Hillsborough Law Bill
Why linked: gov.uk landing page describing the Public Office (Accountability) Bill as the Hillsborough Law.
The government has introduced the Public Office (Accountability) Bill, known as the Hillsborough Law, into Parliament.
The Public Office (Accountability) Bill — colloquially the 'Hillsborough Law' — imposes a statutory duty of candour, transparency and frankness on public authorities and officials in their dealings with inquiries, inquests and investigations, creates new criminal offences for misleading the public and for seriously improper acts by office-holders (replacing the abolished common-law offence of misconduct in public office), and establishes parity-of-arms measures including non-means-tested legal aid for bereaved families at inquests involving public authorities.
This is the Government's headline accountability reform fulfilling a Labour manifesto commitment and responding to decades of campaigning by the Hillsborough families and Bishop James Jones's 2017 report; it will fundamentally alter how public bodies (police, NHS, intelligence services, departments, local authorities, and contractors with health-and-safety responsibilities) interact with inquiries and bereaved families, with personal criminal liability for non-compliance.
The Bill completed Public Bill Committee on 4 December 2025 and is in Commons Report stage during 2026; a carry-over motion was agreed on 27 April 2026 to allow proceedings to continue into the next Session, and the Senedd approved a Legislative Consent Motion on 26 March 2026.
Current operative text: Part 2 Ch.1 imposes the duty of candour and assistance with criminal liability (clause 5); Ch.3 creates the offence of misleading the public (clause 11); Part 3 replaces misconduct in public office with statutory offences (clauses 12-13); Part 4 / Schedule 6 deals with parity at inquiries and inquests including non-means-tested legal aid.
Government launch communications on introduction.
Government's consolidated landing page for the Bill.
Clause-by-clause explanation of the duty, the offences, the intelligence-services exception, and the parity-of-arms regime.
Government framing document setting out the duty's scope, sanctions and links to the Hillsborough Charter.
Justifies the regulation-making powers in the Bill, including the power to extend the duty to further investigations.
MoJ ECHR memorandum on the Bill, supplementing the original ECHR memorandum laid at introduction.
Latest independent procedural briefing on the Bill's Commons passage.
Substantive Commons Library briefing analysing the Bill on introduction.
Independent analysis of clause 11 in anticipation of Lords scrutiny.
Lords Library backgrounder framing the Bill for peers.
Pre-legislative JCHR scrutiny calling for a broad duty of candour and enhanced legal support for families.
Quantitative IA for the duty of candour package.
IA covering legal-aid parity and representation reforms for bereaved families.
IA for clauses 12-13 and the abolition of the common-law offence.
Joint submission from the campaign coalition and leading inquest charities arguing the Bill should match their drafted version.
Original text on First Reading; supersedes the campaign-drafted Public Authority (Accountability) Ten Minute Rule Bill of 2 July 2025.
Includes the Hillsborough Charter and prior commitment to a policing duty of candour — the policy ancestry for this Bill.
Background SI consolidating four Kent coroner areas into 'Kent and Medway' — relevant to operational coroner system that the Bill amends but not itself part of the Hillsborough Law package.
NI workstream proceeding in parallel; the Bill's NI extent is limited and devolved implementation matters.
Comparator regime for the new UK-wide duty in inquiries/investigations; Scottish Ministers consent provisions in clause 21 / Sch 1 Part 5 engage with this baseline.
we remain fully committed to bringing legislation forward at pace, which will include a legal duty of candour for public servants and criminal sanctions for those who refuse to comply
Why linked: The Government's 22 April 2025 Lords answer expressly tied the Bill to the manifesto commitment; the Bill is the legislative vehicle delivering that commitment.
the Prime Minister's promise to introduce the Hillsborough Law to Parliament before the 36th anniversary of the disaster on 15 April 2025
Why linked: EDM 64038 records that this commitment was missed — the Bill was not introduced until 16 September 2025 — and the campaign coalition has used that delay as leverage.
introducing legislation for an organisational duty of candour for policing - part of the code of practice for ethical policing laid in Parliament on 6 December 2023
Why linked: The 2023 Conservative Government response to Bishop James Jones's report (the immediate predecessor commitment) introduced a policing-only duty of candour by Code of Practice rather than a cross-public-sector statutory duty — the gap the current Bill is intended to fill.
