Government depends on a functional bureaucracy, but how does the attention of the bureaucracy itself function? While bureaucrats ideally just do their jobs, focusing on the programs laid out by elected officials, the reality is that bureaucrats in most democracies have a great deal of autonomy. The United Kingdom (UK) is notable for the fact that the majority of legislation occurs as secondary, delegated legislation called statutory instruments (SIs) that are written by bureaucrats themselves. This paper makes use of a new dataset of all UK SIs from 1987 to 2008 covering their issue content and relation to EEC/EU Directives to develop a better understanding of bureaucratic attention in the UK. It finds that bureaucratic attention has shifted in its focus over time and that the implementation of EEC/EU directives is a relatively small part of SI activity, but that the focus of non-EU related SIs varies heavily by issue. This paper represents the first output from a developing project on the content and, in time, the responsiveness of national level bureaucracies in EU member states over time.