The govt document edam refers to is at www.dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/@dh/@en/@ps/@sta/@perf/documents/digital asset/dh_109887.pdf
It says that the dept of health will be "working to extend our partnership with Mumsnet to allow its users to supply feedback on the maternity care they have received."
As edam says, this could be a good thing. But the difficulty is in the phrase 'partnership with Mumsnet'. That is only accurate if Mumsnet is taken to mean the organisation itself, not the usership of the forum. And in general I think that MN is failing to make that distinction clear. That didn't matter in the past because all there was, really, was a big barn and lots of women shouting in it. But now there is the big barn plus a range of initiatives and potential partnerships arranged by MNHQ.
There is nothing sinister or bad about that, but although these initiatives take some guidance from threads, they can't be presented as an organic development from forum conversations. And that is how they are currently being presented. E.g. on the About page: "Mumsnet is a community and is not a lobby group. We ... have no political axe to grind. That said our members are very active when it comes to something they feel strongly about."
Why don't we have a specific Campaigns and Partnerships Topic, with a clear top-of-page statement of MN's legitimate business objectives, and with site tools to allow more structured consultation on campaigning. Anyone who chose to participate there would be aware of the uses to which their contributions would be put, and they would be consulted more effectively than they can be in the odd unstructured thread. There could be polls, panels, sign-ups for campaigns and partnership e-alerts, and whatever else. Then when MN purported to be speaking for the usership, it would only be gaining validation from users who were interested and had been properly informed and consulted.
It might take a bit of trouble to set up, but the campaigning theme and the political webchats have been very popular. It would be a shame to spoil the ship for a ha'peth of tar.