The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice (Dominic
Raab) Today, I am launching our consultation on proposals to
overhaul the Human Rights Act and replace it with a Bill of Rights.
I thank Sir Peter Gross and the panel he chaired for conducting the
independent Human Rights Act review—the report of which is
published today—which has influenced and informed our thinking in
this regard. The Government’s proposals for a Bill of Rights will
strengthen this...Request free trial
The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice ()
Today, I am launching our consultation on proposals to overhaul
the Human Rights Act and replace it with a Bill of Rights. I
thank Sir Peter Gross and the panel he chaired for conducting the
independent Human Rights Act review—the report of which is
published today—which has influenced and informed our thinking in
this regard.
The Government’s proposals for a Bill of Rights will strengthen
this country’s proud tradition of freedom, curtail abuses of the
human rights system and reinforce the democratic prerogatives of
elected Members in this House over the legislative process in
respect of the expansion of human rights. Above all, we will
restore some common sense to the system.
At the outset, let me reassure the House—this issue was raised
earlier in oral questions—that the UK will remain a party to the
European convention on human rights. As we have shown with the
introduction of our Magnitsky regime for human rights abuses, we
will continue to lead internationally in the championing of
freedom around the world.
Our objective in overhauling our human rights legislation will be
to change, reform and revise the domestic interpretation and
application of the convention by the UK courts. Following the
reforms to the convention system reflected in the 2012 Brighton
declaration, we will assert the margin of appreciation, as
appropriate, in the UK’s dialogue with the Strasbourg Court.
As I said, we have a long, proud and diverse history of freedoms
in this country that stretches back to Magna Carta through the
1689 Claim of Right Act and Bill of Rights, the Slave Trade Act
1807 and the Representation of the People Act 1918. It is a
tradition steeped in great thinkers such as John Locke, John
Stuart Mill and Isaiah Berlin, and in the advocacy of great
champions of freedom and human rights from Emmeline Pankhurst
through to Violet Van der Elst.
As we take the next step in our country’s reforms, and as we look
to the future, we can and, I believe, should confidently build on
those traditions and values.
Our proposals will recognise the right to trial by jury, as it
applies variably across the different nations of the United
Kingdom in important ways, as part of the common law tradition of
human rights. We also have the opportunity to reinforce the
weight we attach to freedom of speech, a quintessentially British
right—the freedom that grants all the others—that we have seen
eroded of late by a combination of case law that has introduced
continental-style privacy rules and the incremental narrowing of
the scope for respectful but rambunctious debate in politically
sensitive areas, which is something we in this House should
resist both on principle and in the interest of effective
decision making that comes only from a full airing of contrary
views. Freedom of speech sometimes means the freedom to say
things that others may not wish to hear.
While retaining the European convention on human rights, we will
prevent the misuse and distortion of those rights that we have
seen from time to time through elastic and innovative expansions
that go well beyond anything the architects of the convention had
in mind during the post-war settlement. Some of this has arisen
from Strasbourg case law, and some has arisen from UK case law,
and I make it very clear at the outset that my critique is
levelled at the Human Rights Act and how it operates; it is not
levelled at the UK judiciary, who have quite properly sought to
implement legislation passed by this House.
I will give three examples of the problems we have encountered
and a sense of how we can address them. Under our proposals, we
will be able to prevent serious criminals from relying on article
8, the right to family life, to frustrate their deportation from
this country. One example—the case law is littered with them—is
the case of the convicted drug dealer who was also convicted of
battery against his partner. He paid no child maintenance but,
none the less, he claimed the right to family life to trump the
public interest in his removal.
To give a sense of scale, because it is easy to cite one case or
another and people will say it is not representative of the
problem, article 8 claims now make up around 70% of all
successful human rights challenges by foreign national offenders
against deportation orders. Our proposals will enable us to
legislate to curtail that abuse of the system, and hon. Members
will have to decide whether they are for or against that
proposition.
Secondly, under our proposed reforms we will be better able to
protect the public in other ways by addressing our
well-intentioned but, frankly, distorting jurisprudence. I cite
the example of the Osman case, which has skewed the operational
priorities of some of our major police forces. The ruling has
required police forces to divert officers, resources and focus to
protect criminal gangs from the threats they make to each other,
which are of course time, effort and resources that could
otherwise be prioritised towards protecting law-abiding members
of our society.
Thirdly, these changes will help to deliver root-and-branch
reform of parole proceedings, which hon. Members on both sides of
the House raised with me in the aftermath of recent cases,
including the case of Colin Pitchfork.
In these areas and others, our reforms will enable Parliament to
act and, where necessary, assert the margin of appreciation with
respect to Strasbourg while remaining party to the convention. We
will achieve these objectives through carefully targeted reform
under our Bill of Rights, which will revise and replace the
framework provided under the Human Rights Act.
Our independent judiciary and parliamentary sovereignty are the
cornerstones and the foundations of our democracy and, indeed,
our success as a country. With that in mind, we will sharpen the
separation of powers and reform the duty in section 2 of the
Human Rights Act that requires UK courts to take account of
Strasbourg case law, but has at various times been interpreted as
a duty to match the Strasbourg jurisprudence, which is neither
necessary nor desirable—[Interruption.] I see hon. Members
shaking their heads, and I point them to the Ullah case in
particular, but of course the case law has ebbed and flowed. That
ebb and flow has created uncertainty, so it is right that we
provide greater legal certainty by making clear the primacy of
the UK’s own case law and primary legislation and the role of the
UK Supreme Court, not Strasbourg, as the ultimate judicial
arbiter when it comes to interpreting the European convention on
human rights in this country. We will make it crystal clear that
the UK courts are under no duty to follow Strasbourg case law,
which itself does not operate a doctrine of precedent.