Why linked: gov.uk landing page describing the Public Office (Accountability) Bill as the Hillsborough Law.
The government has introduced the Public Office (Accountability) Bill, known as the Hillsborough Law, into Parliament.
Why linked: Official government factsheet explaining the duty of candour provisions — key policy communication document.
The Government is clear that what happened following the Hillsborough disaster must never happen again. This Bill represents a powerful new package of measures to address these failings.
Why linked: Filled the "Government response to Hillsborough families' decades of campaigning" gap via web research
Response to Bishop James Jones' independent report on the families' experiences following the Hillsborough disaster.
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The Public Office (Accountability) Bill — the 'Hillsborough Law' — is the Government's flagship state-accountability reform: a statutory duty of candour and assistance on public authorities and officials backed by personal criminal liability (clauses 2, 5), a new offence of misleading the public modelled on the post-Hillsborough cover-up (clause 11) 1, the abolition of the common-law offence of misconduct in public office and its replacement by two statutory offences (clauses 12-13, 16), and parity-of-arms measures including non-means-tested inquest legal aid for bereaved families (Schedule 6) 2. The Bill completed Public Bill Committee on 4 December 2025 and was reprinted as Bill 341 2; on 27 April 2026 the Commons agreed a carry-over motion preserving proceedings into the next Session 3, and the Senedd consented on 26 March 2026 4. The Ministry of Justice (David Lammy as sponsor; Alex Davies-Jones as working minister) leads, with Cabinet Office co-sponsorship of the Delegated Powers Memorandum 5.
The Bill sits at Commons Report stage entering 2026-Q3, with amendment papers tabled at least weekly from January 2026 onwards 12 and a carry-over motion (Davies-Jones, 27 April 2026) ensuring it survives prorogation 3. The current operative text is Bill 341 as amended in Public Bill Committee on 4 December 2025 4, which substantially preserves the as-introduced architecture (Bill 306 5) but reflects the PBC's five sittings of oral and clause-by-clause scrutiny 678910. Devolved consent is partly in hand: Senedd Cymru approved the Legislative Consent Motion on 26 March 2026 11; Scottish and Northern Irish implementation runs in parallel under separate workstreams tied to the Infected Blood Inquiry response <a href="/document/48898/" class="ws-cite" title="Scottish Government
The organisational duty of candour provisions of the Health (Tobacco, Nicotine etc. and Care) (Scot">1213. Government framing — set out in the MoJ Factsheet 14 and the 15 September 2025 launch press notice 15 — is that the Bill represents a 'powerful new package' to ensure 'what happened following the Hillsborough disaster must never happen again'. The campaign coalition (Hillsborough Law Now, INQUEST, JUSTICE), through their joint PBC submission POAB07 16 and continuous ministerial engagement led by Pete Weatherby KC 17, regards the Government text as the floor rather than the ceiling.
Five developments in the last six months matter for analysts. First, the Bill emerged from Public Bill Committee on 4 December 2025 as Bill 341 1, after PBC took oral evidence from the Hillsborough families, the Law Commission and INQUEST on 27 November 2025 23 and ran clause-by-clause on 2 and 4 December 2025 45. Second, on 19 January 2026 Minister Alex Davies-Jones made a Commons next-steps statement 6 confirming the Government's revised timetable, and Report-stage amendments have been tabled continuously since 78. Third, the Senedd granted Legislative Consent on 26 March 2026 9 and Hillsborough Law Bill became the consolidated Government policy hub on gov.uk on 16 March 2026 10. Fourth, the intelligence-services carve-out crystallised as the principal contested area through Harriet Cross's 3 February 2026 oral question on impact on the intelligence services 11. Fifth, on 27 April 2026 the Commons agreed a carry-over motion 12, formally signalling that Royal Assent will not be reached in the current Session — a meaningful delivery slippage given the Prime Minister's earlier 15 April 2025 introduction-pledge that EDM 64038 records as already missed 13.
