UK Transparency Watchdog Orders Charity Commission to Reconsider Releasing GWPF Investigation Files

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Series: Lord Lawson

Lord Lawson faces further embarrassment concerning his climate denial Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), as the UK transparency watchdog has ruled that the Charity Commission must reconsider releasing files from a 2014ย investigation.

Two years ago the Charity Commission conducted an investigation into the GWPF following complaints from the public that the charity was engaging in politics – this led to Lawson setting up the sister organisation: the Global Warming Policyย Forum.

DeSmog UK commissioned a freedom of information request to the Charity Commission to force the release of the investigation files, so that the public could better judge whether the former chancellor had used the GWPF for non-charitableย ends.

The Charity Commission originally refused the appeal on the grounds that it, along with a series of other requests, was vexatious โ€“ intended to cause disruption or annoyance. The Information Commissionerโ€™s Office (ICO) has now ruled against the Commission and demanded it consider releasing theย documents.ย 

This comes at the same time as ministers announced plans on January 7 to extend freedom of information laws to cover charities. Currently, charities are exempt from the information laws despite the fact that many receive tens of millions of pounds in grants funded by theย taxpayer.

While the GWPF is funded by private donations, if the law is expanded this could see the charity face heightened scrutiny over its activities with the public able to submit freedom of information requests to the charityย directly.

Murkyย Interactions

Bob Ward, policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics, was among those to complain about the GWPFโ€™sย activities

He told DeSmog UK: โ€œThere has been a lot of murkiness about the Charity Commissionโ€™s interactions with the GWPF in relation to its multiple breaches of charity rules by promoting inaccurate and misleadingย information.

โ€œThe foundation has continued to break charity rules even after it created a new lobbying arm, the Global Warming Policy Forum, to circumventย them.

โ€œIt is time for the Commission to come clean about its dealings with Lord Lawson and the other trustees of the foundation so that the public can have confidence that charity rules are beingย upheld.โ€

The ICO‘s decision comes less than a month after Greenpeace revealed significant flaws in the GWPFโ€™s peer review process as one of its academic advisors agreed to write a report extolling the benefits of carbon dioxide on behalf of a fictitious oilย company.

These revelations have since been incorporated into Charity Commissionโ€™s current investigation into the GWPF.

Charityย Status

Following complaints from members of the public and a thoroughgoing investigation ending in the summer of 2014, the Charity Commission forced the GWPF to split into separate charitable and campaigning arms. The freedom of information request was made shortly after by Request Initiative on behalf of DeSmog UK.


What did the ICOย decide?

  • The Charity Commission argued that the requests had โ€œlimited value and purposeโ€.ย DeSmog UKย explained that the request was made as part of an investigation into the activities of the GWPF in relation to climate change denial. The ICO does not agree with the Charity Commission that the request in this case has limited purpose orย value.
  • The Charity Commission tried to get out of releasing the GWPF investigation file on the basis that it was already overburdened by freedom of information requests about the charity. The Information Commissioner โ€œdoes not consider that the complainant can be said to have made a significant amount of requestsโ€ฆthis averages out at less than four requests perย year.โ€
  • The Charity Commission said that dealing with the requests placed a significant burden upon it, but it failed to elaborate or provide detail on the time and cost implications of completing this work. Based on this, the ICO was โ€œnot persuaded that responding to the request would have imposed a significant burden, even when considered in the context of the earlierย requests.โ€

As Request Initiative argued: โ€œThe Global Warming Policy Foundation has been described as โ€˜the UKโ€™s most prominent source of climate changeย denial.โ€™

โ€œTheir mission itself still states that its aims are to critique policy and that the GWPF has โ€˜opened the debate on climate policies among opinion formers and MPsโ€™.

โ€œWe also know that the GWPF has been one of the most complained about charities over the last fewย years.

โ€œThe Charity Commission after investigating the GWPF found that the charity had in fact โ€˜blurred fact and commentโ€™ and was failing as a charitable organisation in that the main purpose of the foundation was political, notย charitable.

โ€œThere is a huge public interest in both knowing how the Charity Commission itself functions in response to complaints against charities and also to understand how the GWPF may have influenced politicians and policy whilst benefiting from being aย charity.โ€

Newย Response

Despite this argument, in May 2015 the Charity Commission refused to release any documents on the grounds that the request wasย โ€œvexatiousโ€.

However, the ICO has now ruled โ€“ after a six-month decision period โ€“ that this refusal wasย incorrect.

Brendan Montague, editor of DeSmog UK, said: โ€œThe Charity Commission finds itself in a very difficultย position.

โ€œIt is stuck between the rock of Lawson and his expensive lawyers and the hard place of dealing with dogged campaigners acting in the public interest to ensure charities are not just PR fronts for vested interests. I donโ€™t envyย them.โ€

The Charity Commission now has 35 days to issue a new response to the original freedom of informationย request.

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Kyla is a freelance writer and editor with work appearing in the New York Times, National Geographic, HuffPost, Mother Jones, and Outside. She is also a member of the Society for Environmental Journalists.

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