Civil Service chief Chris Wormald is sacked by Keir Starmer as he throws one other aide below bus ‘to save lots of his personal pores and skin’ on one other day of chaos in Number 10

Keir Starmer finally confirmed he had sacked the head of the Civil Service today –  amid a furious Whitehall row over who should replace him.

The Cabinet Office tonight said Sir Chris Wormald has stood down as Cabinet Secretary ‘by mutual agreement’, following days of speculation.

But he is to be replaced on an interim basis in the £220,000 post by not one but three senior mandarins.

Dame Antonia Romeo, who had been widely tipped to be in line for Sir Chris Wormald’s former job, Catherine Little and James Bowler will share the responsibilities of Cabinet Secretary for an interim period. 

It came after an astonishing row over Dame Antonia’s appointment that saw former top diplomat Lord McDonald of Salford take the highly unusual step of publicly warning No10 against the move.

The peer insisted Dame Antonia must not be parachuted into the post without a fresh vetting process, given she was investigated for bullying when she was HM Consul General in New York a decade ago. A probe found no wrongdoing. 

In a short statement, The Prime Minister said he was ‘grateful’ for Sir Chris’s ‘long and distinguished career of public service’ and his ‘support’ as Cabinet Secretary, having only taken up the position 14 months ago. 

Sir Keir added: ‘I have agreed with him that he will step down as Cabinet Secretary today. I wish him the very best for the future.’

But Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch said Sir Chris was ‘is the latest person Keir Starmer has thrown under the bus to save his own skin’, amid a furious row over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US.

And in his own remarks released by the Government, the civil servant did not thank the Prime Minister by name. 

He is now in line for a £250,000 payoff and a note in history as one of the shortest serving Cabinet Secretaries.

The Cabinet Office tonight said Sir Chris Wormald has stood down as Cabinet Secretary ‘by mutual agreement’, the Cabinet Office said.

Dame Antonia Romero was the frontrunner to replace Chris Wormald as Cabinet Secretary

Keir Starmer has been urged not to rush through the appointment of Dame Antonia

Lord McDonald, who was permanent secretary at the Foreign Office for five years until 2020, told Channel 4 News: ‘This is the most important job in the civil service. It can’t be chosen on the fly.’

Sir Chris said: ‘It has been an honour and a privilege to serve as a civil servant for the past 35 years, and a particular distinction to lead the service as Cabinet Secretary.

‘I want to place on record my sincere thanks to the extraordinary civil servants, public servants, ministers, and advisers I have worked with.

‘Our country is fortunate to have such dedicated individuals devoted to public service, and I wish them every success for the future.’

Bizarrely, Downing Street refused to say this morning who the Cabinet Secretary was, although the PM’s spokesman insisted there still was one at the time. 

Lord McDonald, who was permanent secretary at the Foreign Office for five years until 2020, told Channel 4 News: ‘This is the most important job in the civil service. It can’t be chosen on the fly.’

In a reference to Lord Mandelson being appointed US Ambassador in spite of his links to Jeffrey Epstein, the crossbench peer said: ‘The Prime Minister has recent bitter experience of doing the due diligence too late. It would be an unnecessary tragedy to repeat that mistake.’

A Government source said: ‘There is absolutely no basis for this criticism.

‘Antonia Romeo is a highly respected Permanent Secretary with a 25 year record of excellent public service. The allegations all come from a single grievance made some time ago by a former employee. All the allegations were dismissed on the basis there was no case to answer.’

Another Government source told the Times: ‘This is a desperate attempt from a senior male official whose time has passed but spent their career getting Britain into the mess it finds itself in today. 

‘A computer says no culture, that cannot challenge the status quo. 

‘Antonia is a disrupter. She isn’t settled with the status quo. She is one of the few senior officials that has always fought against the computer says no culture embedded in the British state. 

‘In light of the crisis we face as a country, Antonia is exactly the leadership the civil service need to embrace systemic reform to rewire the state, take on vested interest and deliver for the British people.’ 

Appointing Sir Chris to the £220,000-a-year job in December 2024, Sir Keir lavished praise on him as ‘exceptional’ the right option to ‘drive’ change.

‘There could be no-one better placed to drive forward our Plan For Change than Chris, and I look forward to working with him as we fulfil the mandate of this new government, improving the lives of working people and strengthening our country with a decade of national renewal,’ the premier said.

Sir Chris was drafted in to replace Simon Case – now Lord Case – who received a £200,000 severance deal.

However, there have been persistent rumours of tensions, with briefings apparently from No10 suggesting the top mandarin has been holding up reforms.

Sir Chris has also been accused by Gordon Brown of failing to run an adequate probe into the New Labour architect’s correspondence with Jeffrey Epstein.

Glamorous high-flyer who mixed with the A List in New York 

Antonia Romeo is a Civil Service high-flyer who rubbed shoulders with celebrities during her time as Consul General in the US. 

During her time in New York, where she promoted British interests and UK trade, Mrs Romeo hosted a series of glitzy parties for celebrity figures including Calvin Klein, Anna Wintour, Joanna Lumley and the now-disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein. 

But it prompted an investigation after the now 51-year-old mother of three was accused of bullying staff and misusing expenses in 2017.

The Oxford graduate faced claims she had ‘terrorised’ staff who criticised her extravagant lifestyle and reportedly lavish spending.

Allegations of questionable spending of taxpayers’ money included more than £120,000 in fees for her three children at an upmarket New York school which had not been approved by the Foreign Office, expensive taxis and more than a dozen flights, some business class.

Officials in New York were said to be particularly aggrieved by a last-minute flight booked to London in February 2017 so that Mrs Romeo could attend that year’s Bafta awards where she rubbed shoulders with entertainment industry stars.

The cost of sending expensive bouquets of flowers to British celebrities, including Victoria Beckham, formed part of a dossier of allegations against Mrs Romeo compiled in early 2017.

Her allies insist that the spending was all part of her job to promote the UK, but some former colleagues believe she was more intent on furthering her own personal brand, rather than the UK’s interests.

Mrs Romeo was subsequently found to have no case to answer by the Cabinet Office and was promoted a few weeks later to permanent secretary at the Department for International Trade. The Cabinet Office said: ‘These allegations were made some time ago, were thoroughly investigated and were dismissed on the basis there was no case to answer.’

In 2020 she was believed to have been among the frontrunners to become head of the Civil Service as Cabinet Secretary. But she missed out and the role went to Simon Case, a former aide to Prince William.

She missed out again at the end of 2024, when Chris Wormald was handed the job.