[2025] UKUT 114 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2025] UKUT 114 (AAC)

Fecha: 04-Dic-2025

Disclosure of the Names

Disclosure of the Names

243.

I also agree with the conclusion of the ICO that

“106.

The Commissioner is therefore satisfied that the exemptions at sections 36(2)(b)(i) and (ii) have been correctly applied by the Cabinet Office but that the public interest in the withheld information, with the exception of all names other than the three individuals listed in the Confidential Annex, favours disclosure.”

244.

As to the disclosure of the identities of the more junior and non-public facing officials, the ICO found that

“104.

As previously noted, the Commissioner is not persuaded that the Cabinet Office arguments as to the future chilling effect have strong or realistic application to some of the individual officials named in the withheld information, given their senior and public facing roles. However, in respect of more junior and non-public facing officials named in the withheld information, the Commissioner considers that the risk of a future chilling effect, both upon them personally and with regard to departmental junior officials more widely, is a real and credible one, such that the public interest balance supports maintaining the exemption to their identities.”

245.

In his submissions, as set out in paragraph 115 above, Mr Perry submitted that Mr Madden’s evidence on the impact of anonymisation of the names of more junior officials was unconvincing and should be afforded minimal weight, although that was a submission which was not developed or particularly emphasised.

246.

I do not agree. It seems to me that, in the case of the more junior officials, the risk of a future chilling effect, both upon them personally and with regard to departmental junior officials more widely, is a real and credible one, such that the public interest balance supports maintaining the exemption to their particular identities and I did not understand the ICO ultimately to contend strongly otherwise.