Future Britain Bill of Rights
The Observer home affairs editor Jamie Doward reports on the formation of “Future Britain” which he describes as the broadest coalition in history devoted to constitutional change. He says “Future Britain” is an unprecedented alliance, including the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties, Charter 88, Justice,
The coalition, Future Britain, will be formed in February and is to be co-ordinated by academics at the London School of Economics. It will conclude around the next general election, when its supporters believe the issue will become a key electoral battleground. Those behind the alliance want to foster a debate about what should be in the new bill and how it should be implemented. It says it is apolitical in an attempt to make its appeal as wide as possible.
Unfortunately Doward then goes of the rails a touch when he describes the present situation Human rights in the
In fact the HRA does not challenge Parliamentary supremacy, all it allows is for the courts to state if an act of Parliament contravenes the Human Rights Convention; it does not pass Parliamentary power to the courts. If the courts do find a contravention it is still up to Parliament to decide the issue, parliament could well take a different view and the courts would have no say in the matter.
What is so very eerily strange about this article is the compleate lack of any reference to the present bill of rights which underpins what was in effect the new
Betty Boothroyd the Speaker of the House of Commons issued the following statement:
“There has of course been no amendment to the Bill of Rights … the House is entitled to expect that the Bill of Rights will be fully respected by all those appearing before the courts”
(Hansard, 21 July 1993 column 352).
However in recent years politicians have ignored the existence of the bill of Rights when making legislation this has created several problems with that legislation because of a judgement made by Lord Justice Laws;
A further problem is that the Bill of Rights 1689 was not an ordinary act of Parliament it was an act of settlement which actually sets up the legality for the present state and give Parliament its power in the first place. It also clearly states that changes to it, were themselves illegal. So on one hand (if we take Laws ruling) the Bill of Rights has precedence over any later legislation which does not specifically state it is changing the Bill of Rights, on the other we have as situation where any act which does challenge the Bill of rights is illegal.
See Also The EU’s judicial land grab
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