Sir Fred Goodwin Stripped Of His Knighthood For Bringing The Honours System 'Into Disrepute'

Fred Goodwin

First Posted: 31/01/2012 17:03 Updated: 1/02/2012 09:53

Ex-banker Fred Goodwin's disgrace was completed when he was humiliatingly stripped of his knighthood on Tuesday.

The award was "cancelled and annulled" by the Queen after a key committee found he had brought the honours system into "disrepute".

Politicians hailed the move, which brackets the former Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) boss with notorious figures such as Soviet spy Anthony Blunt and Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe.

David Cameron said it was the "right decision", while Chancellor George Osborne insisted Mr Goodwin represented "everything that went wrong in the British economy over the last decade".

Labour leader Ed Miliband said the punishment was "only the start of the change we need" in boardrooms.

Mr Goodwin received his knighthood for services to banking under the Labour government, before guiding RBS to the brink of collapse in 2008.

Honours are usually only removed from individuals who have been convicted and jailed but the Cabinet Office said the scale of the RBS disaster - necessitating a £45 billion bail-out from the taxpayer - made the case "exceptional".

"Both the Financial Services Authority and the Treasury Select Committee have investigated the reasons for this failure and its consequences," the department said in a statement.

"They are clear that the failure of RBS played an important role in the financial crisis of 2008-9 which, together with other macroeconomic factors, triggered the worst recession in the UK since the Second World War and imposed significant direct costs on British taxpayers and businesses.

"Fred Goodwin was the dominant decision maker at RBS at the time.

"In reaching this decision, it was recognised that widespread concern about Fred Goodwin's decisions meant that the retention of a Knighthood for 'services to banking' could not be sustained."

The Forfeiture Committee, made up of senior civil servants, met last week to consider the issue the Press Association reported.

Its recommendation to strip Mr Goodwin of the honour was conveyed to the Queen by the Prime Minister.

The Cabinet Office said: "This decision, not normally publicised in advance, was taken on the advice of the Forfeiture Committee, which advised that Fred Goodwin had brought the honours system into disrepute.

"The scale and severity of the impact of his actions as CEO of RBS made this an exceptional case."

In a statement, Mr Cameron said: "I welcome the Forfeiture Committee's decision on Fred Goodwin's Knighthood.

"The FSA report into what went wrong at RBS made clear where the failures lay and who was responsible. The proper process has been followed and I think we've ended up with the right decision."

A spokesman for Liberal Democrat Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said he also backed the move.

Mr Osborne said: "I think we've got a special case here of the Royal Bank of Scotland symbolising everything that went wrong in the British economy over the last decade.

"Fred Goodwin was in charge and I think it's appropriate that he loses his knighthood."

Mr Miliband said: "It is right Fred Goodwin has lost his knighthood but it is only the start of the change we need to see.

"We need to change the bonus culture and we need to change the rules so we see real responsibility across the board.

"As I said in my conference speech, we should not have given Fred Goodwin a knighthood but this should not be about individuals, it is about taking the right steps now to create a more responsible capitalism."

