Ministers urged to stop ‘hiding from scrutiny’ by blocking FoI requests | Freedom of information | The Guardian


AI Summary Hide AI Generated Summary

Government Spending on Blocking FOI Requests

Six UK government departments spent at least half a million pounds over four years fighting Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, revealed by openDemocracy's investigation. The Department of Health and Social Care alone spent over £278,000, including £129,000 on one case regarding ministerial diaries.

Public Concern over Secrecy

A Savanta ComRes poll found that nearly three-quarters of UK adults are concerned about rising government secrecy, particularly regarding the increasing refusal of FOI requests. Older adults expressed greater concern.

Government Response and Criticism

The government claims it balances transparency with protecting sensitive information and has the right to appeal ICO rulings. However, Peter Geoghegan of openDemocracy criticizes the use of public funds to avoid scrutiny.

Key Examples

  • Department of Health: £129,000 to block ministerial diaries, £20,000 for hospital fire safety information, £87,000 for a childhood obesity policy document.
  • Department for Work and Pensions: Over £80,000 on three appeals since 2018.
  • Department for Education: At least £52,000 to prevent FOI releases.

The article also highlights a previous legal battle the government lost concerning an “Orwellian” unit accused of obstructing FOI requests.

Sign in to unlock more AI features Sign in with Google

Six government departments have between them spent at least half a million pounds over the past four years trying to block information being released under the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act.

They include the Department of Health and Social Care, which spent more than £129,000 in one case trying to stop the release of ministerial diaries before a judge eventually ruled most of the information should become public.

In another case, the same department spent £20,000 trying to stop a journalist from obtaining information about fire safety in hospitals.

The figures have been revealed after FoI requests by the investigative political website openDemocracy, in relation to efforts by government lawyers to challenge decisions by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which regulates information rights in the UK. The result, in some cases, has been expensive legal tribunals.

The Department of Health was also found to have spent £87,000 on attempting to preventing the release of drafts of a policy document about childhood obesity.

Elsewhere, the Department for Work and Pensions has sparked three appeals against the ICO since 2018, spending more than £80,000. The Department for Education has spent at least £52,000 to date on attempts to prevent FoI releases.

A recent survey carried out by the polling company Savanta ComRes, for openDemocracy, found that nearly three-quarters of UK adults were concerned about a rise in government secrecy.

The online poll in the middle of last month asked 2,075 UK adults how concerned they were that the percentage of FoI requests that government departments had refused to answer in full had increased in recent years.

About 71% said that they were concerned, while 18% were not. Those aged 55 and over (75%) were more likely to be concerned than those aged 35-54 (69%) and 18-34 (68%).

Chart: the Department of Health and Social Care has spent £278,000 since 2016 trying to get around freedom of information requests

A spokesperson for the government said that it was committed to being open and transparent, adding that it balanced the need to make information available with a duty to protect sensitive information.

They added: “Just like any other public authority, under the FoI Act the government has a right to appeal ICO rulings and set out our position when we feel there is a need to protect particularly sensitive information, including related to national security and personal data.”

“We routinely disclose information beyond our obligations under the FoI Act, and are releasing more proactive publications than ever before.”

Peter Geoghegan, the editor-in-chief of openDemocracy, called on ministers to stop using public money “to hide from public scrutiny”.

“At a time when the public are concerned about government secrecy it is deeply ironic that government departments are spending hundreds of thousands of pounds of public money to hide information from the public. Ministers need to stop using public money to hide from public scrutiny,” he said.

Earlier this year, the government lost a legal battle to prevent the release of documents about an “Orwellian” unit that is accused of obstructing the release of material requested by the public under the FoI Act.

The Clearing House, a little-known unit that sits at the heart of government, circulates details of certain FoI requests by journalists, campaigners and others around Whitehall and also advises on how to respond to them.

🧠 Pro Tip

Skip the extension — just come straight here.

We’ve built a fast, permanent tool you can bookmark and use anytime.

Go To Paywall Unblock Tool
Sign up for a free account and get the following:
  • Save articles and sync them across your devices
  • Get a digest of the latest premium articles in your inbox twice a week, personalized to you (Coming soon).
  • Get access to our AI features

  • Save articles to reading lists
    and access them on any device
    If you found this app useful,
    Please consider supporting us.
    Thank you!

    Save articles to reading lists
    and access them on any device
    If you found this app useful,
    Please consider supporting us.
    Thank you!