Share

Office for Civil Society returns in Tory 'Big Society' agenda

Office for Civil Society returns in Tory 'Big Society' agenda
News

Office for Civil Society returns in Tory 'Big Society' agenda 1

Governance | Celina Ribeiro | 15 Apr 2010

The Conservatives have revived an abandoned proposal to re-name the Office for the Third Sector the Office for Civil Society, and has pitched the voluntary sector as key to delivering its Big Society agenda.

As recently as a month ago, shadow minister for charities, social enterprise and volunteering that the Tories would “keep the Office for the Third Sector”.

However, in a letter sent today, from the minister and fellow Conservative shadow cabinet member Francis Maude to voluntary sector leaders, the pair stated that should their party win office: “We will create an Office for Civil Society, to be based within the Cabinet Office, that will act as a champion of the voluntary sector in the heart of the Government”.

"The Office for Civil Society will replace the current Office for the Third Sector and will take a lead role in delivering our Big Society agenda," the letter continued. 

The proposal to change the office's name was originally floated in the party’s 2008 green paper on the sector, but dropped last year.

Today’s letter also expressed an aim to “lock in political consensus on the value of the voluntary sector, and build a more stable framework for these valuable organisations to operate in”.

It reiterated the party’s stated plan to charities winning a greater proportion of public sector contracts, saying that “where, as is frequently the case, voluntary sector organisations deliver extremely good value for money, their performance is recognised”.

Pete Bass
Researcher
Freelance
16 Apr 2010

It's nice to see the Tories talking about Civil Society, but what is the point of doing this? It will still be part of the cabinet office, do mostly the same stuff and employ the same Civil Servants.

What do they expect to achieve by simply changing the name of the sign above the door? Is this really the time to be spending money on rebranding goverment departments?

Comments

[Cancel] | Reply to:

Close »

Community Standards

The civilsociety.co.uk community and comments board is intended as a platform for informed and civilised debate.

We hope to encourage a broad range of views, however, there are standards that we expect commentators to uphold. We reserve the right to delete or amend any comments that do not adhere to these standards.

We welcome:

  • Robust but respectful debate
  • Strongly held opinions
  • Intelligent relevant discussion
  • The sharing of relevant experiences
  • New participants

We will not publish:

  • Rude, threatening, offensive, obscene or abusive language, or links to such material
  • Links to commercial organisations or spam postings. The comments board is not an advertising platform
  • The posting of contact details for yourself or others
  • Comments intended for malicious purpose or mindless abuse
  • Comments purporting to be from another person or organisation under false pretences
  • Gratuitous criticism, commentary or self-promotion
  • Any material which breaches copyright or privacy laws, or could be considered libellous
  • The use of the comments board for the pursuit or extension of personal disputes

Be aware:

  • Views expressed on the comments board are left at users’ discretion and are in no way views held or supported by Civil Society Media
  • Comments left by others may not be accurate, do not rely on them as fact
  • You may be misunderstood - sarcasm and humour can easily be taken out of context, try to be clear

Please:

  • Enjoy the opportunity to express your opinion and respect the right of others to express theirs
  • Confine your remarks to issues rather than personalities

Together we can keep our community a polite, respectful and intelligent platform for discussion.

emailalert

Tribunal upholds Commission's merger decision but orders changes

24 May 2012

The Charity Tribunal has upheld the Charity Commission’s decision to allow two independent schools in...

Tender is issued for £200m National Citizen Service contracts

24 May 2012

The Department for Education has issued an invitation to tender for delivery of the National Citizen Service...

Trustees 'should be free to seek total return investments without approval'

24 May 2012

The Charity Law Association has recommended trustees are given the legal freedom to invest on a total...

Philanthropy in higher education consultation looks at collaboration with wider charity sector

25 May 2012

The Higher Education Funding Council for England has hinted at the possibility of collaboration with the...

Esmée Fairbairn: applications to trusts and foundations remain stable

25 May 2012

The Esmée Fairbairn Foundation is surprised not to have been inundated with applications for funding...

Charities in Twitter storm over balloon releases

24 May 2012

Charities are being urged to abandon balloon releases in a Twitter a campaign.

Charities express concerns over cookie compliance

25 May 2012

From tomorrow the Information Commissioner’s Office will enforce the law requiring all websites to inform...

Charities in Twitter storm over balloon releases

24 May 2012

Charities are being urged to abandon balloon releases in a Twitter a campaign.

Missing People plans to use Twitter to find child runaways

24 May 2012

Missing People is hoping to track down missing children using Twitter.

Join the discussion

Twitter
 
Training

Attending our one day courses is a highly effective way of ensuring new and existing trustees fully understand their role, responsibilities and liabilities.

>> Find out more <<