{"text":[[{"start":8.690000000000001,"text":"Sue Gray was back in the news last weekend. "}],[{"start":12.32,"text":"The former top civil servant has in fact rarely been out of the news since she unexpectedly quit to become chief of staff to Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, last year. "}],[{"start":22.14,"text":"This time, the Mail on Sunday devoted nearly a whole page to the woman it called “a real-life Labour version of CJ Cregg”, the fictional White House chief of staff in The West Wing TV series. "}],[{"start":33.09,"text":"This was small beer for a person who has been accused of everything from plotting to oust Boris Johnson to spying for the British government in Northern Ireland, which she of course denies. "}],[{"start":42.99,"text":"But for me, one of the most remarkable things about Gray is not what she has done but what she has failed to do: go to university. "}],[{"start":50.63,"text":"I still remember the jolt of hearing a former Whitehall mandarin mention this on the BBC in 2022, when Gray was a second permanent secretary in the influential Cabinet Office. "},{"start":60.209,"text":"That made her one of the most senior officials in the Office, ranking just below the permanent secretaries who run Whitehall departments. "}],[{"start":67.82000000000001,"text":"For context, the number of permanent secretaries who never went to university around this time was zero, says a 2019 report by the Sutton Trust social mobility charity. "},{"start":77.32400000000001,"text":"Most went to one of just two universities, Oxford or Cambridge, as did most senior judges, cabinet ministers and diplomats. "}],[{"start":85.61000000000001,"text":"For context again, the share of the general population going to Oxbridge was less than 1 per cent and just 7 per cent went to the private schools that educated most permanent secretaries, top judges and Lords. "}],[{"start":97.28000000000002,"text":"Education is not the only measure of class. "},{"start":100.15900000000002,"text":"Parents’ occupations matter too. "},{"start":102.32700000000001,"text":"But Gray remains an outlier in a country where a small elite still has a big say in how things are run. "},{"start":107.70700000000002,"text":"The Labour party she is trying to get elected has plans to smash a “class ceiling