The Scotsman

Politician­s must not put themselves above law

While a positive move, Sunak's law striking down Horizon conviction­s may have unintended consequenc­es

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As has been pointed out for years by, among others, The Scotsman, the wrongful conviction of hundreds of Post Office branch managers in the Horizon scandal is one of the most serious miscarriag­es of justice in history. People were sent to prison, lost homes, marriages and reputation­s, and endured the mental torment of an honest person treated as a criminal.

While the root cause of their problems was the flawed Horizon computer system, Post Office minister Kevin Hollinrake told MPS yesterday that the evidence showed “not only incompeten­ce but malevolenc­e” by the Post Office. He lamented that just 95 out of more than 900 conviction­s had been overturned. Now, a law is to be introduced in England and Wales to exonerate the victims, with Downing Street saying it will work with the Scottish Government on similar steps.

It is extraordin­ary what can be achieved by a poignant TV drama – ITV’S Mr Bates Vs The Post Office – in an election year. After years of inaction, politician­s are suddenly falling over themselves to do something. However, there are problems with Rishi Sunak’s approach. The first is that a blanket law clearing hundreds may inadverten­tly include some people who were guilty but, given the pressing need to clear the innocent, this may be a price worth paying. The second is more serious. A law overturnin­g court verdicts may set a dangerous precedent at a time populists are testing the boundaries of political power.

In the US, Donald Trump is attempting to claim that, as president, he had immunity from prosecutio­n. In the UK, Boris Johnson illegally suspended parliament to facilitate his Brexit plans, while Sunak wants to overturn a Supreme Court decision that Rwanda is not a safe country by passing a law to say that it is.

The concept of the separation of powers – the government, parliament and the judiciary – is a vital safeguard against tyranny. Politician­s who think they can strike down judges’ decisions are effectivel­y putting themselves above the law. Voters must make clear this is not a position they will tolerate in anything other than the most extreme circumstan­ces.

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