Irish Independent

Repeal will mean destroying the foundation­s of our human rights

- Bruce Arnold

IN a few weeks’ time, we will each have the personal responsibi­lity of deciding a question in our fundamenta­l law concerning the natural right to life of other human beings. We have been invited by the Oireachtas to withdraw the present acknowledg­ement of the right to life of the unborn in Article 40.3.3, to rescind our guarantee to respect, defend and vindicate that right, and to create an implied right to elective abortion, which the Oireachtas may eventually regulate to some unspecifie­d extent. This should give any rational person pause for thought.

Some people advocate we should trust others in this matter by removing the current protection from the Constituti­on. It may be tempting to follow this advice, rather than engage in the demanding work of reflection involved in any important act of lawmaking. If we value and respect the notion of human rights, which set limits to what the Oireachtas may do in our name, we will rise to this challenge. Citizens cannot outsource this responsibi­lity when human lives are at stake.

It is instructiv­e to review what the Supreme Court has been saying about human rights. The evidence of the past 25 years shows that, whatever the people may agree to or reject in a referendum, the court will tend to neutralise the notion of natural rights mandated by the text of the Constituti­on, and follow its own preference­s in these matters.

This I believe is the nub of the problem. In five instances in the Constituti­on, two of them enacted in 2012, the personal and family rights that it guarantees are described as “natural” rights. They are said to be recognised, acknowledg­ed and affirmed – but never “conferred” – by the Constituti­on. They are also variously described as inalienabl­e and imprescrip­tible rights, antecedent and superior to all positive law.

This is a very clear affirmatio­n by the people of the principle that our fundamenta­l rights are not created or conferred by a vote in a referendum, but that we owe them to one another as human beings. A “natural” right is precisely one that is inherent in human nature. It does not depend for its origin or authority on any human law, although it requires such laws for its effectiven­ess. Recognitio­n of such rights is not optional or elective. As the basic rule of justice in society, our Constituti­on must, and does, acknowledg­e and vindicate them.

The Supreme Court, however, has rejected this constituti­onal affirmatio­n of an objective basis for natural rights. Despite a generation of supportive judicial observatio­ns, it held in 1995 that “the courts … at no stage recognised the provisions of the natural law as superior to the Constituti­on”. Citing a supposed incompatib­ility between an inherent human law and the sovereignt­y of a democratic state, the court has nullified the constituti­onal text in this respect.

The principle of objective natural rights was explicitly acknowledg­ed once more in 2012 by a sovereign decision of the people. The text of the new Article 42A twice affirmed an inalterabl­e basis in human nature for the rights of the child. On the ‘positive law’ principles adopted by the court itself, this should have been sufficient to reverse its 1995 policy decision. If the people reject a judicial policy and insist on acknowledg­ing a “natural and imprescrip­tible” standard for human rights, the courts must accept and abide by that. That is what democratic sovereignt­y means.

Not so, apparently. In a recent case on immigratio­n and unborn rights, known as the M case, the Supreme Court completely ignored the “natural and imprescrip­tible rights” in Article 42A and reaffirmed its 1995 decision on the source of constituti­onal rights. Thus, the court asked itself whether it would be “possible to look at Article 42A.1 as creating a standalone provision conferring rights on children”? Putting the question in this way, it was bound to get the wrong answer. As we have seen, the Constituti­on does not purport to confer natural rights on anyone; it recognises and vindicates them.

WHY is Article 42A significan­t? In the X case, the court made it clear that a right to life does not extend to the protection of one’s physical or mental health. Every living human being, therefore, also needs a basket of other protective natural rights. These include the right to developmen­tal health and well-being, the right not to be poisoned, abused, neglected or have pain inflicted unnecessar­ily, and so on. The wide terms of Article 42A.1 clearly acknowledg­ed such rights and guaranteed to vindicate them for “all children”.

The natural rights due to a born child can also be enjoyed by, and are therefore due to, the same child before birth. To hold that human rights suddenly become “natural and imprescrip­tible” on cutting the umbilical cord is an irrational superstiti­on. The court apparently subscribes to this fiction, holding that birth is the “gateway” to constituti­onal rights. By stubbornly refusing the recognitio­n of natural rights as such, against the plain meaning of the constituti­onal text, the Supreme Court has expressly denied this vital source of legal protection to the unborn child. It has also emptied it of value for other children also.

The court held that “it is simply not possible to interpret” the phrase “all children” in Article 42A.1 “as encompassi­ng the unborn. They are separately dealt with in Article 40.3.3 of the Constituti­on”. This clearly reflects the ‘positive law’ mindset of the court. The court had difficulty in seeing “any right contained therein which could avail an unborn child”. This wilful blindness stems, again, from the court’s rejection of the notion of “natural and imprescrip­tible rights”, which are reaffirmed in that Article. The denial of the health and welfare protection provided in Article 42A.1 to unborn children has no rational basis in human nature.

This unjust discrimina­tion reached its nadir in the very stark conclusion of the court that the unborn child has no inherent or implied human rights whatsoever, beyond the limited right to life conferred by Article 40.3.3. If that minimal safeguard is repealed in the forthcomin­g referendum, and replaced by an implied right to elective abortion, the unborn child will be utterly devoid of any protection in Irish law.

I conclude that the Supreme Court’s stubborn rejection of natural rights undermines and perverts our fundamenta­l law. It appears to acknowledg­e the people have an absolute power to make unjust and discrimina­tory laws. In reality, it leaves the ultimate power in the hands of the Supreme Court, which interprets or ignores the constituti­onal text as it sees fit.

This is not true law or natural justice. We cannot validly make laws that go against our human nature, to the extent of depriving our fellow human beings of their basic natural rights. The present calamitous policy will remain in force unless reversed by some future Supreme Court judgment. In the meantime, it should inform our decision in the referendum.

It leaves me in no doubt that to repeal Article 40.3.3 would be to complete the wanton destructio­n of the very foundation­s of human rights in our Constituti­on, not to mention the countless human lives that would be lost.

 ?? Photos: Kyran O’Brien ?? Posters for the referendum on abortion at Christchur­ch in Dublin city centre.
Photos: Kyran O’Brien Posters for the referendum on abortion at Christchur­ch in Dublin city centre.
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