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Even with 14 special advisers, Clegg is still struggling

Clegg's small army of political advisers has failed to halt the slide in his poll ratings.

Clegg's approval rating has fallen from +53 to -59. Graphic: Henrik Pettersson.
Nick Clegg's net approval rating has fallen from +53 in May 2010 to a record low of -59. Graphic: Henrik Pettersson.

As the Cabinet Office revealed yesterday, Nick Clegg now employs 14 special advisers at a cost of nearly £900,000 a year. (George Osborne, conversely, gets by with just four). The list below names them and their salaries, where they exceed £58,200.

There are good arguments for increasing the number of spads, as the coalition has done. In a misguided attempt to display its thriftiness, the government initially employed just 69. It now employs a far more sensible 81. Clegg, in particular, had a strong case for more support. As the Institute for Government noted back in September 2010, his office was under-resourced compared with those of other cabinet ministers and threatened to be overwhelmed by government business.

But it would be remiss not to note that Clegg's spads, employed to give political advice on policies and media, have failed to halt the slide in his approval ratings. The most recent YouGov/Sunday Times poll found that net approval with Clegg had reached a new low of -59, down from a heady +53 in the halcyon days of May 2010.

Clegg now employs 14 special advisers at a cost of nearly £900,000. Source: Cabinet Office.

8 comments

New statesman xyz's picture

Thanks for this non-article!

Ellie's picture

This article contains no real information about what they are actually employed to do. Is it possible Nick Clegg employs his advisors to, I dunno, advise on matters of government and policy, rather than to polish his ratings??

Worldismad's picture

Either way they are doing a very poor job.

frances smith's picture

performance related pay for spads then?

the more unpopular the politician they serve the less they get paid.

the biggest advantage i can see it that it would reduce the number of career politicians going straight from political adviser to politician.

Benjamin Rae's picture

People don't like to be taken for a mug. Clegg presented himself as better and more honest than his rivals. He raised people's hopes beyond what he could deliver with utopian rhetoric. The public have found out since the election that not only is he just as bad, he's worse.
He's been exposed for what he is. There's no way back from that. You have to laugh when you see him and Cameron do one of their buddy stunts. As if Clegg making speeches does anything positive for him or his party.

SimonMW's picture

You don't need to be Nostradamus to know Nick Clegg has no political future after the spring of 2015.

He has sold out on just about every major policy.

Mr Mathews's picture

The Coalition of suckers !

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