Next, we will replace section 3 of the Human Rights Act so that
our courts are confined to judicial interpretation and are no
longer—effectively, in practice—licensed by the Act to amend or
dilute the will of Parliament expressed through statute. One of
the consequences of the elastic extension of rights has been the
incremental expansion of so-called positive obligations on public
authorities by the courts, which are something that has no basis
in the convention, as even a cursory reading of the travaux
préparatoires to the convention—the negotiating history—will
demonstrate. That was the case in the Osman ruling, which I
referred to; it has had the much broader effect of skewing public
service priorities and allocation of precious public resources.
Our approach will provide a check on what is quite properly a
legislative function that ought to be left to elected lawmakers
in Parliament.
Finally in this regard, as we reinforce a clearer demarcation of
the separation of powers, we will consult on plans for a
democratic shield. This will help to promote meaningful dialogue
with Strasbourg—which we achieved in cases such as prisoner
voting, which hon. Members on both sides of the House will
remember—by asserting the margin of appreciation where it is
appropriate. It will recognise the proper role of Parliament in
responding to adverse rulings from Strasbourg, but let me be
crystal clear: hon. Members in this House must have the last word
on the laws of this land.
Next, one of the consistent complaints that we hear from the
public is that human rights can be subject to abuse. Our
proposals will address this in a number of ways. We will
introduce a permission stage, similar to that which exists in
continental jurisdictions, including in the German Constitutional
Court and indeed the European Court of Human Rights itself. This
will bring an appropriate check by requiring claimants to
demonstrate that they have suffered a significant disadvantage,
which will help to prevent spurious or unmeritorious claims.
We can also do more to recognise that rights come with
responsibilities, so we will reform the approach to remedies so
that our courts give greater consideration to the behaviour of
the claimant and the wider public interest when considering the
compensation that may be paid out. That will give judges greater
discretion to strike the right balance between claimants’ rights,
their responsibilities and indeed the rights of others in our
society when considering human rights cases. It is not right that
those who have broken the law can then reach out and claim human
rights, to claim large chunks of compensation at the taxpayer’s
and the wider public’s expense.
Our proposals also recognise the diverse legal traditions across
the United Kingdom, as well as the common heritage that binds us
together. That is the linchpin of our success as a Union. We will
consult with each of the devolved Administrations and across the
UK to get that balance right. We want to guarantee protections
across the Union in accordance with a common framework reflecting
our common traditions, while respecting devolved competences.
In this country, we have a long and proud tradition of liberty,
but we must actively cherish and nurture it. As we write the next
chapter in that proud history, our proposals for a UK-wide Bill
of Rights will strengthen our freedoms, reflect our legal
traditions, curtail those abuses of the system, reinforce the
separation of powers between the judicial and legislative
branches and respect the democratic authority of this House,
which—as so often in our history—has been a bulwark and the
protector of our freedoms. I commend this statement to the
House.
12:43:00
(Croydon North) (Lab/Co-op)
I am grateful to the Secretary of State for advance sight of his
statement, but the truth is that this country’s criminal justice
system is in crisis. There are record backlogs and delays in the
Crown courts, drug use by prisoners is out of control, and just
0.6% of rape cases reported by women and girls ever result in a
charge. If the Secretary of State really wanted to restore
confidence in the system, his priority would be sorting that out,
but he is choosing to fiddle with the Human Rights Act instead of
stretching every muscle and sinew to make sure that rapists and
violent offenders are banged up behind bars where they
belong.
Every time the Government are in trouble politically, they wheel
out reforming the Human Rights Act. It is a dead cat distraction
tactic by a Government who do not know how to fix the criminal
justice system that they have broken and are desperate to divert
attention from the corruption scandals that they started. This is
little more than an attempt to wage culture wars because they
have surrendered in the war on crime and corruption.
The Secretary of State says that he will restore the role of
Parliament and the UK courts in interpreting rulings from
Strasbourg, but they already have those powers under the margin
of appreciation that gives national courts freedom to implement
convention rights on the basis of local laws and custom, so he is
offering nothing new. He is telling us today that it is not
necessary to leave the ECHR to deport foreign criminals, so why
have his Government done nothing about that in their past 11
years in office? A quarter fewer foreign criminals have been
deported in the last year than in the previous year, so it is
clearly not the Human Rights Act that is preventing foreign
criminals from being deported; it is this incompetent
Conservative Government.
The Secretary of State has become so overexcited by his empty
rhetoric that he has missed warnings from senior figures in the
intelligence services telling him that his reforms could actually
make it harder to deport foreign criminals, including terrorists.
They warn that, if the Government go too far in raising the
evidence threshold a person must prove to claim that deportation
would disrupt their family life, that could affect the ability of
MI5 and MI6 to provide evidence in secret to the relevant courts
and lead to more cases going directly to the European Court,
where evidence cannot be submitted in secret. Perhaps this is the
level of detail that we should expect from a Secretary of State
who does not know that the police can investigate crimes a year
after they are committed—even in Downing Street—but is he really
prepared to stand by as cases collapse and terrorists walk
free?
