Blair wants FOI shut down to conceal his abuse of government
July 28th, 2012Blair’s failure to co-operate with the Parliamentary select committee investigating the effectiveness of the Freedom of Infomation Act (FOI) shows just how important this Act is and why it now needs to be strengthened and extended. What he’s afraid of is of course how much more it will reveal of the unsavoury background to his autocratic style and how what really happened diverges sharply from the slick spin with which it was presented. Since Blair got almost all the big decisions of his premiership wrong – his sycophancy to Bush, his neocon support for US militarism, the war in Iraq and his deceitful presentation of the reasons for it, his strong support for Britain joining the Eurozone, his unabashed enthusiasm for neoliberal capitalist de-regulation and privatisation, his massive extension of PFI, his schmoozing with corporate Big Business, his visceral dislike of the trade unions, his corruption by spin and money, and above all the way he blew his chance to use the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity with an unprecedented majority in Parliament to make any long-lasting radical reform of British society in the interests of the Labour Party which elected him – it’s not surprising he wants to keep as much under wraps as he can.
Thatcher rejected an FOI on the grounds that it would undermine Ministerial accountability to Parliament, as though that were not a constitutional fiction. Blair rejected it on grounds that it involved “information that the political system believes should be kept confidential precisely because it concerns meetings and discussions that are very sensitive” – exactly so: it involved information which he would find deeply embarrasing because it exposed actions by him and others that he could neve justify to the British people. One example is his abrupt termination of, and suppression of any information about, the SFO inquiry into the massive al-Yamamah arms deal with the Saudis which would very likely have revealed the enormous bribe paid to Prince Bandar and other Saudi officials to fix the deal.
FOI has been very effective, which is why the likes of Blair are so anxious to shut it down. What is really deeded is that it should be extended, and made to operate quicker and better. Departments which are unco-operative or unduly slow in providing requested information should be sanctioned, like the DCLG which was recently castigated by the FOI Commissioner for delays of up to 400 days in processing requests. The scope of the FOI Act should be broadened to cover outfits like private utilities and contractors engaged in public business. And the 30-year rule on disclosure of some public records should be scrapped since its only defence is that it might cause embarrassment to living persons or their descendants.













