Fleedom of Information (literally)
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amateur51
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI note that Tony Blair now regrets one of the very few progressive policies of New Labour - passing the Freedom of Information Act.
MPs criticise Tony Blair for "failing to co-operate" with their inquiry into Freedom of Information laws, which they say have been good for democracy.
Blair now believes it put too many restrictions on on the Civil Surface.
One of the characteristics of New Labour, a government stacked with lawyers, is that it passed legislation with inadequate time for parliamentary scrutiny, time and again. Whether this was an attempt to secure future work for their trade or because they were just plain arrogant as lawyer-politicians often are (no reflection on any of our lawyer members, of course ) I can't tell - maybe others can.
At the end of S_A's link
"But one constitutional expert said the wider benefits of FOI for the democratic process had been "over-sold" by its supporters.
"It has not achieved its secondary aims of improving the quality of government decision-making or increasing public understanding of those decisions," said Professor Robert Hazell, from University College London's Constitution Unit.
"Nor has it led to an increase in public trust, or public participation in government." "
What it has revealed is the contempt in which ministers and senior civil servants apparently hold the public, using as they have private e-mail addresses etc and in one case an unnetworked PC in an attempt to throw the FOI hounds off the scent. I think that what the public has seen arising out of FOI requests is exactly how decision-making takes place.
The Executive doesn't need to change what it does to regain our trust; it needs to change how it does it, i.e., honestly and openly and treating us as adults. The role of the Press & Media here is significant, as we can but hope that Lord Justice Leveson comes up with some proposals that will mesh with FOI legislation to make the activities of the Executive more accountable to Parliament (through members and through select committees) and to the the people.
I am very disturbed by Blair's stated ambitions to return to public life in UK. Don't hobble the Labour Party or the body politic with the spin of yesteryear, Tone. Stick to you Faith Foundation and keep chatting to God
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI am very disturbed by Blair's stated ambitions to return to public life in UK. Don't hobble the Labour Party or the body politic with the spin of yesteryear, Tone. Stick to you Faith Foundation and keep chatting to God
Probably be as successful as he has been as the Middle East peace envoy.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOlympic legacy? - y'see that the Gods again, innit
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Ariosto
IF there was any justic in this world Tony Bliar would be dangling on the end of a rope, mass murderer as he is.
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I'm not at all sure that "Freedom of Information" is an unmixed good. Perhaps I spent too much of my time working in government service, but I can see the advantages of a degree of privacy if not to say secrecy at various stages of the process of determining policy. Civil servants, advisers, politicians need to have an arena in which they can discuss all sorts of options - including the most outlandish - in a free, untrammelled and unspied-upon atmosphere - to work out what might be the most workable solution - which can then be subject to any kind of scrutiny you like.
If you make all meetings at which decisions are to be made 'open', then decision makers will self-censor; and then inevitably the real decisions will be made in the corridors, antechambers, and lavatories of power.
I may have been a Guardian reader - but the platonic ideal of "open government" is not one I see as a simple 'good idea'.
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
If you make all meetings at which decisions are to be made 'open', then decision makers will self-censor; and then inevitably the real decisions will be made in the corridors, antechambers, and lavatories of power.
And of course Dr Fox dispensed with notes takers and relied on his chum Mr Werrity
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostPerhaps I spent too much of my time working in government service, ...[ ] ..and then inevitably the real decisions will be made in the corridors, antechambers, and lavatories of power.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI'm not at all sure that "Freedom of Information" is an unmixed good. Perhaps I spent too much of my time working in government service, but I can see the advantages of a degree of privacy if not to say secrecy at various stages of the process of determining policy. Civil servants, advisers, politicians need to have an arena in which they can discuss all sorts of options - including the most outlandish - in a free, untrammelled and unspied-upon atmosphere - to work out what might be the most workable solution - which can then be subject to any kind of scrutiny you like.
If you make all meetings at which decisions are to be made 'open', then decision makers will self-censor; and then inevitably the real decisions will be made in the corridors, antechambers, and lavatories of power.
I may have been a Guardian reader - but the platonic ideal of "open government" is not one I see as a simple 'good idea'.
In the end there are some policy decisions that have to be taken urgently at some top level, for emergency's sake, but too often one has the impression that stuff remains hushed up to perpetuate cover ups. Leaks are the corollary of cover-ups - to coin an unfortunate phrase.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
Did you rise to the dizzy heights of having your own Marigolds and a brush, vints?
When there were discussions as to equal opportunities within the service, I regularly maintained that there wd not be any significant improvements towards equality until the Foreign Office introduced bisexual lavatories.
My card was already marked as someone lacking gravitas - these reiterated opinions of mine merely served to confirm that verdict...
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWith every passing pronouncement, Blair succeeds only in undermining the thing he prized most, his legacy.
One of the characteristics of New Labour, a government stacked with lawyers, is that it passed legislation with inadequate time for parliamentary scrutiny, time and again. Whether this was an attempt to secure future work for their trade or because they were just plain arrogant as lawyer-politicians often are (no reflection on any of our lawyer members, of course ) I can't tell - maybe others can.
At the end of S_A's link
"But one constitutional expert said the wider benefits of FOI for the democratic process had been "over-sold" by its supporters.
"It has not achieved its secondary aims of improving the quality of government decision-making or increasing public understanding of those decisions," said Professor Robert Hazell, from University College London's Constitution Unit.
"Nor has it led to an increase in public trust, or public participation in government." "
What it has revealed is the contempt in which ministers and senior civil servants apparently hold the public, using as they have private e-mail addresses etc and in one case an unnetworked PC in an attempt to throw the FOI hounds off the scent. I think that what the public has seen arising out of FOI requests is exactly how decision-making takes place.
The Executive doesn't need to change what it does to regain our trust; it needs to change how it does it, i.e., honestly and openly and treating us as adults. The role of the Press & Media here is significant, as we can but hope that Lord Justice Leveson comes up with some proposals that will mesh with FOI legislation to make the activities of the Executive more accountable to Parliament (through members and through select committees) and to the the people.
I am very disturbed by Blair's stated ambitions to return to public life in UK. Don't hobble the Labour Party or the body politic with the spin of yesteryear, Tone. Stick to you Faith Foundation and keep chatting to God
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... you may be surprised - or perhaps you may not be at all surprised - how many significant decisions were made in the lavatories...
When there were discussions as to equal opportunities within the service, I regularly maintained that there wd not be any significant improvements towards equality until the Foreign Office introduced bisexual lavatories.
My card was already marked as someone lacking gravitas - these reiterated opinions of mine merely served to confirm that verdict...
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