These proposals are all mouth and no trousers. They do nothing to
deal with the severe failings in the criminal justice system,
they repatriate no powers that are not already based here,
and, astoundingly, they actually threaten to make it harder to
deport the most dangerous foreign criminals, including
terrorists. Labour will always defend the human rights of the
British people to live in freedom, safety and security, but we
face a Conservative Government who are high on tax, soft on crime
and desperate to distract from their political failings. If the
Secretary of State really wants to restore trust in the criminal
justice system, his priority should be to fix it and bring
wrongdoers more swiftly to justice. If he is prepared to ditch
the empty rhetoric and political posturing, I will offer him my
party’s full support in doing that.
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his response. I read his remarks,
which were quoted in the early hours of this morning, before we
had published our consultation and hence before he had read the
proposals in it. He accused me of merely tinkering with human
rights and, in the next sentence, of ripping human rights to
shreds. That is an impressive feat of flip-floppng in a single
press statement, but I think it highlights the fact that the
Labour party, or at least its current Front Bench, has absolutely
nothing to say about this issue.
The hon. Gentleman talked about rape. We have published
scorecards and in the new year we will publish local scorecards,
which will highlight various points where the challenge is so we
can tackle it. We have published a consultation on a victims’
law. We are rolling out section 28 of the Youth Justice and
Criminal Evidence Act 1999 to allow pre-recorded evidence from
rape victims, and Operation Soteria is being piloted to bring
about a better approach on the part of police and prosecutors. In
fact, we are doing all the things that the hon. Gentleman
mentioned. If he wants to be tough on criminals, as he claims, he
should have supported our Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts
Bill. If he wants to come down hard on drug dealers and serious
offenders whom we should remove from this country, he should back
our proposals to allow them to be deported.
The hon. Gentleman asked about security, and seemed to warp even
the ludicrous reports about it that have appeared in the papers.
Let me be absolutely clear: the reforms that we propose would
strengthen our ability to deport foreign national offenders, and
the reason we have faced a challenge is Labour’s Human Rights
Act. If he looks at the data—if he is remotely interested in the
facts—he will see that. We are not talking about deporting
someone back into the arms of a torturing tyrant. I would not
support that, and my party and this Government would not support
it. We are not talking about article 3, but we are talking about
article 8 and the right to family life, which makes up 70% of all
successful human rights challenges. Let me quote to him what the
architect of the Human Rights Act, , said:
“There is a sense that”
the Human Rights Act has become
“a villains charter”.
I have not used language like that. There is a sense and a
genuine concern that terrorists are not being deported and that
criminals are benefiting—that was from Labour’s own architect of
the Human Rights Act.
The hon. Gentleman went on to criticise the approach we take to
the Strasbourg Court. Let me read to him from one of the premium
textbooks on the subject. The author said that the Strasbourg
Court is primarily concerned with supervision and its role is
subsidiary to that of the domestic authority. That author stated
that it
“has no role unless the domestic system for protecting human
rights breaks down”.
I agree with that, but it is not what we have in the Human Rights
Act. That quote actually comes from the leader of the Labour
party, in his seminal textbook on the subject back in 1999. I
have to say to the hon. Gentleman that Captain Hindsight rarely
makes predictions for the future, but on this occasion he did and
he was proved right, and that is exactly what our proposals for
reform will deliver.
(Bromley and Chislehurst)
(Con)
The Lord Chancellor has made an important and considered
statement and I am particularly grateful that he paid tribute to
Sir Peter Gross and the work of his committee. Their report, such
that I have been able to read it, because it is a detailed one,
is very thoughtful and stands head and shoulders above the rather
trite comments we get in politics and in the media. I commend the
report to anyone who is seriously interested in the topic.
Does the Lord Chancellor agree that it is important that he has
confirmed, as Sir Peter’s report confirms, the reality that the
Strasbourg jurisdiction has never been binding on UK courts in
the way that the European Court of Justice’s decisions once were,
that the margin of appreciation is well established in the
jurisprudence and that, therefore, as we make sensible reforms,
which is always proper and appropriate, this is precisely the
sort of area ripe for pre-legislative scrutiny through a Bill?
Does he agree that, when we make changes, we should take on
board, in particular, that we should not inadvertently permit
legislation to go directly to Strasbourg, which would undermine
the protections that our own domestic procedures have in relation
to issues of security and other sensitivity? Surely that is
capable of being dealt with in our reforms.
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. He refers to the Independent
Human Rights Act Review report by Sir Peter Gross, and I again
thank Sir Peter and his panel for the extensive work they have
done. They have not only shown us the challenges that the Human
Rights Act has presented, but given us a range of options and
influenced the approach that we have taken—they have certainly
informed it. My hon. Friend is also right to highlight the
confusion there has been with the case law of the Strasbourg
Court, which does not operate, as many civil law courts do not,
by adopting precedent; and the way in which, in the UK courts,
particularly as a result of section 2, it has virtually been
turned into a system of precedent. That is clearly an area where
we can reform, and I think we can do it in a sensible way that
respects the primacy of the UK courts and gives greater legal
certainty for everyone involved.
Brendan O'Hara (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
I thank the Secretary of State for prior sight of his statement,
which says that these reforms are necessary to
“curtail abuses of the human rights system”.
