Glad you agree with me that the charities went for the obvious choice given the options they were presented with by the government.
So you ask groups who benefit from a special privilege, and only groups that benefit from a special privilege, whether they'd like to retain that special privilege, and they say 'yes please, we'd love to continue to have the special privilege'. Hardly a ringing endorsement of meaningful consultation on the matter.
So no evidence of wilful obstruction on the part of the charities as you claimed.
The obstruction, as I described it, is the failure of the churches to apply for registration since 1996 when they were told they had to against a deadline. If you disagree that they have failed to make any meaningful attempt to apply for registration in the 25 years since 1996 then you will be able to provide me with evidence of the number of excepted church charities with incomes between £5k and £100k that have applied for registration, and presumably you'd be able to indicate it to be a large proportion. If you cannot provide that evidence then my assertion that the churches have failed to apply for registration in a reasonable manner given they've had 25 years to do so, then I think my view stands.
My view is also strengthened by the claims that there are still 30-40k excepted CofE charities that had not been registered by 2021, which suggests no meaningful attempt to comply with the 1996 requirement by the churches (given that there are only 16,000 CofE churches in total). It is also strengthened by the fact that the numbers of registered charities in England & Wales has barely changed in the period 1996 to now. Had there been a major effort by the churches to register tens of thousands of charities, we would almost certainly have seen a major uptick in registered charities numbers.
The churches have, frankly, done nothing meaningful to comply with the 1996 requirements and that, in my opinion is wilful obstruction, knowing that as a deadline loss they will yet again claim that there are too many to deal with (because they have failed to be applying for registration in a measured and systematic manner) and therefore they need another extension. This is the argument used in 1996, and again in 2001, and in 2007, and in 2012, and in 2014 and again in 2021. And I suspect we will have exactly the same argument in 2031 when they demand a further extension.
And all the while as far as I can see they have done nothing meaningful to get these charities registered. If you disagree with me, please provide that evidence.