Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
WhatsApp outage raises fears over Tory reliance on messaging service
[Mika Baumeister / Creative Commons]

THE Tory government’s “reliance” on WhatsApp to carry out official business came under fresh criticism today after the app was hit by a two-hour service outage. 

People trying to send and receive messages began reporting issues just before 8am on Tuesday. However, by around 10am the service had returned for many users. 

Meta, which owns the app, said it had fixed the issue but did not explain the cause of the problem. 

The app, which has around two billion users globally, is popular among MPs, who were left without their go-to communication tool on the day new PM Rishi Sunak came to power.

The dominance of the app in Westminster decision-making, especially during the pandemic, has proved controversial. 

Last year, the government was taken to court by campaign group the Citizens over the use of self-destructive messages, with campaigners and journalists arguing that the app was being used to avoid scrutiny of decision-making processes.

This is because deleted messages cannot be retrieved through freedom of information requests, nor stored in the national archives at a later date. 

Investigative reporter Iain Overton, among those who brought last year’s legal challenge, said Wednesday’s service outage also demonstrates how the use of private Whatsapp messages could pose a risk to national security. 

“If His Majesty’s government is so reliant on a foreign-owned messaging system that is prone to outages, how can anyone be assured that such a platform will survive a true catastrophe, such as a war or a concerted cyber-attack?” he asked. 

“It’s not only bad for transparency, it’s also deeply worrying for the ability of government to function in a disaster.”

The High Court ruled that MPs use of WhatsApp did not break the law.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
People take part in a Million Women Rise march outside Chari
Britain / 4 March 2023
4 March 2023
Million Women Rise call out state failures to tackle misogyny and racism in society
Similar stories
MORE QUESTIONS THAN ANSWERS: AI Truth Machine / LIT Law Lab,
Features / 12 April 2025
12 April 2025
ANSELM ELDERGILL asks whether artificial intelligence may decide legal cases in the future, in place of human judges, and how AI could reshape the legal landscape
Britain / 16 February 2025
16 February 2025
EXCESSIVE POWER: Prime Minister Boris Johnson during a meeti
Book Review / 2 October 2024
2 October 2024
JOHN GREEN welcomes a significant contribution to the discussion of the urgent need to reform Britain’s failed governmental system
Britain / 4 July 2024
4 July 2024