This Government regularly tell us that abuses of the system are
the reason for all manner of reforms of legislation that simply
does not suit them. I know from my experience of the Elections
Bill recently that they rarely manage to produce anything other
than anecdotal evidence—ironically, evidence that would not stand
up in a court of law. So, this time, where is the empirical
evidence for this enormous change and where can we see it? The
Secretary of State says that the UK will remain a party to the
ECHR, but, again, different Ministers give different answers, so
will he confirm, once and for all, that every provision in the
ECHR will be adhered to in full, without tinkering or
equivocation? It takes some brass neck for this Government to
invoke a history of upholding human rights, given that this
statement comes hot on the heels of multiple dreadful pieces of
legislation designed to absolutely trash those rights, be it the
Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, the Elections Bill,
the Judicial Review and Courts Bill or, most appallingly, the
Nationality and Borders Bill.
On Scotland, does the Secretary of State have any appreciation of
how the Human Rights Act is fundamental to how the devolution
settlement works and that any change to that would be a recasting
of the UK’s constitution? I have no doubt that he will come back
to me saying, “We will consult the devolved Administrations” but
that is not enough. We expect—no, we demand—a guarantee that
nothing will be done without the Scottish Government’s
permission. The Scottish Government have made it absolutely clear
that any attempt to erode the Human Rights Act will be robustly
opposed. The Secretary of State may have scant regard for the
democratically elected Government of Scotland, but he needs to
understand just how much the people of Scotland value their human
rights and how outraged they will be about this.
The SNP and the Scottish Government will fight to protect human
rights across these islands and indeed across the globe. The best
way we can do that is simply by voting yes in our next
independence referendum, and I thank the Justice Secretary for
the part he has played in ensuring that that happens.
The hon. Gentleman asked about the evidence basis for what we are
doing. That has been set out at some length in the independent
Human Rights Act review, if he takes the trouble to read it,
which was published today and chaired admirably by Sir Peter
Gross. It is also set out in the pretty extensive consultation
document that we have published. I have said it once today but I
am happy to reaffirm that we will stay within the European
convention on human rights. We will qualify areas such as article
8—[Interruption.] The hon. Gentleman says “Ah”, but he will know
that paragraph 2 of article 8 invites qualification—it admits of
it—in the interests of a whole range of reasons, including
security. That will allow us to deport more foreign national
offenders, in which we have been hamstrung by article 8 as it has
been interpreted under the Human Rights Act. I am pretty sure
that the people of Scotland, and the people across the UK, want
us to be able to deport more serious, dangerous offenders from
these shores.
The hon. Gentleman asked about the devolved Administrations. We
are very sensitive to the devolved settlement. As he knows, the
Human Rights Act is UK-wide legislation and a protected enactment
under the devolution settlement, and ending it is therefore a
matter for the UK Government, but we also recognise that the
devolved legislatures can legislate on human rights in areas that
are devolved to them, and that will remain the case. I look
forward to consulting with the relevant devolved Administrations
and with civil society in all the nations of the UK.
(Stone) (Con)
Would my right hon. Friend accept that this article 8 issue has
been at the root of a great number of extremely unsatisfactory
appeal decisions? Does he agree that, in the light of our
sovereignty and our right to govern ourselves and have our own
legal system in this context, the combination of that change and
the Nationality and Borders Bill that we put through this House
only last week will be of great benefit to the people of this
country and immensely popular up and down the land in dealing
with illegal immigration?
I thank my hon. Friend for the huge amount of forensic legal work
and analysis he has put into this, as well as for his political
and parliamentary contribution to the debate. He is right to say
that the reforms will enable us to take measures to deal with the
very real problems that his constituents and mine, and those in
all four corners of the UK, are concerned about.
Article 8 is an interesting illustration. A lot of people say,
“Well, we will still have to comply with Strasbourg”, and it is
true that ultimately we will still have to accept the obligations
under the convention, but the democratic shield will provide us
with a proper means of stretching the margin of appreciation
within the boundaries of the convention. Also, the case for
article 8 expanded far more aggressively and energetically in
this country, and it was later that the Strasbourg Court followed
the case law in this country. So what we do is important, and the
relationship is two-way. That is why the margin of appreciation,
the dialogue and the provisions in the consultation document are
so important.
(Camberwell and Peckham)
(Lab)
I thank the Justice Secretary for his statement. It sounds as if
he has come to the House with many of the complaints that all his
predecessors since the Conservatives have been in government have
made when they pledged to change the Human Rights Act, but those
proposals have ended up amounting to nothing. We shall see
whether he is able to turn his concerns into anything of
substance. In the Joint Committee on Human Rights, we will
obviously look carefully at his consultation and respond to the
Gross review. Can I just say how pleased and relieved I am that
he has made such a strong commitment to the European convention
on human rights and all the rights protected therein, including
article 8—the right to private and family life? I hope he will be
able to confirm that he will do nothing to make it take longer or
cost more for people to enforce their rights. He pledged to stand
by the European convention. We cannot have a situation where
those rights are available only for those who can afford to
enforce them.
I thank the right hon. and learned Lady for her perfectly
reasonable and thoughtful response. She is right that we will
stay within the European convention. If she looks me up on the
record, she will see that I have consistently said that the
problem is not the convention, which is totally unobjectionable
as a list of rights. She asked about Conservative politicians
bringing these concerns to the House of Commons. That is right.
There have been long-standing issues with the Human Rights Act,
but it is not just Conservative politicians. I cited Jack
Straw—there have been others—as one of the architects of the Act
who has been seriously concerned and has made the case for
reform. So there are, across the political divide, strong
arguments for making a change. We have put proposals forward—that
is the difference—including draft illustrative clauses precisely
to stimulate the kind of debate we should have. I think that that
answers not only the right hon. and learned Lady’s point, but
that of my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ), the Chair of the Justice
Committee, about pre-legislative scrutiny. By putting text out
there for consideration, we can get right to the crux of these
issues.