Three structural battles will dominate the next year. The intelligence-services carve-out — clause 6 with the OSA 1989 s.1(9) lock and the narrowed compliance directions in Schedule 1 — has crystallised as the Opposition's principal scrutiny vector, with Harriet Cross's 3 February 2026 oral question 1 foreshadowing Lords amendments. The Lords lineup is unusually well-equipped on this point: Baroness Manningham-Buller (former DG Security Service) and Baroness O'Loan (former NI Police Ombudsman) both spoke in the 22 April 2025 short debate 2, and Lord Alton has led successive Lords interventions including the 13 November 2025 short debate 3. The parity-of-arms package (Schedule 6 Part 4 non-means-tested legal aid) is the campaign coalition's redline — Hillsborough Law Now, INQUEST and JUSTICE's joint POAB07 submission 4 makes clear they expect the legal-aid parity to be widened, not narrowed. The scope of clause 11 (misleading the public) is the third — the Lords Library has already prepared a dedicated briefing on this clause 5 and Hacked Off's POAB15 submission 6 focuses on the recognised-news-publisher carve-out. Beyond the chamber: watch the NHS manager duty-of-candour workstream 78, whose interaction with the Bill's organisational duty is still unresolved; the Northern Ireland Executive's promised organisational duty 9; and DPP consent practice for the new clause 12-13 offences once they bite. The carry-over 10 means Royal Assent and commencement under clause 25 will trail into the next Session.
The Bill's principal delivery risks all relate to scope. The clause 6 intelligence-services carve-out is the contested seam between accountability and operational security 1; the Lords lineup raises the realistic prospect of amendments narrowing it further or, alternatively, widening the OSA 1989 s.1(9) shield. The campaign-Government gap on the strength of the duty remains live — Hillsborough Law Now's POAB07 2 and EDM 64038 3 frame the Government text as a watered-down version of the campaign-drafted Bill, and the carry-over 4 sharpens this contest. Inferred from corpus gap: the JCHR has not, on this retrieved corpus, published a fresh report on the as-introduced Bill — only the May 2024 Third Report on the pre-legislative proposal 5 and the March 2025 Government response 6 — so the most authoritative HRA/ECHR scrutiny on the actual Bill remains a notable hole, partly filled by the MoJ's supplementary ECHR memorandum 7. The interaction between the organisational duty and the NHS-manager professional duty is unresolved on the corpus 89. Finally, devolved commencement under Sch 1 Parts 5-6 and clause 25 introduces sequencing risk: Scottish and NI workstreams could lag the Royal Assent date materially.
The Bill operates as a four-layer accountability stack mounted on top of the existing inquiries, inquests and criminal-law framework.
The first layer is the substantive duty (Part 2 Chapter 1). Clause 2 imposes a positive, ongoing duty on public authorities and officials to be candid, transparent and frank in their dealings with inquiries, inquests and other listed investigations, broken down into duties to notify, to provide information (including drawing attention to significant material), to correct errors, to file a position statement and to comply with specific directions. Clause 4 extends the duty to non-public bodies that hold a 'relevant public responsibility' — chiefly contractors carrying out activities under a direct contract with a public authority that have a significant impact on the public, or anyone with a statutory health-and-safety responsibility for an incident. The duty is enforced procedurally through 'compliance directions' issued by inquiry chairs and coroners (Schedule 1 Parts 1-4, including the new s.23A of the Inquiries Act 2005 and an analogue paragraph in Schedule 5 to the Coroners and Justice Act 2009).
