2020 was ‘worst year on record for UK Government transparency’
Fewer Freedom of Information requests to UK Government departments were granted in 2020 than ever before, making it the worst year for transparency on record, a new report into government secrecy has said.
The report, ‘Access Denied: the UK Government attack on Freedom of Information’ from open-democracy, also highlights practices used by the UK Government such as relying on a public interest loophole to delay responding to requests.
It also outlines how special advisors play a key role in vetting responses to requests prior to their release in at least five government departments.
White hall’s worst department for responding to FOIS is the Foreign office, the report states, with just 17 per cent of responses receiving a full response.
However, the Cabinet Office labelled the report “complete nonsense”, claiming many of the practices listed by the report as being anti-transparency are in line with the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
Peter Geoghegan, editor-inchief of open democracy, said: “Theuk government is waging a secret war against freedom of Information. And it is winning. This concerns us all because government secrecy is toxic.
"If left unchecked, it can conceal incompetence and corruption. And the bottom line is that politicians spending public money should not hide their actions from the public.”
The report includes evidence of a “public interest loophole” that sees government departments using a part of the FOI Act to delay responding if they need time to consider the public interest test.
The report alleges this is being used to delay responding in full without any effective consideration of the public interest test.
It also contains the revelation the Cabinet Office’s much-criticised ‘clearing house’ processes requests with “high political sensitivity” and “significant wider interest”, effectively acting as an early warning system for public interest disclosures under FOI, raising concerns about secrecy. This has taken place with requests around the Grenfell Tower tragedy and the infected blood scandal.
Responding to the report, the Cabinet Office said it did not accept that a metric based on the percentage of FOI requests granted was representative of the level of transparency in government, and criticised the report’s reliance on what it said is old data.
It added that many exemptions are appropriately used by government in line with the FOIA, and that the Cabinet Office’s role with the Clearing House has been transparent.
The department added that the criticism around the involvement of special advisers is also misplaced, stating they are allowed to provide advice and assistance on any aspect of government business, including responses to Freedom of Information requests.
A Cabinet Office spokesperson said: “This report is complete nonsense. It shows a total misunderstanding of the FOI Act and government processes, while misleading readers with outdated statistics.”
The scottish government has also faced criticism in the past for its FOI handling, with the Scottish Information Commissioner intervening in 2017 due to evidence requests from journalists faced additional checks and scrutiny than requests from members of the public.