The right hon. and learned Lady rightly asked about remedies. We
will, of course, retain effective domestic remedies, but what we
will do with the permissions stage is have a check, which the
Strasbourg Court itself has, on unmeritorious claims. It is also
right that it has been a long-standing principle in this country
that he who comes to equity must come to the court with clean
hands. [Interruption.] She is nodding. I hope she agrees. So I
think it is right for us to look at strengthening the provisions
for the courts, within their discretion, to be able to take into
account the wrongdoing of those who claim human rights.
(Henley) (Con)
As the leader of the UK delegation to the Council of Europe,
which looks after the ECHR, I am pleased to hear that we will
remain in the convention. I think that that is very important to
us. The ECHR is itself badly in need of reform. Will my right
hon. Friend join me in the work I am already doing to try to
achieve a reform of that court, so that it better deals with the
human rights problems across the whole of Europe?
I thank my hon. Friend, who has been a champion of the ECHR and
makes, in a powerful and eloquent way, the case for trying to
deliver better outcomes at international level. We want that as
well, so I will work with him and support his efforts. We, of
course, want to ensure that the Council and ECHR system, post the
2012 Brighton declaration, is properly implemented. We were
told—my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst, the
Chair of the Justice Committee, is nodding—that the Court was
entering an age of subsidiarity, which also picks up on the point
made by the leader of the Labour party back in 1999. What we are
doing goes with the grain of that, but we will also hold
Strasbourg and the Council system to its word to see through
those reforms.
(Walsall South) (Lab)
It is the Justice Secretary who is contradictory, is it not? All
the convention did was to be enacted in the Human Rights Act, so
he cannot say he is keeping the convention and taking away the
Human Rights Act. We are talking about evidence, not opinion.
Will he publish a list of cases where British judges have not
applied British law and have been hamstrung by European law?
I always enjoy engaging with the right hon. Lady on these
subjects. She will see a list of the cases set out, the
diagnosis, in both the IHRAR report by Sir Peter Gross and the
consultation document. She will not have had a chance to read it
cover to cover yet, but I encourage her to do so. She talks about
it as if there is only one way to incorporate or implement the
ECHR in UK law, but there is no one on either side of this debate
who thinks that that is the case. We had proposals. I remember
that when I sat on the Joint Committee on Human Rights there was
consideration of a next stage of a Bill of Rights which took a
different approach. We have seen in every Council of Europe
member state different ways of enacting the ECHR, so I gently say
to her that the convention and how it is interpreted and applied,
in particular the operation of the separation of powers between
the judicial, the Executive and the legislative branch, can be
done in different ways and we want to sharpen that
demarcation.
(Maldon) (Con)
Does my right hon. Friend agree that recent court judgments
appear to have extended privacy law in this country against the
provision of section 12 of the existing Human Rights Act and
without the debate or approval of Parliament? Can he say whether
his reforms will strengthen section 12 to right the balance, and
will he stress once again the importance of freedom of
expression?
My right hon. Friend, as ever, hits the nail on the head. We will
be looking precisely at that provision. We think it was
introduced with a legitimate aim. It is one of those things that
we actually support, but that has not delivered the kind of
emphasis and protection around freedom of speech. I agree with
the point that he made about avoiding the incremental extension
of continental-style privacy law into the UK; we have a common
law tradition, and tend to have a greater emphasis on free speech
and transparency. That is coupled with the EU influence—I do not
want to get wholesale into that debate, but he will remember
proposals for a right to be forgotten—and the sensitivities that
we increasingly see around debate, which, in this Chamber, in our
country and in our society, we have to protect, and our proposals
will allow us to do just that.
(Bath) (LD)
After 96 people were crushed to death in the Hillsborough
disaster and the victims themselves were blamed, it was the Human
Rights Act that helped their families finally to have their
voices heard. The Human Rights Act is also a cornerstone of the
Good Friday agreement. Why do the Government see the need to
create greater uncertainty and jeopardy in Northern Ireland just
for the sake of political posturing? By the way, I have seen a
very interesting poll by , which is about what people
in Northern Ireland think about the future. More than 60% now
believe that there will probably be a united Ireland within the
next 20 years.
I say gently to the hon. Lady that, if she looks at the Good
Friday agreement, she will see that it talks about incorporation
of the ECHR, not incorporation of the Human Rights Act. We have
made it clear that we will maintain our position as a state party
to the European Convention on Human Rights, which is complemented
by our stalwart support of the Good Friday agreement.
(Bexleyheath and Crayford)
(Con)
I warmly welcome my right hon. Friend’s statement today on
overhauling our human rights framework. Does he agree that his
reforms, after discussion and deliberation with colleagues and a
wide variety of people, must strengthen the role of Parliament
and the UK courts, rather than relying on judgment from
Strasbourg?
I thank my right hon. Friend. He has been a long-standing
champion of this issue, and has had a long-standing interest in
it. I think the separation of powers between the legislative, the
Executive and the judicial branches is really important. We want
a robust judiciary, which is why we are proposing to strengthen
the primacy of the Supreme Court—it is called a Supreme Court for
a reason, and there is not a doctrine of precedent in Strasbourg.
We also need to make sure that if there are expansions of human
rights, the shifting of the goalposts that frustrates many of our
constituents, they are subject to the democratic scrutiny of this
House.
