SOCIALIST UNITY

24 February, 2009

JACK STRAW OVERRULES COURTS ON DISCLOSURE OF IRAQ WAR MINUTES

Filed under: civil liberties — admin @ 5:39 pm

by Chris Ames

Jack Straw’s decision to veto the release of the minutes of two pre-Iraq war cabinet meetings is a dagger to the heart of the Freedom of Information Act. No one who has seen New Labour’s approach to spin and to freedom of information will have expected the papers to be given up without a fight. But that it has come to this so soon says a lot about the man and the government of which he is an immovable fixture.

It is four weeks since the Information Tribunal ruled that the Cabinet Office must release the official record of the two meetings at which the attorney general’s advice (or lack of it) on the legality of the war was discussed. The government had exactly that length of time to choose whether to comply, to launch an appeal or simply veto the request outright. In the end, it chose to put our expectations of government transparency out of their misery.

Straw recognised that the tribunal’s interpretation of the Act –– which he himself took through Parliament –– poses serious challenges to the way that we are currently governed. But he failed to understand that it is the way that decisions are taken, not the possibility of disclosure, that needs to change.

Of course the government may continue to argue that the minutes will not show that anything went wrong, as the Cabinet failed to challenge Tony Blair over Iraq. They can do that because we will not see them. To complete the circle, they may say that the minutes do not therefore justify breaching collective cabinet responsibility and confidentiality. Those of us who think that things went very badly wrong would argue that neither convention is worth saving.

As with the Iraq war, Labour has the Tories for company on the wrong side of the argument. Tempted though the opposition may have been to call for Labour’s dirty washing to be aired in public, they are backing Straw. They are clearly preparing for government and do not want to feed expectations that they will make their own deliberations public.

As Straw justified his decision –– one that was officially taken collectively by the cabinet –– he reeled off the statistics for how many Freedom of Information requests have been dealt with without anyone deploying the veto. But that completely misses the point. If ministers can pick and choose what the Act does or does not cover, the most important and most damaging secrets will always be kept under lock and key.

First published on Free Speech blog : http://blog.indexoncensorship.org/

4 Comments »

  1. Surely its up to the public to decide whats in this act, thats why we have the freedom of information rights. This smells of a major coverup on the Iraq war and our interventions in it.

    Comment by norma smith — 24 February, 2009 @ 7:32 pm

  2. The government took us into a devastating war for reasons that have now been thoroughly discredited — that’s if you didn’t already know it at the time which a huge swathe of the nation did. The war is still going on. The public, still paying for the action, has the right to know exactly what was done and why.

    The government was wrong, they’ve been caught out, but no-one wants to be accountable. Not a very good example of democracy.

    Comment by Madam Miaow — 24 February, 2009 @ 7:45 pm

  3. I used to work in the Foreign Office when Straw was there and some of us referred to him as Jack Shit - which is all we’ll ever get out of him. You can’t expect war criminals to voluntarily reveal evidence against them.

    Comment by Lee — 24 February, 2009 @ 9:07 pm

  4. Galloway’s statement on this:

    George Galloway this morning slammed Justice Minister Jack Straw for refusing to release vital Cabinet minutes under the Freedom of Information Act. “This makes a mockery of open government,” said Galloway. “But more than this, it’s an insult to the voters who were conned into this war and to the memories of the million people who died in it.

    “Straw claims it is “not in the public interest” to disclose the papers, which are not even an accurate account of who said what in Cabinet but a summary of the “sense” of the meeting. But this has nothing to do with the public interest. The public interest lies in knowing who was responsible for this disaster. It’s all about trying to save this government and the reputations of its leading members past and present.

    “Even worse, but hardly surprisingly, Cameron and the Tories are supporting the government on this. We should all remember the Tories backed the government up to the hilt in their complete subordination to the madmen in the White House.”

    Comment by Andy Newman — 26 February, 2009 @ 4:18 pm

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