Elected politicians and candidates in Wales who deliberately lie could face serious consequences, including being removed from office, under proposals aimed at restoring trust in politics.

The Senedd’s (Welsh parliament) standards of conduct committee has recommended legally defining political deception, and strengthening existing rules to explicitly ban misleading statements. Proposed potential penalties range from a formal retraction to suspension or, in extreme cases, recall by voters.

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These efforts see Wales become the first UK nation to attempt to tackle the problem of dwindling trust in politics by modern day legislative force.

Those championing the changes refer to how the deliberate rise in campaigns of misinformation, by those of all political persuasions, have in some instances led to electoral victories overseas.

The need to act is also reflected in the public’s perception. Surveys have consistently found that trust in politicians to tell the truth has declined. A survey in 2023 placed politicians as the least trusted profession in the UK. Just 9% of the public said they trusted elected officials to tell the truth.

More recently, findings from the British social attitudes report in 2024 revealed that the public is as critical now of how the UK is governed as it has ever been. A record high of 45% of respondents said they now “almost never” trust governments of any party to place the needs of the nation above the interests of their own political party.

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While, research had found that more than two-thirds of Welsh voters supported a law criminalising political lying, judicial adjudication for serving Senedd members has been ruled out. The report [opens pdf] also details concerns from the legal professions that existing resource pressures on the courts would have lead to long disputes, rather than the swift resolutions.

But in reality, we are talking about strengthening safeguards for maintaining standards in public offices. In particular addressing deliberate mistruths by politicians to secure deceitful advantages during an election.

In that sense, the new legislation is essentially bringing the political profession in line with others such as lawyers, doctors, journalistic and financial institutions, by having clearer repercussions when they lie and fail to maintain professional standards.

Given the need for something to change in order to restore trust, and the extensive powers that politicians have to affect the lives of citizens, it is clear why Wales is trying a different approach towards restoring trust.

  • @Eheran
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    1514 hours ago

    Now all you need to do is prove that it was deliberate. Good luck with that. “Oh I forgot XYZ”

    • @[email protected]
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      1914 hours ago

      Then they have to formally retract their statement. Do it enough times and the pattern becomes clear.

      • @qarbone
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        1013 hours ago

        Yeah, force them to fund with their own money a marketing campaign with specified outreach or certain length to specified media (TV, internet, print, etc) for a specified amount of time that lists what they said and what they were wrong about.

        • @[email protected]
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          513 hours ago

          Even just maintaining an “I was wrong” section on a website with an exhaustive list. And then they must print it out at election time and distribute to all voters.

          Unfortunately, they real issue is that “I dont recall” will become the default response to all questions…

          • NoneOfUrBusiness
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            913 hours ago

            Unfortunately, they real issue is that “I dont recall” will become the default response to all questions…

            “I don’t recall” doesn’t get voters, though, so they’ll need to figure something out.

    • oce 🐆
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      13 hours ago

      I don’t know how it works for public lies, but sometimes the action can be juged regardless of the intention. A lie based on “honest mistake” but with bad consequences could be condemnable negligence or something like this.

    • @itsathursday
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      214 hours ago

      Fool me once shame on me, fool me twice…