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The UK Freedom of Information Act 2000 and its effect on the Westminster Parliament Robert Rogers Clerk of the Journals House of Commons
22

The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Dec 18, 2021

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Page 1: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

The UK Freedom of Information Act 2000

and its effect on the Westminster ParliamentRobert Rogers

Clerk of the JournalsHouse of Commons

Page 2: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations
Page 3: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

The Freedom of Information Act 2000

• Came into force 1 January 2005• Applies to England, Wales and

Northern Ireland (Scotland has its own Act under devolution)

• Applies to “public authorities”

Page 4: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Profound change in information culture

• Before...– Private unless a public authority decides

to disclose• Now…

– Public unless there is good reason to keep private Similar arrangements in....50 other states including the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, most EU countries

Page 5: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Publication schemes

• What you routinely make available?• What do you put in?• Parliament’s schemes

Page 6: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Things that aren’t in the publication scheme: the basic Fol principle

• Section 1 of the Act says:– Any person making a request for

information to a public authority is entitled

(a) to be informed in writing by the public authority whether it holds information of the description specified in the request, and

(b) if that is the case, to have the information communicated to him

Page 7: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

How it works

• Requests must be in writing• with a return address• do not have to mention the FoI Act

Page 8: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Responding

• Public authority has 20 days to reply• In the form acceptable to the applicant• Duty to assist — what does it mean?

Page 9: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Simple so far?

• Wait … here are THE EXEMPTIONS

Page 10: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

• information intended for future publication• national security• defence• international relations• relations within the UK• the economy• investigations and proceedings by public

authorities• law enforcement• audit functions

Page 11: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Wait, there’s more

• formulation of government policy• effective conduct of public affairs• communications with the Queen and

honours• health and safety• environmental information• protected personal information• legal professional privilege• commercial interests

Page 12: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

But these are all subject to a public interest test• Which means.....

– the public interest in disclosure is greater than the public interest in maintaining protection

Page 13: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Not subject to the public interest test…• information accessible by other means• information supplied by security bodies• court records• parliamentary privilege• conduct of public affairs (House of

Commons or House of Lords)• information provided in confidence• prohibited by another Act

Page 14: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

How is all this enforced?

• The INFORMATION COMMISSIONER– independent public official– approves publication schemes– gives advice– enforces

Page 15: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Refusing information: what happens?

• application for information• public authority refuses, giving

reasons• requester asks for internal review• still refused• requester goes to Information

Commissioner• enforcement notice• contempt of court

Page 16: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

But…

• Appeal to the Information Tribunal• Appeal to the High Court

Page 17: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

• Cabinet Minister’s veto (public criticism?)

• report by the Information Commissioner

Page 18: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations
Page 19: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

So how does this affect Parliament?

• As a seeker after information?• As a steward of information?

Page 20: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

As a seeker after information

• An additional weapon in the hands of Members

• Cannot be used to pursue Parliamentary Questions

• But Ministers will find it more difficult to refuse an answer

Page 21: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

As a steward of information

• We are in the information business• But when needed, two key

exemptions for Parliament:• Parliamentary privilege• Effective conduct of public affairs

Page 22: The Freedom of Information Act 2000 - United Nations

Requests so far

• 4,000 to Government• 50 to Parliament

– Members’ expenses claims– Security– Staffing matters– Catering (the price of drinks)