(Preston) (Lab/Co-op)
The Secretary of State said in his statement that the Government
will make it crystal clear that the UK courts are under no duty
to follow Strasbourg’s case law, so will it be a matter of pick
and mix from the articles contained in the convention? If that is
the case, using the Secretary of State’s logic, what is the point
of being signatories to the ECHR when he has made it clear that
the Government will choose only those articles they feel are
appropriate?
With the greatest respect to the hon. Gentleman, he has not
followed the point that I was making. We will stay within the
European convention. There are some articles, such as article
8(2), which admit a qualification to protect security. We will
avail ourselves of that. The issue is about the interpretation of
the application. There is no doctrine of precedent in Strasbourg,
which is one of the areas of confusion that has arisen because we
do have a doctrine of precedent in the UK courts. We will make it
clear that it is for UK courts to apply in relation to UK case
law and UK circumstances and, above all, to follow the will of
the elected lawmakers. When there is a declaration of
incompatibility and the courts will be free to still use that
tool, that should come back to this House to decide what to
do.
(Huntingdon) (Con)
When speaking with politicians from former Soviet countries, it
is invariably the European convention on human rights that they
value as the protector of their, and indeed our, western
democratic values. My right hon. Friend has made it quite clear
that he is not intending to pull out of the ECHR or to change it,
but I can foresee that this will cause upset with our allies, so
will he today say that he will go to our allies and make it quite
clear that he actually wants to back the ECHR and will be backing
their democratic values?
I think the message we send—that we will remain a state party to
the European convention—is important. We know how important it is
in relation to our allies and partners and the Good Friday
agreement. It is also incumbent on us to lead by example, as we
have done for many years, and ensure that we have a system that
is well regarded the world over. That means getting our own house
in order. Reforming the Human Rights Act and making sure we have
clear separation of powers, and ensuring that, when the goalposts
shift, this House—elected Members, accountable to our
constituents—makes those decisions, are absolutely crucial.
(Norwich South) (Lab)
If we were playing authoritarian bingo, after today’s statement,
we would have a full house. Not only have the Government come for
our trade union rights, our rights to vote and our rights to
protest, now our human rights are up for grabs. Today’s statement
does nothing to strengthen human rights and everything to weaken
them. The Conservative party is not a party of freedom, but one
of growing authoritarianism and many of them over there know
it.
The hon. Gentleman has done one thing with his words: highlight
the importance of protecting free speech and rambunctious debate,
even though he is wrong in everything he said.
(South Holland and The Deepings)
(Con)
The Secretary of State is to be commended on the statement, but
will he be clear that we need to challenge the very principle of
natural rights, which gave rise to the Human Rights Act? It has
had the effect of emphasising individual interest above social
solidarity, weakening communal will and undermining the
sovereignty of this Parliament, which is and always has been the
primary guarantor of Britain’s rights. Will my right hon. Friend
conduct a root and branch reform of that assumption about rights,
put aside consideration of the Human Rights Act, which is part of
the Blairite legacy, and challenge those parts of the convention
that frustrate this Parliament and the wishes of the British
people?
I always enjoy hearing my right hon. Friend’s side of the
argument. As John Stuart Mill said:
“He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of
that.”
I do not take quite the same view as my right hon. Friend, but I
welcome his iconoclasm and his challenge to ensure that we get a
better balance between individual rights— which, as he has often
said to me, Bentham described as “nonsense upon stilts”—and
communal and societal needs, and particularly public protection
in the areas that I outlined, whether parole reform, police
forces or deportation of foreign national offenders.
(Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
(PC)
Diolch yn fawr iawn, Mr Llefarydd. During the course of
devolution, Wales has developed a distinct body of law, which
safeguards specific rights arising from international law,
including the rights of children and older people. Schedule 7A of
the Government of Wales Act 2006 makes it clear that
“observing and implementing international
obligations and obligations under the Human Rights
Convention”
are the responsibility of our Senedd.
In Wales, we learn fast. We learn that, for this Government, the
word “consult” means a tick-box exercise. I therefore ask the
Secretary of State how the proposed consultation on the UK’s
international human rights obligations will not undermine the
Senedd’s ability to protect and promote human rights in
Wales.
We will consult not only the devolved Administrations, but
practitioners, academics and civil society in all the devolved
nations. As I mentioned earlier, the Human Rights Act is UK-wide
legislation and its enactment is protected under the devolution
settlement. Amending it is for the UK Government. However, we
also recognise that devolved Administrations can legislate on
human rights in areas that remain devolved competences. That is
the position. We respect it and I look forward to consulting the
right hon. Lady and proving her cynicism wrong.
(Christchurch) (Con)
The welcome reforms are long overdue and now urgent, so will my
right hon. Friend guarantee that the primary legislation to
implement them after the consultation will be introduced before
the summer recess of 2022?
It is important to have the consultation, to listen carefully and
look at how we can refine, hone and chisel the proposals, given
all the sensitivities we are very mindful of, but we want to
introduce the Bill of Rights and get it enacted in this
Parliament.
(Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
I am not a lawyer, but this piece of legislation really worries
me, because with legislation I always look at where the drive for
it comes from. I cannot find it supported in the academic
community, the legal community or the business community, and it
is increasingly clear that it comes from the increasingly
strident right wing of the Conservative party and the Back
Benchers so positively in favour of it. Will the Secretary of
State, even today, look at all the serious leaders in the
newspapers—The Times, The Daily Telegraph and The Independent? He
has very few friends on this.
