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

[2025] UKUT 114 (AAC)

Fecha: 04-Dic-2025

Public perception

(c)

Public perception

65.

The Tribunal also led itself astray by considering what the public might think of the political processes or underlying facts relating to the request. That approach came dangerously close to the classic conflation of “public interest” with “what interests the public” – the fact that there was or might be a widespread public perception of wrongdoing or cover-up (say) did not justify a decision-maker proceeding on the basis that there was a strong public interest in shedding light on such matters. (Far from being a “tired platitude”, as the Tribunal put it (at [45]), that was a crucial distinction as established at the highest authority: British Steel Corp v Granada Television Ltd [1981] AC 1096 at 1168 per Lord Wilberforce: “there is a wide difference between what is interesting to the public and what it is in the public interest to make known”.) Such an approach would generate a significant chilling effect indeed, if disclosure decisions were to be materially influenced by public opinion and political popularity.

66.

The correct position was that such considerations were subjective and ultimately unknowable, and therefore not suitable to be taken into account for the purposes of applying exemptions under FOIA. It followed that that was an irrelevant consideration for the Tribunal to have had regard to.