The Grenfell Tower Inquiry's final report highlights accountability issues, revealing how unscrupulous manufacturers, reckless deregulation, and cost-cutting led to preventable deaths, emphasizing the need for immediate reforms.
The lengthy duration of inquiries often dilutes public anger and accountability, as those responsible may no longer be in power by the time findings are published.
Sam Freedman pointed out the cynical nature of prolonged inquiries, suggesting they might strategically reduce immediate political costs while delaying significant policy changes.
Freedman argues that while inquiries do incur some political costs, they're significantly lower than those linked with immediate actions that might engender backlash or accountability.
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