Updated: 20:48, 31 January 2012


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Ex-banker Fred Goodwin's disgrace was completed when he was humiliatingly stripped of his knighthood on Tuesday. The award was "cancelled and annulled" by the Queen after a key committee found he h...
Ex-banker Fred Goodwin's disgrace was completed when he was humiliatingly stripped of his knighthood on Tuesday. The award was "cancelled and annulled" by the Queen after a key committee found he h...
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05:45 on 02/02/2012
Were there ANY of these financial institutions in the GFC that didn't have j ewish CEO's
14:36 on 01/02/2012
Off with his head! (seriously......a public beheading would be a GOOD thing)
17:22 on 01/02/2012
A little extreme, don't you think?
12:49 on 01/02/2012
Suggest he asks the Queen if he can pay the running costs of the Yacht we will probly. give her out of his pension.Second thoughts, no, he will prob.make a mess of that too then another bail out for the hardpressed taxpayer.
12:43 on 01/02/2012
You have to remember that this mess was caused by the Rating Agency's who "abdicated their responsblys" & did not give the right grading to the new investment tool that involved mortgages.
The banks followed the R/A's trusting their risk judgement as they continue to do even today.
Noone is suggesting the R/A's should be punished, I continue to wonder why.The banks claim that the investment was difficult to understand. Did they ask their Accountants for a briefing?
12:02 on 01/02/2012
I can think of a few more that deserve to be stripped of their honours!
11:34 on 01/02/2012
What about Freds' pension pot of around £9million? This was largely - I gather - gained during his period of incompetent and now seemingly dispreputable leadership(sic) of RBS. The very thing for which he's been stripped of his knighthood. Who says incompetence doesn't pay?? Move this man down onto the basic state pension. That way he'd get some idea of the penury that he left some others in. Oh and compulsory purchase his house, then flog it at auction. The proceeds can go into the 'pot' to repay us taxpayers..
11:14 on 01/02/2012
Goodwin is Scottish and loses his knighthood; Archer is English and keeps his peerage. Enough said.
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11:11 on 01/02/2012
It perfectly demonstrates how corrupt and a complete joke the honours system is.
10:51 on 01/02/2012
Maybe of interest: the last decade was also marked by the noise financial experts in
the media created. The media and the experts they came along with played a
decisive role in all the nonsense.
The video is from the US. Pretty much the same flashback video could be put
together what was aired on TV in the UK..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2I0QN-FYkpw
10:13 on 01/02/2012
Although I'm not a fan of Fred Goodwin, I do find it bizarre that he's stripped of his knighthood as a result of making some poor business decisions while many others continue to hold honours and peerages despite having criminal convictions for serious offences. The Honours Committee needs to clearly identify what the rules are, and what conduct would result in the removal of an honour. I would argue that in the interest of fairness to Mr Goodwin ALL peers/recipients of honours with a criminal conviction should be immediately stripped of their honours.
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ideaville
Wind turbines. I'm a big fan.
10:05 on 01/02/2012
It has to be remembered that when the Labour idiots decided to sack him and not pay him his bonus, their gross incompetence led to them not noticing his £9million pension pot and removing it.
Stripping him of his knighthood is all good and well, but he is having the last laugh.
09:39 on 01/02/2012
Its convenient to attack Fred Goodwin to deflect attention away from the real culprits, the politicians. Following the Great Depression of the 1930's, laws were introduced to stop the same thing ever happening again. Those laws were seen as "antiquated" and "outdated" and were recently repealed by politicians. The change created a platform for the credit crunch to be unleashed on an unsuspecting world. A credit crunch that no one has yet been charged for in a court of law. Have they got away with it?
12:32 on 01/02/2012
Well done ,He should not have been knighted for his work taking apart companies & making good people redundant. Remember the film "Pretty Woman"? she made her boyfriend see there was another way to go about making companies profitable.This is political correctness gone mad by David & Dizzy. I stick with Instiute of Directors.Tawdry is not a strong enough word Alistair.
09:12 on 02/02/2012
The bankers are only part of the problem, the credit crunch had many contributors: the central (government) banks, the politicians and the regulators put the machinery in place for the banks to use.
09:38 on 01/02/2012
One down, maybe "the committee" could investigate others in the House of Lords and strip them? Almost as worse was the expenses scandle, where Lords have been found guilty in court but still hold onto their title, as it wasn't "guilty enough for a longer sentence"? Poor old Fred (no sympathy) hasn't even been found guilty in court!
08:37 on 01/02/2012
I knew Fred Goodwin many years ago while he was training as an accountant with Touche Ross in Glasgow. He was a hard working simpleton then and he's not changed. The fault was in those around him whose greed allowed him to nearly destroy 300 years of hard work by generations of careful builders, and the most heinous fault of all rests with the government which allowed those responsible for this calamity to walk away with their personal fortunes intact.
08:06 on 01/02/2012
Scapegoat anyone? The debt all these banks have was conjured up anyway, how to turn a given value into money.. And it all started with excessive thieving in the housing market, Vendors, brokers, bankers all as stupid as each other! but not so stupid, they've all kept their winnings! I'll pay it off for you!