I think the hon. Gentleman must have read the papers a little bit
quicker than I did. It is not just Conservative politicians.
Indeed, former members of the judiciary make the case for reform
very powerfully, and there is of course the Labour architect of
the Human Rights Act in , who has made the case for
reform. But the real truth is that the calls for reform and a bit
more common sense in the system have come from our voters—the
public—and he would do well to remember that.
(Gainsborough) (Con)
I am a member of the Council of Europe, which I think has lost
its way. It lets Russia literally get away with murder but
interferes in the minutiae of so-called human rights in western
democracies. I support what the Secretary of State has said
today, but I want to be convinced that if we stay in the European
Court of Human Rights and the Council of Europe, what he is doing
will actually make much difference. He can convince me in one
way. At the moment, our deportation policy is a complete joke. We
never deport anybody. Illegal migrants know that they can vanish
in the community. Will he now convince me that after we pass this
we will be able to deport these people and stop this illegal
migration?
Human rights reform will no more be a silver bullet for all the
ills of the world than any other reform, but it will deal with a
whole range of serious and significant issues that the people of
this country, my right hon. Friend’s constituents and mine, want
dealing with. The reason I give in the consultation paper—I wrote
about it in The Times today—is that article 8 is an example of a
qualified right that allows us to stretch, or to press, the
margin of appreciation. Some 70% of the successful human rights
challenges to deportation orders by foreign national offenders
come from people claiming under article 8 on the right to a
family life. That is a very good example of what we can
address.
(Westminster North) (Lab)
Leading human rights lawyer and expert, and former adviser to the
Joint Committee on Human Rights, Adam Wagner, said of these
proposals this morning that this Government may be the first in
the history of liberal democracies to enact a Bill of Rights that
has the effect of reducing rather than increasing rights and
protections. Are a Government who have traditionally provided
themselves on the defence of the individual against the state
proud of that description?
I do not accept it, but I know that a number of people, including
the shadow Justice Secretary, have commented on the proposals
before having read them. Freedom of speech, and trial by jury and
the recognition that we can give to it, are just two examples of
the way we can strengthen human rights, but also strengthen the
credibility of human rights so that they are not dirty words in
the minds of many of the public.
(Kettering) (Con)
Significant planning harm is being caused in the Kettering
constituency and across the country by Gypsies and Travellers
deliberately building permanent, unauthorised structures in the
open countryside, against all the planning regulations. When the
local planning authority seeks to enforce against this in the
planning courts, more often than not the authority is overruled
by the Human Rights Act. Will the reforms that the Secretary of
State has proposed today help to rebalance the planning system so
that planning laws apply equally to everyone, everywhere?
My hon. Friend raises an issue that I have heard raised quite
widely across the House. He will know that the Home Secretary has
already announced proposals to strengthen our powers in relation
to illegal encampments. The critical thing that our proposal for
a Bill of Rights will do is protect legislation enacted in this
House by elected Members accountable to our constituents and stop
it being whittled away, revised or amended as a result of the
Human Rights Act and what it requires the courts to do.
(Belfast South) (SDLP)
The Lord Chancellor’s statement made a cursory reference to the
devolved regions. I am not sure if he ever got round to reading
all of the Good Friday agreement after he revealed at the
Northern Ireland Affairs Committee that he had not read it, but
the prospect of the Human Rights Act was critical in those
negotiations and has proved crucial in the years since, both for
victims and survivors and for all those seeking good governance
in all areas of life, because it puts those safeguards in the
hands of citizens. Has he received specific legal advice on the
interaction of his proposals with Northern Ireland and the
Northern Ireland Act 1998?
Of course we are very conscious of any impact on the Good Friday
agreement settlement, which is why it is important to stay in the
European convention. I hope that gives the hon. Lady the
reassurance she needs.
(Blackpool South) (Con)
The residents of Blackpool are sick and tired of the way in which
the Human Rights Act has been abused by foreign criminals so they
can remain in the UK. My constituents will be delighted by my
right hon. Friend’s statement, but can he reassure them that the
measures he outlined will help to make it easier to deport
dangerous foreign criminals and will work alongside our new
Nationality and Borders Bill to make it easier to deport failed
asylum seekers?
Let me be clear that, as we have set out at some length, there
are some things that we cannot do. We cannot send people back to
the arms of a torturing tyrant in violation of article 3. Even if
we came out of the European convention, there would be other
international treaties and frankly, morally, I do not think that
is the right thing to do. The reality is, however, that the
majority of the challenges that we have had—70% of those in
relation to foreign national offenders—have come under not
article 3 but article 8. That is a good example of why this
reform will be meaningful and far-reaching, and will have the
support of our constituents.
(Oldham East and
Saddleworth) (Lab)
My fear is that the consultation on our Human Rights Act is more
about giving more power to the Executive and there being fewer
challenges to it than about meaningful reform. Will the Justice
Secretary answer my earlier question on which of the following
breaches of human rights, on which the courts ruled that the
Government could be challenged, will no longer apply: rights
against torture, rights against medical experimentation on
British military personnel, or rights preventing discrimination
against disabled people?
Of course it is right to say that in none of those areas will our
reforms prevent accountability through constituents being able to
bring cases to the courts. I will correct the hon. Lady on a
broader point. If she looks at the consultation, she will see
that it is not about accumulating authority or power to the
Executive; it is about the separation of powers between the
judicial and legislative branch. As the goalposts shift on human
rights, which is fundamentally a legislative function, hon.