The second layer is criminal liability for breach. Clause 5 makes deliberate or reckless non-compliance an either-way offence with a maximum of two years on indictment. Clause 11 adds the standalone offence of misleading the public — designed, as the Lords Library briefing notes, 'to capture the most serious incidents such as the behaviour seen after Hillsborough' — requiring significant or repeated dishonesty on matters of significant public concern, causing or risking harm and a significant departure from the proper exercise of public functions.
The third layer rewrites the law of misconduct in public office. Clause 16 abolishes the common-law offence and clauses 12-13 replace it with statutory offences: misuse of public office for benefit or detriment (10-year maximum) and breach of a duty to prevent death or grievous bodily harm (14-year maximum). Both require DPP consent. The territorial extent of this layer is England and Wales only.
The fourth layer is parity of arms (Part 4 / Schedule 6). It overlays the existing Inquiries Act 2005 and Coroners and Justice Act 2009 with overriding-objective duties, requires proportionality in public authority legal representation, and most concretely provides non-means-tested legal aid to bereaved families at inquests where a public authority is an interested person.
The regime is engineered to leave four pre-existing structures intact: the OSA 1989 / Intelligence Services Act 1994 / Investigatory Powers Act 2016 framework for the security and intelligence services (clause 6 plus narrowed compliance directions in Schedule 1); the devolved duties of candour in Scotland (organisational duty under the Health (Tobacco, Nicotine etc. and Care) (Scotland) Act 2016) and proposed in Northern Ireland; the journalism carve-out for recognised news publishers within Part 3 of the Online Safety Act 2023 (clause 11(4)(b)); and the existing whistleblowing regime under the Employment Rights Act 1996 (preserved through clause 9(5)(b) and (11)).
The composite statutory obligation in clause 2(1)-(5): to act with candour, transparency and frankness, to notify the inquiry, to provide and correct information, to file a position statement and to comply with any direction.
A written direction by an inquiry chair or senior coroner under the new s.23A of the Inquiries Act 2005 (and parallel provisions for non-statutory, local authority, and coroner-led investigations) requiring a specific public authority, official or holder of a relevant public responsibility to comply with the duty.
For clause 11 purposes, an act involving significant or repeated dishonesty in respect of matters of significant public concern, that caused or had the potential to cause harm, and that departed significantly from what is expected in the proper exercise of public functions, as a reasonable person would judge.
Under clause 4, holding a health and safety responsibility in connection with an incident, or carrying out activities under a direct contract with a public authority that have a significant impact on the public.
The package in Part 4 / Schedule 6 requiring proportionate public authority legal representation, an overriding-objective duty, and non-means-tested legal aid for bereaved families at inquests where a public authority is an interested person.
Commons Report stage and Third Reading on the as-amended Bill 341, given the 27 April 2026 carry-over motion preserves proceedings into the new Session
Lords Second Reading and committee stage — likely focal points are clause 6 / Sch 1 intelligence carve-outs and the parity-of-arms package, on which Lords Library has prepared briefings
Continued meetings between MoJ and Hillsborough Law Now / Pete Weatherby KC tracking concessions on the strength of the duty
Royal Assent following Lords stages and any ping-pong; the Bill will then become the Public Office (Accountability) Act 2025 per clause 26
Commencement regulations under clause 25 bringing Parts 2-4 into force on appointed days, with separate commencement powers for Scotland (Sch 1 Part 5) and the Department of Justice in NI (Sch 1 Part 6)
Northern Ireland Executive bringing forward its own organisational duty of candour as previously committed
DHSC response on whether a professional duty of candour will apply to NHS managers, alongside the broader manager regulation consultation
