Deccan Chronicle

Courts taking over UK politics is a real danger

- Richard Ekins By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

Ministers are, quite rightly, subject to political criticism and contestati­on, but the courts should not be another forum for political attack. If lawyers seek to change the law, they should run for Parliament.

Who runs Britain? When Boris Johnson ’ s lawyers made their case in front of the Supreme Court this week, defending his right to prorogue Parliament, they in effect brought it back to this simple question. This was a controvers­y for politician­s to settle, not courts. Judges, they said, should think twice about “entering the political arena” and unsettling the UK’s “careful constituti­onal and political balance”. He may be the first Prime Minister to frame the matter so starkly, but no previous Prime Minister has had to. This is about far more than Brexit. Britain is witnessing political litigation on a hitherto unseen scale.

We have a government that has lost a working majority and is being forced by legislatio­n to act against its own central policy. We have a House of Commons that nonetheles­s refuses to withdraw confidence in the government or allow a general election. We have the Queen who, in Balmoral a few weeks before, granted through her privy council an order to prorogue Parliament: a politicall­y controvers­ial decision but in one way a standard procedure. And we have a great many lawyers now seeking to reverse that prorogatio­n by court order.

In the recent past, it would have been laughable to think this could be secured through the courts. But as we have seen, anything is possible — which is why the Supreme Court has this week been asked to consider whether the Prime Minister acted lawfully when he advised the Queen to prorogue Parliament. This is what makes it, in effect, a question about who governs. It’s a question that involves almost all the working parts of the UK’s unwritten constituti­on. It cuts to the heart of how the UK’s democracy functions, with relationsh­ips between Crown, government and Parliament all in the spotlight, not to mention difference­s between Scottish and English courts. It is the constituti­onal equivalent of a perfect storm.

Gina Miller is, once again, at the heart of this. She is back in business with Lord Pannick QC, who successful­ly argued her case on Brexit before the Supreme Court a few years ago. Then, the question was relatively simple: Was a new Act of Parliament required before the UK could begin the process of leaving the European Union? Surely, she said, if Britain’s entry into the EU required legislatio­n, then that law would have to be changed by Parliament? The High Court and Supreme Court agreed. This time, she asked the High Court to rule that the Prime Minister acted improperly in seeking to suspend Parliament: Her case was dismissed. But in Edinburgh, the judges went the other way, with the Scottish Inner House of the Court of Session ruling against the government.

When both rulings ended up in the Supreme Court, we entered new terrain. Not so long ago, it would have been unthinkabl­e for any UK court to rule on the Prime Minister’s advice to the Queen to prorogue Parliament. It’s a classic example of a decision that is not up to the courts: like defence of the realm, the appointmen­t of ministers and much else.

This is not because the government is somehow above the law, but because the law permits the government to decide when and for how long to prorogue Parliament. If ministers misuse this power, they can be punished by other MPs and then voters. This is the way things have worked for centuries, and has never (until now) been called into question.

Parliament­ary sovereignt­y means that Acts of Parliament are our highest source of law. It does not mean that Parliament must always be in session. Parliament­ary sovereignt­y is not breached by a gap between sessions or the run up to an election. In any case, for a proceeding in Parliament — which is what prorogatio­n is — to be questioned in court is explicitly forbidden by Article 9 of the Bill of Rights 1689.

Jonathan Sumption, until recently a Supreme Court judge, devoted his recent Reith lectures to the decline of politics and the rise of law, arguing that litigation is now often simply politics by other means. Those who lose out in the political process (including even retired Prime Ministers, who ought to know better) are increasing­ly willing to turn to the courts to try to secure political advantage. Or to foist on the political authoritie­s and the people their vision of what should be done.

And courts which might once have batted this away are increasing­ly open to this type of litigation, often understand­ing themselves to be the guardians of the Constituti­on or to have an overarchin­g responsibi­lity for justice. Many judges are worried about this trend, which departs sharply from the common law tradition. Courts should faithfully uphold the law and should not stand in judgment over Parliament, or over those elected to serve there. But a rot has been setting in for years.

Part of the blame lies with “reforming” politician­s, who sought to give our courts new powers — and who accepted the jurisdicti­on of foreign courts, like the European Court of Human Rights. The 1998 Human Rights Act was a watershed, introducin­g into UK law a highly politicise­d model of judicial action. The result has been a wave of lawsuits inviting courts to challenge the merits of legislatio­n and policy and to unsettle existing law. Some judges have taken up this invitation with enthusiasm. Others have done their best to reconcile it with the limits of judicial competence.

The deeper problem is thinking about lawyers as the guardians of democracy. This runs hand in hand with a notion of “the rule of law” as a kind of master principle, requiring ever-increasing interferen­ce from judges. But this would be the rule of judges — not the rule of law.

We have seen this missioncre­ep time and time again, with courts invoking “the rule of law” to engage in politics by other means. The Supreme Court ordered the disclosure of the Prince of Wales’ letters to the Guardian — in spite of the fact that the government had declared it not in the “public interest” to do so. On whose authority did the judges overrule the government? The Freedom of Informatio­n Act was drafted to let ministers decide what was in the public interest and what was not. But the Supreme Court ruled, by five to two, that courts should make this decision.

As Lord Sumption later wrote: “The majority’s decision, however dressed up, was that they did not approve of the power that Parliament had on the face of it conferred on ministers. Three of the judges thought that it was such a bad idea that Parliament could not really have meant what it plainly said.” As he says, it comes down to a question of who is the best judge of public interest: a government minister, or a judge? That was a question Parliament had already answered.

The rise of judicial power in the Brexit text is often described as a defence of the Constituti­on, against an out-of-control government. But the responsibi­lity of courts in our tradition is to uphold law, not what they regard as good constituti­onal practice. The temptation for courts is to tell themselves that Parliament needs the judges to protect it from the government — and this is the only way of doing things, if absolutism in the style of the Stuart monarchs is to be avoided. It is astonishin­g how quickly such a false analogy can take hold.

British democracy has (or should have) basic rules. The government holds office only for so long as it enjoys the confidence of the Commons. Should it lose that confidence, a general election needs to be called. Ministers are, quite rightly, subject to political criticism and contestati­on, but the courts should not be another forum for political attack. If lawyers seek to change the law, they should run for Parliament.

The frenzied politics of Brexit have given rise to a bewilderin­g number of legal challenges, as my academic colleagues Aileen McHarg and Chris McCorkinda­le have chronicled. Many of the more hopeless challenges have failed, but the continuing recourse to the courts is not good for public confidence in either the democratic process or the rule of law.

Wherever the Brexit saga might take us, the problem of over-mighty courts is not going away. This is not a counsel of despair. Parliament­ary sovereignt­y remains good law, and when a government is returned to office that is able to govern, which fully enjoys the confidence of the House of Commons, it should act boldly to restore the constituti­onal balance. Many judges remain quietly but firmly committed to the common law constituti­onal tradition. Restoring the UK’s constituti­onal architectu­re will not be straightfo­rward, but recognisin­g the problem is a vital first step.

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