However Iain Duncan Smith spins it, it seems clear that universal credit is a policy in trouble. What should future Labour ministers learn from this experience?

IDS won some respect for thinking deeply about welfare reform while still in opposition. He set up the Centre for Social Justice which produced interesting ideas on early years intervention, tackling gangs, helping with debt and work with offenders as well as the proposals for welfare reform centred around universal credit. The idea gained cross-party support, although those who had experience of implementing and funding reform in welfare rightly counselled that it would be difficult to get the Treasury to pay for it, to get the IT to work it, and that it would need extensive trialling and piloting.

However, with the energy of a new secretary of state in a newly formed government, IDS declared universal credit as his top priority and sneered at those who questioned the deliverability as unwilling to support reform.

So what went wrong?

First, I find it frankly amazing that there seems to have been so little progress-chasing by ministers of the department’s top priority. This morning, the BBC’s Nick Robinson likened universal credit to the Child Support Agency or NHS IT systems as examples of how big projects often go wrong. However, neither of those were the secretary of state’s top priority. They weren’t the mainstay policy of one of the government’s top reforms.

When I first became a junior education minister in 1999, Estelle Morris tracked the delivery of literacy and numeracy on a weekly basis. David Blunkett returned from Sheffield every week with a dictated memo of action for officials based on the progress (or lack of it) he’d seen in his constituency. In 2000-1, Alan Milburn summoned ministers and officials weekly to plan how to get the NHS through the winter. In 2006 when I went back to education, Andrew Adonis knew the stage that every single new academy was at. When I was home secretary, I had fortnightly meetings to track how we were doing in delivering a neighbourhood policing team to every area of the country.

Ministers need to set strategic direction, but they also need to assure themselves that key policies are being delivered. IDS has failed to do this.

Responsibility cannot be shuffled off to civil servants as IDS and his aides have so clearly tried to do. There appears to have been a civil service failure to plan and project-manage properly. However, briefing and counterbriefing won’t solve the immediate problem – and it will certainly destroy the close and trusting working relationship between ministers and civil servants which, in my experience, is always necessary to deliver reform and make it stick.

Then this week IDS seems to have gone from one extreme to the other. His Today interview was a flurry of the worst sort of bureaucrat-speak – ‘prioritise; pathfinder; roll out the fully enhanced digital offering blah blah’. There is a happy medium between floating so high in the policy atmosphere that you can’t see what’s happening on the ground and turning into a speaking project plan.

And at another point, he described the new official in charge of delivery as ‘the leader’ of universal credit. No, Iain! You’re the leader – you’ve just failed to lead properly so far. Labour shadow ministers – look and learn. Rachel Reeves’ offer of cross-party support to sort out the mess and her suggestion that Labour is already setting up a ‘taskforce’ to rescue the policy when we’re in government are canny moves.

Labour shadow teams are rightly focusing on the key policies and messages for the next manifesto. Winning is the first task. However, as IDS has demonstrated, there’s no pause for thought between winning and governing.

So, as you are determining the policy, give a bit of thought to how you’ll make it happen when you get the chance. And when you get into office, trust your civil servants, but don’t assume you can hand over responsibility. That’s why government is hard, relentless work. Planning and thinking in advance makes it manageable and, most importantly, successful.

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Jacqui Smith is a former home secretary, writes the Monday Politics column for Progress, and tweets @smithjj62

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Photo: Steve Punter