Committed Government delivery of the Bill as central to his post-Hillsborough commitment — at Second Reading framed Hillsborough as 'an injustice' and 'a cover-up by the institutions that are supposed to protect and serve' and presented the Bill as a legacy for the 97.Nov 2025Sep 2025
Day-to-day ministerial owner of the Bill in the Commons; defended the Bill's design including the intelligence-services carve-out and maintained continuous engagement with the Hillsborough Law Now campaign while pressing the carry-over to ensure passage despite delay.Jan 2026Apr 2026Mar 2026
Tension with Hillsborough Law Now (campaign coalition)
Named Bill sponsor as Lord Chancellor; institutional position is delivery of the Labour 2024 manifesto commitment.Sep 2025
Lords MoJ minister; in 22 April 2025 and 24 July 2025 Lords answers stated the Government 'remain fully committed' to delivering a Hillsborough Law including a legal duty of candour and criminal sanctions for non-compliance — but emphasised the need to 'get this landmark legislation right' over speed.Apr 2025Jul 2025
Tension with Hillsborough Law Now (campaign coalition), Ian Byrne
Joint POAB07 evidence with INQUEST and JUSTICE argues the Government Bill is materially weaker than the campaign-drafted Public Authority (Accountability) Bill on scope of the duty and criminal sanctions; has secured continuous engagement with Ministers but treats the as-introduced text as a floor, not a ceiling.Nov 2025Jul 2025Nov 2025
Tension with Alex Davies-Jones, Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede
Co-signatory of POAB07; written evidence to the JCHR (April 2024) argued Hillsborough Law should establish a duty of candour as 'a codified requirement on public servants, public authorities and corporations to act in the public interest and proactively and truthfully assist investigations' — broader than the Government's drafting.Apr 2024Nov 2025
Co-signed POAB07 endorsing the Hillsborough Law Now and INQUEST stronger-duty position.Nov 2025
Architect of the campaign-drafted alternative Bill; meeting cadence with MoJ since January 2026 shows substantive engagement, with the campaign-side aim of strengthening clauses on the scope of the duty and on parity of arms.Mar 2026Jul 2025
May 2024 Third Report called for a broad duty of candour and enhanced legal support for families and warned that decades-long fights for justice would remain a risk without it; the Government's March 2025 response restated commitment to a Hillsborough Law including a duty of candour.May 2024May 2024Mar 2025
Most active parliamentary campaigner for the Bill: reintroduced the campaign Public Authority (Accountability) Ten Minute Rule Bill on 2 July 2025 stating he was 'parliamentary lead for the Hillsborough Law Now campaign'; pressed Ministers via repeated oral questions; sits on the PBC. Public stance is that the Government version must match the campaign-drafted text.Jul 2025Jul 2025Feb 2026Mar 2026
Tension with Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede
Led the 13 November 2025 Lords short debate and pressed for progress in earlier oral questions; in the Hansard summary noted 'Parliament will want to be convinced that the Hillsborough law will tip the balance away from the behemoth against whom the small battalions are pitted'.Nov 2025Nov 2025Jul 2025
Conservative scrutiny on the intelligence-services impact, signalling the Opposition's principal area of probing on clause 6 and the Schedule 1 carve-outs.Feb 2026
Crossbench peer and former DG of the Security Service; intervention in the 22 April 2025 Lords oral question signals an intelligence-services-protective stance likely to shape Lords amendments on clause 6.Apr 2025
Crossbench peer (former NI Police Ombudsman) intervening from a perspective of state-implicating investigations — supportive of a strong duty of candour.Apr 2025
Written evidence POAB15 focused on the clause 11 misleading-the-public offence and the journalism carve-out — the campaign group's traditional concern.Nov 2025
POAB14 frames the new offences as a needed complement to the anti-corruption enforcement architecture.Nov 2025
Public-sector law firm whose POAB20 submission focuses on operationalising the duty within public authority legal departments and supplying compliance machinery.Dec 2025
Lead department maintaining that the Bill 'will fundamentally alter the relationship between those who govern and the people they serve' through a 'new professional and legal Duty of Candour' — language from the 19 March 2026 Solicitor General reply consistent across MoJ communications.Mar 2026Sep 2025Sep 2025