Cambridge News

Home Office rapped over backlog figures

-

THE Home Office has been reprimande­d by the statistics watchdog after the Government was accused of lying about clearing part of the asylum backlog.

UK Statistics Authority chairman Sir Robert Chote said the “episode may affect public trust” as he outlined the findings of the body’s investigat­ion into complaints received about Rishi Sunak’s claim ministers had “cleared” the asylum backlog.

The watchdog previously said its regulatory arm, the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR), was looking into the announceme­nt made earlier this month as more than

4,500 “legacy” cases remained outstandin­g – despite ministers claiming they had succeeded.

At the time, opponents branded it a “barefaced lie”.

In a major pledge, the Prime Minister promised to clear the backlog of the 92,000 cases of people who had claimed asylum before July last year but were still awaiting an initial decision.

In a letter, published on Thursday, to Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael, who lodged the complaint with the watchdog, Sir Robert said: “The average member of the public is likely to interpret a claim to have ‘cleared a backlog’ – especially when presented without context on social media – as meaning that it has been eliminated entirely, so it is not surprising that the Government’s claim has been greeted with scepticism and that some people may feel misled when these ‘hard cases’ remain in the official estimates of the legacy backlog.

While he welcomed the Home Office publishing data on such an

“important policy area”, he noted the department did not disclose this at the same time as making the announceme­nt in a press notice to journalist­s, “which prevented them from being able to scrutinise the data when first reporting it”.

“This does not support our expectatio­ns around intelligen­t transparen­cy, and we have raised this with the Home Office,” he added.

 ?? UK PARLIAMENT/PA ?? Lib Dem MP Alistair Carmichael lodged the complaint
UK PARLIAMENT/PA Lib Dem MP Alistair Carmichael lodged the complaint

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom