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

[2025] UKUT 114 (AAC)

Fecha: 04-Dic-2025

second, such an approach was inconsistent with the Divisional Court’s analysis in FDA , where at [41] it rejected the Cabinet Office’s submission “that the sole purpose of the Ministerial Code is to d

(2)

second, such an approach was inconsistent with the Divisional Court’s analysis in FDA, where at [41] it rejected the Cabinet Office’s submission “that the sole purpose of the Ministerial Code is to determine the standards that ministers must meet in order to retain the confidence of the Prime Minister”, and recognised that “Ministers are personally responsible for deciding how to act and how to conduct themselves in the light of the Ministerial Code and for justifying their actions including to the public. As such, the Ministerial Code does more than simply describe circumstances in which the Prime Minister may cease to have confidence in a minister.”

(3)

third, and relatedly, it was clear that other individuals and bodies with particular involvement and/or competence in questions of ministerial ethics and propriety were expected to express views about those matters. There was a considerable public interest in disclosure of those views. In particular, there was a strong public interest in understanding the view taken by ACOBA to compliance with the BARs (as opposed to the Code). To take another example: where the Independent Advisor on Minister’s Interests had provided an opinion on ministerial compliance with the Code (as in the context of the bullying allegations against Ms Patel), that view was also a matter of considerable public interest. (The role of the Independent Advisor was recognised in the Code at 1.4, 7.2, 7.4, 7.7, 7.11, 7.13 and 7.25.)