Aviva, have suspended or cancelled their membership. The government, and the Labour party, have paused all official contact until the situation is resolved. Has Newton-Smith done enough to win them back?
The allegations could not be more serious. They concern claims of sexual misconduct, including rape, by male employees. The women who have complained say their concerns were not properly dealt with. The CBI’s president, Brian McBride, conceded in April in a letter to members that his organisation had failed to filter out “culturally toxic people” during its hiring process, and that its managers had tried to find resolution in sexual harassment cases “when we should have removed offenders from our business”. On Wednesday, he said the organisation felt “chastened”.
In some quarters, the tone has been less apologetic. Carolyn Fairbairn, director general from 2015 until 2020 and the first woman to lead the CBI, recently spoke up in the Sunday Times for what she described as a “really good culture”, saying she did not accept a connection between the way the organisation was run and
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