Special exemptions to be written into Freedom of
Information Act:
Royal Family granted new right of secrecy
by Robert Verkaik
Saturday, 8 January 2011
Letters, emails and documents relating to the monarch, her heir and
the second in line to the throne will no longer be disclosed even if
they are in the public interest.
Sweeping changes to the Freedom of Information Act will reverse
advances which had briefly shone a light on the royal finances -
including an attempt by the Queen to use a state poverty fund to heat
Buckingham Palace - and which had threatened to force the disclosure of
the Prince of Wales’s prolific correspondence with ministers.
Lobbying and correspondence from junior staff working for the Royal
Household and Prince Charles will now be held back from disclosure.
Buckingham Palace confirmed that it had consulted with the Coalition
Government over the change in the law. The Government buried the plan
for “added protection” for the Royal Family in the small print of plans
called “opening up public bodies to public scrutiny”.
Maurice Frankel, head of the Campaign for Freedom of Information,
said that since the change referred to communications written on behalf
of the Queen and Prince Charles it might be possible for “park keepers
working in the royal parks” to be spared public scrutiny of their
letters written to local authorities.
The decision to push through the changes also raises questions about
the sincerity of the Liberal Democrats’ commitment to government
transparency. In opposition, senior Liberal Democrats frequently lined
up to champion the Freedom of Information Act after it came into force
in 2005.
Ian Davidson, a former member of Parliament’s Public Accounts
Committee (PAC), told The Independent: “I’m astonished that the
Government should find time to seek to cover up royal finances. When I
was on the PAC what we wanted was more disclosure not less. “Every time
we examined royal finances we found extravagance and indulgence as well
as abuse of expenses by junior royals. “Everywhere we looked, there were
savings to be made for the Government. This sends the wrong message
about public disclosure and accountability.”
Paul Flynn, another member of the committee, described the special
protection for the Royals as “indefensible”. He said: “I don’t think it
serves the interests of the public or the Royal Family very well.”
Mr Frankel said he believed that Prince Charles was the driving force
behind the new law.
“The heir to the throne has written letters to government departments
in an attempt to influence policy,” he said.
“He clearly does not want these to get into the public domain.”
Later this month, lawyers for the Cabinet Office, backed by Prince
Charles, will go to court to continue to resist Freedom of Information
requests of ministers to publish letters written to them by the Prince
of Wales.
A spokesman for Buckingham Palace said that the change to the law was
necessary because the Freedom of Information Act had failed to protect
the constitutional position of the monarch and the heir to the throne.
He explained that the sovereign has the right and duty to be
consulted, to encourage and warn the government, and by extension, the
heir to the throne had the constitutional right and duty to prepare
himself for the role of King.
Courtesy: The Independent
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