Members on both sides of the House should be responsible for
that, and ultimately should be responsible to our constituents
for that.
(Glenrothes) (SNP)
I first send best wishes for a speedy recovery to my hon. and
learned Friend the Member for Edinburgh South West (), who, had she not tested
positive for covid, would certainly have been here with some
difficult questions for the Secretary of State. I have no doubt
that those questions will be coming as soon as she is restored to
full health.
The Secretary of State said that hon. Members in this House must
have the last word on the law of the land, by which I presume he
means this land. He will not forget that there are three other
lands—three other nations—that are only partially under the
jurisdiction of this place and partly under the jurisdiction of
their respective national Parliaments. Will he give an absolute
guarantee that if any of those national Parliaments seeks to use
its devolved powers to grant its citizens a higher level of human
rights protection than is covered in UK legislation, the rights
of those devolved Parliaments will be respected?
I pass on our best wishes to the hon. and learned Member for
Edinburgh South West (). I hope that she is back up
and running and well soon.
I say to the hon. Gentleman that we think that it is elected
lawmakers who should have the last word on the laws of the
land—that includes the devolved competencies. What he is saying,
logic would suggest, is that he wants Strasbourg to be able to
overrule not just Westminster but the Scottish Parliament. We are
supporting democracy in all the nations of the UK and in this
House.
(Hammersmith) (Lab)
This is the third or fourth attempt by successive Tory
Governments to fillet the Human Rights Act, and it is no more
coherent than the ones that were abandoned. We know that it is
intended to pick on what are perceived as the easier or unpopular
targets, but it will mainly disadvantage ordinary citizens of
this country who are victims of unlawful decisions by the state.
It purports to repatriate powers from Europe, but we are rightly
staying in the European convention on human rights, so more
decisions will go to Strasbourg. Judges will no longer be bound
by the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, but they
are not now. Will he take the opportunity of the consultation to
look at that again and see whether the measures are coherent in
any way?
I think this is the first time that a consultation document has
been put forward to the House of Commons. The hon. Gentleman is
right that it has been much debated; we are now taking action. I
am afraid that I disagree with him: we are very much focused on
protecting and strengthening our tradition of freedom, of which I
have given freedom of speech as an example.
Frankly, the hon. Gentleman has a choice to make. He can sit back
and bask in the generalities of what he has said, or he can
recognise, as the former Home Secretary and architect of the
Human Rights Act does, that there has been abuse of the system
and that if we reform and take our responsibilities in this House
seriously, we can make a change for the better and introduce some
much-needed common sense.
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
The Justice Secretary has made much of his concerns about article
8, the right to family life. To the extent that it affects the
best interests of children, it is of course a particularly
important article. Can he assure me that the changes that he
intends to bring in will in no way water down our obligations to
serve children’s best interests, as prescribed in the Children
Act 1989, or our obligations under the United Nations convention
on the rights of the child, to which we are of course a
signatory?
Of course we live up to our international obligations, and it is
precisely partly the aim of these reforms to protect the bespoke,
tailored approach to primary legislation when it comes to
protecting the most vulnerable in our society, including through
the Children Act.
(Rochdale) (Lab)
How will the Secretary of State convince me that his biggest
supporters in this will not be President Erdoğan of Turkey and
President Putin in Russia? Can he also tell me this: if the
Government move ahead with his proposal to give an amnesty to
those who committed murder during the troubles in Northern
Ireland—and they do have that intention—and given that he says he
supports the article 13 of the European convention, on the right
to an effective remedy, how will the families of those murdered
get justice if there is not proper access to the Strasbourg
Court?
We are very confident that the proposals that we have put
forward, given the passage of time, are ECHR-compliant. The hon.
Gentleman talks about being friends with dictatorial countries.
Frankly, this reform will be about restoring some common sense
and some credibility to human rights in this country. He asks
whose side we are on. We are on the side of the British public,
and he should get on board.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Secretary of State for his statement. The prospect of
a Bill of Rights is an overwhelming project, as we all recognise.
What steps will the Secretary of State take to ensure that all
minority groups receive protection, and that religious freedom
and the expression and sharing of faith are explicitly protected
as a foundation of this great nation of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland—better together?
I thank the hon. Gentleman. Of course there are provisions for
non-discrimination in the ECHR, but also in UK law. This reform
will allow us to strengthen the protections that we in this House
provide, including the hon. Gentleman, and make sure that they
are not whittled away, not undermined, and not revised through a
combination of section 2, section 3 and the other provisions of
the Human Rights Act.
(Carmarthen East and
Dinefwr) (Ind)
The Human Rights Act is entrenched in the Welsh constitution, so
what amendments would need to be made, if any, to the Government
of Wales Act if these proposals were to be implemented? Will the
Secretary of State give an undertaking not to proceed to
legislate unless he receives prior consent from the Welsh
Government, the Scottish Government and the Northern Ireland
Executive?
I thank the hon. Gentleman. As I said, it is a protective
enactment. We will respect the devolved competences. Until we
have got to the stage of full legislative proposals—which we
will, and I look forward to having the discussion then—I think it
is a bit too early to touch on the points that he made.
(Rutherglen and Hamilton
West) (Ind)
New licensing rules for arms trade announced last week are
already causing concern that they could make it easier for
international human rights abuses to be ignored when the
Government make decisions on sales. Has the Secretary of State
considered how changes to domestic human rights legislation could
have a knock-on effect on our international strategies?
I would say we have one of the most robust and rigorous
approaches to export licensing, and we will continue to do so.
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