UK courts subject coercive state action to close judicial scrutiny but pay comparatively little attention to the legality of state influence exercised through information, framing, and behavioural communication. Contemporary programmes such as the Research, Information and Communications Unit (RICU) operate lawfully to counter extremist narratives and maintain pre-prepared contingency communication architectures capable of rapid deployment following major incidents. The constitutional question is not whether such programmes should exist, but whether existing public law provides courts with sufficient evidence to determine whether their operation remains within legal limits when the methods of influence are not publicly disclosed.
This article argues that the existing proportionality framework established in Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No 2) already provides the necessary analytical structure, but that its effective application is frustrated by what this article terms a structural evidential vacuum. Section 26 of the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015 imposes broad statutory duties while leaving the behavioural and informational mechanisms through which those duties are operationalised largely unspecified. Where those methods remain unpublished, courts face significant practical difficulties in assessing rational connection, necessity, and fair balance under proportionality review.
Drawing upon Silver v United Kingdom, Halford v United Kingdom, R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex p Simms, R (Moseley) v Haringey LBC, Animal Defenders International v United Kingdom, Magyar Helsinki Bizottság v Hungary, and S and Marper v United Kingdom, the article argues that existing doctrine is best understood as supporting a reviewable duty requiring ministers to publish the general purposes and operational methodologies of state influence programmes. It further develops a Judicial Application Protocol and a Deployment Inference Framework (DIF) to demonstrate how existing principles of proportionality, procedural fairness, and the "quality of law" requirement under Articles 8 and 10 ECHR can be applied to informational state power without requiring courts to evaluate political content. The proposed transparency duty is presented not as a novel constitutional power, but as a doctrinal synthesis of established public law principles adapted to contemporary forms of governmental influence.
Publication Date: 2026-06-18