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

[2025] UKUT 114 (AAC)

Fecha: 04-Dic-2025

the point was, in addition, relevant to one limited piece of the withheld information

(b)

the point was, in addition, relevant to one limited piece of the withheld information.

(6)

although the Tribunal recorded at [40] that “[a] letter from Mr Trickett (an Opposition spokesman) to the Prime Minister on the matter went unanswered” and concluded “[t]here had been no effective parliamentary scrutiny and accountability”, it failed to consider important dimensions of the ICO’s analysis of the accountability and transparency deficit. In particular, its ruling did not consider the ICO’s arguments that (a) there was no published correspondence from ACOBA criticising, or otherwise commenting on, Ms Patel’s retrospective application, (b) there was no public indication of the Prime Minister’s response to allegations against Ms Patel and (c) Ms Patel did not make any Parliamentary or other public statement regarding her compliance with the BARs or the Code.

(7)

the Tribunal did not appear to place weight on the positions occupied by the individuals who expressed views in the documents caught by the underlying request, the majority of whom were senior civil servants. That was a highly relevant factor. As explained in the decision notice at [94]: “the individuals in question would therefore be expected to be robust when providing advice and not easily deterred by the possibility of such information being disclosed”.

(8)

the Tribunal adopted other strands of reasoning which went beyond the ICO’s arguments, namely (a) the reference at [40] to “the unlawful prorogation of Parliament by the Prime Minister, a general election and the withdrawal from the EU” and (b) the suggestion at [41] that the qualified person’s opinion of 12 February 2020 (Oliver Dowden MP) was given on “a good day to bury bad news”. The relevance of those matters to the issues in dispute was unclear.